Issue Four
Chula Vista’s
General Fund Budget Deficit
Due to the fire and the air quality
issues only 30 to 40 people showed up at the October 22, 2007 meeting of the Southwest Chula Vista Civic
Association. City Manager David Garcia and Ed Van Eenoo,
Director of Budget & Analysis, did come. City
Manager Garcia had been awakened at 2 AM by the fire chief and spent his day at
the emergency command center. Ed Van Eenoo lives in Eastlake Trails and had at
home his mother and grandmother, who had been evacuated from Rancho Bernardo,
and his wife and three small children. We commend their devotion to duty. They gave a presentation on the budget
deficit to the Growth Management Oversight Commission at 5PM and
then arrived at the meeting of SWCVCA at 6:45PM with the intention of informing
the three civic groups in the city about the budget deficit. They felt that it was only fair
that the community groups had the information they needed to provide informed
comments to the City Council.
They gave an overview of the city’s General Fund revenues and expenses. (Click to see the Power
Point.) This includes a chart showing exactly where every cent of
every dollar of property tax money goes and graphs showing how much sales tax
has fluctuated over the years and how low it is now. Property taxes are also
lower since the County Assessor has recently reassessed properties. All the
foreclosures and resales at lower value have started reducing property tax
income.
There is a 7.3 million deficit. If nothing is done
the reserves will be exhausted by the end of the year, which would be
bankruptcy. Our city manager refuses to let this happen. He has taken three
steps:
1.
A hiring freeze,
2. Offer the 134
eligible employees two years of service credit if they retire early (Many have
expressed interest, but it is not yet certain how many will take this offer.)
3. 10% cut from
every department (All are being asked is it core to the department?)
They need to cut 7.3 million. With 81% of
budget being salaries and benefits this means eliminating 104 positions. They
expect to have 39.2 layoffs. Vacant positions will not be filled or be filled
by transfers from other departments where possible. He provided a list
of 195 different cuts that have been suggested and ranked. Many are
cuts of vacant positions, but all will affect services to the public. The cuts
in police and fire are particularly worrisome, but these are the most expensive
areas of the budget. Chula Vista already has a furlough program for all
employees except police and fire. This means people take a week off without pay
every year. This loss of income is spread over the year for the employees. The
first 137 cuts would entail 104.3 full time employee cuts, 39.25 full time
employee layoffs and save $14,666,320. This would keep the city from bankruptcy
for a year. It turns out that the $7.3 million figure was only for six months.
The council workshop on Thursday November 1 (#6 of e-brief) is
available on streaming video. The council is considering other options and
will not vote on cuts until December.