Modesto’s budget deficit rises to $12M

[Leslie Albrecht, Apr. 20, 2010]

Modesto’s projected budget shortfall has swelled to $12 million, up from the $8 million to $10 million leaders anticipated earlier this year.

Officials will spend the next month hammering out how to bridge the spending gap in the $103 million general fund, which pays for police, fire, parks and other quality of life services.

The deficit grew after some departments failed to meet revenue goals, said Mayor Jim Ridenour. He declined to say which departments.

Modesto recently received one piece of better budget news: Sales tax revenue in the last quarter of 2009 met projections. That’s important because sales tax is the city’s biggest source of general fund revenue. Those dollars have dried up as the economic decline has kept shoppers out of stores.

Ridenour and City Manager Greg Nyhoff have asked department heads to paint a picture of how potential cuts would affect their operations. They’re asking all department leaders to prepare scenarios cutting 3 percent, 5 percent, 7 percent and 10 percent of their budgets.

Ridenour said he also asked departments to show him what 8 percent cuts to personnel budgets would look like.

“That gives me a good idea of where we would be if we just laid a bunch of people off, which we’re not going to do, but we wanted to see what it would look like,” Ridenour said.

In the Police Department, even the smallest level of cuts would mean losing employees, said Chief Mike Harden.

“At the end of the day, to get that target, it’s personnel costs, which make up about 80 percent of my entire budget,” Harden said. “We’ve had to offer up both sworn and civilian staff alike.”

Harden said it’s too early to say how many employees, if any, the Police Department could lose.

He and other officials will know more after the city completes negotiations with employee unions. All of those groups skipped pay raises last year except the police officers union.

The city will hold a series of public budget workshops in May. Ridenour is scheduled to present his proposed budget to the City Council in early June. The city’s new budget year starts July 1.

 

Modesto ranks near bottom in another quality-of-life survey
Water, Wealth, Contentment, Health? Not so much, Gallup says

[Feb. 17, 2010]

Modesto ranks near the bottom of another national survey rating the quality of life among metropolitan areas.

The Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index that came out Tuesday ranked Modesto 130th among the 134 small and mid-size metropolitan areas in the United States. The Fort Smith, Ark., area ranked last while Boulder, Colo., was No. 1.

Among large metro areas, San Jose was tops and Brimingham, Ala., was at the bottom.

 

Time for that ‘vision thing’

[Adam Ashton, Aug. 09, 2010]

What’s next, Modesto?

“It might be time to talk about the vision thing again,” said former Mayor Carol Whiteside.

Should that mayor be someone who keeps the lights on and the budget balanced, reflecting realistic goals as Modesto emerges from the recession?

Should the city’s next leader shake up the powerful, as Sabatino did?

Or should a mayor have that “vision thing” to project a Modesto that wouldn’t keep turning up on lists of miserable places to live?

Whiteside’s looking for the latter.

“As we come out of the recession, we ought to be talking about quality of life … the package of things you expect from a city this size,” she said.

After seven years, Ridenour’s fingerprints are all over City Hall.

During his tenure, the city dealt with unsexy subjects such as a sewer plant expansion while keeping the budget balanced in the worst economy since the Great Depression. He pivoted the city to embrace regionalized and privatized services to save taxpayers’ cash.

Ridenour’s council also accomplished a couple of political reforms that Sabatino wanted but couldn’t build a consensus to execute: raising the pay of elected officials and instituting district elections for council races. Those changes could open Modesto to new political voices over time.

Ridenour did the work without drawing much attention to himself, a counterpoint to Sabatino’s years when council meetings sometimes lasted past midnight, for good or ill.

But the council with Ridenour has been the opposite of Sabatino’s in another way. Unlike the bunch who sat on the council with Sabatino, the current group can give residents the impression that it’s an exclusive body whose members disagree over little aside from zoning disputes.

Two council members likely are going to run for mayor next year, and the field could open up with candidates with business or public safety backgrounds.

City Councilman Brad Hawn has both feet in the mayor’s race, and Councilman Garrad Marsh is rumored to be getting ready to run, too. They have virtually indistinguishable voting records on the council, but they have different politics and different bases on which to draw if they follow through.

Hawn is a Republican, an artist, an engineer, and he’s the guy who takes on some of the grunt work on utilities and budgets on the council.

Marsh is a Democrat, a supporter of nonprofit groups, the owner of McHenry Bowl, and he’s best known for advocating slow-growth policies.

Next year, rake ‘em over the coals and get them to tell you, “What’s next, Modesto?”

Are there ways to increase the options we have for providing recreational services and enhancing the lifestyles of Modesto and area citizens? How can we infuse more play into our own individual lives, and help other get out and play? In which areas can community involvement improve a bleak situation?


QUALITY OF LIFE CHALLENGE

  • REVIEW – You have educated yourself about many of Modesto’s quality of life issues in your earlier missions. How can you pass that knowledge on to others?
  • ACT – What can you do about it?Help us decide:
    • WHICH great challenges and social problems should the /Building Imagination Alliance tackle next?
    • WHO would you encourage to play Season 2?
    • HOW would you change the game for Season 2?
    • WHAT new tools would you want as a Super Hero?
    • WHY would you come back for a second Season? What more would you want from the experience?
  • IMAGINE – Unleash your creativity and return to the scene of the battle to learn what we can do next.
  • Ask A Mentor for Help

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