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Council MIN 05-19-1995 Special 1996 CITY COUNCIL BUDGET SESSION Friday, May 19, 1995 City Council Chambers } ... 2:00 p.m. Attendance: Mayor Gates; Deputy Mayor Watkins; and Councilmembers Dovey, Elder, Gintz, Priest. City Staff: Kenneth E. Nyberg, Philip Keightley, Iwen Wang, Greg Moore, Cary Roe, Larry Springer, Londi Lindell, Jennifer Schroder, Mary McDougal, Marie Mosley, John Caulfied, and Patrick Briggs. Meeting called to order at 2: 1 0 p.m. City Manager Ken Nyberg presented the preliminary budget packet to Mayor and City Council. The following is a brief summary of the discussions: I. 1996 Budget Process: Suggested process and calendar were reviewed and the following discussions ensued: . June 6 preliminary public hearing: A preliminary public hearing is scheduled for June 6 to solicit input from the general public, boards, and commissions. It was noted that the City Council are seeking new ideas/suggestions to further the City' s priorities and ways to reduce costs as well as needs. . Time Commitment: Council directed staff to simplify the budget process and take the approach of the second year of a biennial budget. Suggestions were made by Council to police each other, to keep focus on policy issues, and to save staff preparation time by identifing questions prior to meetings so staff can limit the scope of preparation. . Committee v Full Council: Staff interpretation of this discussion was that it is preferable that related issues first brought to Council Committees to workout details and report/recommend to full Council for decisions or actions. II. Council Goals: Council reviewed their 1995 goals, current status of those goals and made the following updates for their 1996 goals. The updated goals in priority order are: 1. 2. Implement the police department; Contain contracting costs, including court, jail, and health service contracts. (Staff to follow-up on whether the City could opt out of County Health Contract); Implement 1995 bond issue projects, if passed; 3. ORIGINAL 4. 5. Implement the Comprehensive Plan; Continue to develop sports fields and to include provisions for maintenance and operation; Implement neighborhood development program; and Implement affordable housing policy. 6. 7. III. City Manager Kenneth E. Nyberg presented baseline revenues, expenditure projections, and reviewed the preliminary new initiatives identified with Council: . Mr. Nyberg indicated that the COLA and PW right-of-way inspector are the two programs he would recommend at this preliminary stage. He then highlighted the pay plan request, explained the administration' s designation of 1995 as .Year of Emp/oyee' , and concern of the "at- risk" nature of the P-3 portion of the compensation plan. It was acknowledged that P- 3 is a superior system in rewarding performance with drawbacks being subjective and laborious. Council directed the City Manager to bring back long-term comparisons between P-3 and step increases. . Community Development Services: Permit counter position (0.5 FTE) should be supported by fee revenue; Sign Code inventory needs to be implemented in 1995; Council also requested that staff review permit/code enforcement activities and identify those that are mandatory vs optional and evaluate if we need to continue the optional activities. . Legal Department: It was suggested to use the jail cost savings to fund the request for an additional attorney. . Community Outreach and Policy Planning: Allow $50,000 (instead of $80,000) in total for code revision and comp plan implementation. Council also added $15,000 for Human Services planning for future discussion. . Parks, Recreation and Cultural Services Department: Discussion on proposed King County property transfer took place. Council directed staff to evaluate the proposed transfers and associated conditions (Le. can we change use to suit citizen' s needs?) before a decision is reached. . Public Works: Council directed staff to consider an emergency management plan in conjunction with the police department setup. Additionally, staff were asked to look at funding inspectors through fee revenues as part of the proposed rate structure review. IV. V. VI. City Manager Nyberg then reviewed the long-range outlook of the baseline operation. The expenditures of the baseline operation are expected to exceed revenues in 1997. A chart of different revenue sources was displayed and Council indicated that: ~ Different revenue sources ma.,'be used if an equal amount of reduction in existing sources is made. . . Any new construction and/or increased level of service should be put to vote of the people, otherwise, just maintain existing level of services (note: the intent is to maintain the activity level which could mean a lower level of service as the population grow.) . Look at new initiatives that allow more efficiency/effectiveness. Summary of policy questions raised during the discussion: . DARE program - alternatives (this may be delayed until city department is formed). . Required vs. optional permit processes - what are we doing and why? . Review cost recovery ratio for park and recreation programs. . Evaluate charge for teen nights so we are not directly in competition with the private sector; and defray some costs to provide security, and maintain the facility. . Review cost recovery ratio for bulging/land use/and public work programs. Other comments: . Need to pull revenues and expenditures together in the presentation, e.g. Visitation Retreat Center/ recreation programs. Meeting adjourned at 5: 15 p.m.