Council reviewed FY 2016-17 budgets for Development, Economic Development, HR, and Police, flagging a tripled workers' comp rate and a $250,000 buildings line for itemization.
3 items on the agenda · 4 decisions recorded
On the agenda
- 1Call to Order - Roll Call▶ 0:00
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Review of Proposed Departmental Budgets
discussedDepartment heads presented FY 2016-17 proposed budgets for Development, Economic Development, Human Resources, and Police (supervision and various divisions). Council provided feedback, including a request from Deputy Mayor Phillips to add a marketing/sponsorship line item to Economic Development, and asked staff to verify a tripled workers' comp rate and itemize building improvements in the Development budget. No formal votes were taken; this was a work session review.
- direction:Council directed staff to verify the workers' compensation rate that appeared to triple in the Development Department budget. (none)
- direction:Council directed staff to update budget figures to reflect the flat-rate health insurance increase news received the prior week. (none)
- direction:Council directed Mrs. Fierce to itemize the $250,000 building improvements line in the department overview (restrooms, glass block wall, flooring/carpet). (none)
- direction:Deputy Mayor Phillips requested consideration of adding a marketing/sponsorship line item to the Economic Development budget. (none)
Highway 19Main and GrandSims ParkBefore Brady'sBoard of RealtorsHeirs AssociatesMain Street LandingsNorthwestern Mutual InsurancePEDCThe HaciendaBernie WongCouncilman DavisCrystalDebbie ManzDeputy Mayor PhillipsJoe PoblickMr. BogartMr. IazzoniMrs. FierceAccount 1516 health insurance waiver stipendAccount 2511 unemployment compensationAccount 3199 professional services miscellaneousAccount 3413 employee support programAccount 3499 contractual services miscellaneousAccount 6299 building improvementsAccounts 4511/4521/4523 liability/building/auto insuranceCRA budgetCommunity Development Block GrantComprehensive plan amendmentsDefined contribution plan (2214)Downtown parking garage analysisFY 2016-17 Proposed BudgetFlorida Retirement System (account 2211)Leadership Pasco tourMarine District overlay conceptNeighborhood Stabilization ProgramPolice pension fundResidential rental inspection programSign code amendment phase two▶ Jump to 0:15 in the videoShow transcriptHide transcript
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[00:00:15] I think we all made it back from supper, so the first and only item [00:00:19] on the agenda is the review of proposed department budgets. [00:00:23] Ms. Manz? [00:00:24] Mr. Mayor, we'd like to take over where we left off the last time we were [00:00:28] together and present the second half of the departmental budgets to you. [00:00:34] And this evening, we're going to start with the development department. [00:00:37] And so we have Mrs. Fierce before you. [00:00:41] Evening. [00:00:43] In terms of the personnel services, there is an increase in the budget [00:00:49] amount for the development department for that item. [00:00:53] And that's due to a change in some staffing we had this past year. [00:00:59] And in order to attract a qualified and experienced residential rental inspector, [00:01:04] we had to be a little more competitive with some of our surrounding jurisdictions [00:01:10] in terms of the salary. [00:01:11] And then the items that are 2111 through 2432 are all those that are adjusted [00:01:19] based on increase in rates, which I know you've heard from different [00:01:23] department heads talking to you about that. [00:01:26] So those changes would represent an increase in the overall personnel services [00:01:34] portion of the budget. [00:01:37] In terms of the operating items, we're looking for a little bit more funding [00:01:42] for our city engineer services. [00:01:45] We have hired heirs associates, as you know, and they provide development [00:01:52] review services for us as well as some other services for the public works staff. [00:01:57] And we've found them to be a competent and reliable staff, and we have found [00:02:01] ourselves to be in need of their services a little more often. [00:02:07] For the professional services planning line item, that would include the balance [00:02:13] of the sign code amendment that I know you're aware we've completed phase one [00:02:19] with the attorney. [00:02:21] The attorney will be involved in phase two, and then the other consultant [00:02:26] will be leading the balance of that amendment. [00:02:30] So that coupled with some, what we feel would be maybe some minor [00:02:34] comprehensive plan amendments that we may need external services for, would it [00:02:39] include the $50,000 in professional services for planning? [00:02:45] We have added a line item that's listed as 42XX, and that would be postage for [00:02:54] the residential inspection program. [00:02:57] I guess we thought we would want to call that out as a separate line item. [00:03:01] It would include certified mail that would be necessary for when we actually [00:03:04] have to officially notice property owners about their properties that are [00:03:12] not in compliance, and when we take them to magistrate or court. [00:03:17] So that's a new line item. [00:03:19] The next one on there is the lease of the copier, which is just going up about $1,000. [00:03:26] And we've added a notary to the staffing, so now we've added a little cost for that. [00:03:32] Towards the bottom, we have increases in both dues and memberships, as well as books [00:03:38] and publications. [00:03:41] Because we've added more staff, we have more needs, and so they all are members of [00:03:45] their affiliated professional memberships. [00:03:50] And we have had to budget for code books, FEMA publications, and construction [00:03:56] standards to keep up with the current standards that are in the industry in terms of building. [00:04:05] And that represents pretty much the changes from last year. [00:04:10] So those would be the increases that we're seeking. [00:04:14] Can you explain the workman's comp? [00:04:17] I cannot, but I bet the finance department could. [00:04:19] If you'll allow me. [00:04:20] Yeah, please. [00:04:21] So the worker's comp class, we have two different line items for that in her department because [00:04:30] we've got two different classifications of employees working for her. [00:04:35] And the worker's comp code that's assigned to the employees is audited on an annual basis [00:04:43] by the state. [00:04:45] So it went from 10 to 33, that's what caused it to go from that one to the other? [00:04:51] The rates for that particular category have increased from last year. [00:04:56] Tell the guys not to go up on the roof and inspect from the ground and not on the roof. [00:05:00] Just kidding. [00:05:01] That's not an increase, that's triple. [00:05:04] Yeah. [00:05:05] We're going to verify that number because it does seem really high. [00:05:13] This man's report on Friday indicated that the health insurance had, is there still going [00:05:22] to be an increase in the health insurance or not? [00:05:25] Because obviously that's going to be reflected in every one of these budgets we've looked [00:05:28] at. [00:05:29] This increase that we've seen, it'll be smaller, there'll be something depending on personnel [00:05:36] or their wages going up or something I would imagine. [00:05:40] Right. [00:05:41] The estimates that we've presented to you so far do not include the fact that we'll [00:05:46] be provided a flat rate increase this year. [00:05:52] Crystal was off last week so she couldn't make the adjustment. [00:05:56] Just wanted to make sure that you're, the information we got, so we are going to see [00:06:01] changes across the board there. [00:06:03] Yes, you should expect to see changes. [00:06:06] I also mentioned that I forgot to point out that 3499, which is contractual services miscellany, [00:06:12] has gone up from 50 to 80,000 and that's because we no longer can rely on the Neighborhood [00:06:19] Stabilization Program funding that we've had for several years through the county. [00:06:27] There's no longer that funding available so that money is used for slum and blight removal. [00:06:34] As we're doing about 10 a year, we think that we need about 80,000 to cover additional. [00:06:39] Do we put, don't we put the burden back on them in a, in a, okay, so we have to pay it [00:06:46] out front but we might get it back in revenue at some point. [00:06:49] At the time of title transfer. [00:06:50] Okay. [00:06:51] The other question is, is that the county decided not to fund that particular line item [00:06:56] with their windfall and their millage? [00:07:01] It's actually a community development block grant funded. [00:07:05] Is that Roman Goley managed? [00:07:07] That's correct. [00:07:08] Okay. [00:07:09] The Neighborhood Stabilization was, is a federal program that there's no more dollars for that [00:07:14] we were getting the money through the county and again, those dollars have dried up, if [00:07:19] you will. [00:07:20] Ms. Fierce, did you say that you added employees to your, to your world? [00:07:28] We have a senior staff assistant position that you know as the front receptionist and [00:07:36] that was transferred last year from the city manager's overview to the development department [00:07:42] and we did add a residential rental inspector. [00:07:46] So that could account for some part of that workers comp because I believe it's, it's [00:07:51] per. [00:07:52] The residential rental inspector was a brand new position and the front desk receptionist [00:08:01] was converted from a part-time position to a full-time position but it, I don't think [00:08:07] would account for the numbers that we're showing on your 16-17 budget request. [00:08:15] I think Crystal and I both think that there must be an error somewhere and we'll track [00:08:19] it down. [00:08:20] So what about the, on the health insurance side too because I thought we said we weren't [00:08:24] going to see much change but it went up almost $20,000. [00:08:30] I'm sorry, I might not have been clear when I responded to Deputy Mayor Phillips' question [00:08:35] earlier. [00:08:37] These documents don't reflect the fact that we won't see a rate increase this year. [00:08:44] We just learned of that news last week and we have not redone the forms. [00:08:49] Okay, good, thank you. [00:08:51] We will do that before the next presentation to you. [00:08:55] The last thing is on 6,299, I know we spent $250,000 last year, what, and in your goals [00:09:06] and objectives it's not listed as a, as one of the things that was going to be dealt with [00:09:14] this year, but what falls under building improvements, that's a $250,000 is a pretty [00:09:21] good umbrella. [00:09:22] Actually, we didn't spend the $250,000 in this current fiscal year, but what that would [00:09:27] include are improvements to the building including the restroom facilities, the block wall that [00:09:36] we see out front to convert that to a glass block wall, right, converting that. [00:09:42] Is this $250,000 carried over from last year? [00:09:44] Essentially it's a carryover. [00:09:46] Because I thought part of it had to do with the roof elements and some of the other things, [00:09:50] was that it? [00:09:51] That was in a separate capital budget item? [00:09:55] That's correct, yep. [00:09:56] The roof was separate. [00:09:57] All right. [00:09:58] We're also going to be doing the flooring, the carpet in the building. [00:10:06] And we didn't implement the improvements this fiscal year because we had just too many [00:10:12] capital projects without bonding for any loan monies. [00:10:18] So we held back. [00:10:19] In your, in your department overview, would you please add to the building improvements [00:10:23] and would you itemize them in case somebody from the outside looked at this and said, [00:10:29] you wouldn't even reference it, so that way they understand that it moved from one to [00:10:35] the other and these are the three or four things that we have projected to do more facility [00:10:42] improvements to. [00:10:44] Thanks. [00:10:45] Any other questions? [00:10:48] Right. [00:10:49] Thank you. [00:10:52] The next departmental budget that we'd like to represent to you this evening is economic [00:10:58] development. [00:10:59] Mr. Iazzoni will represent the budget. [00:11:02] Thank you very much, city manager and council. [00:11:18] This part of the budget primarily consists of staffing, primarily comes out of the general [00:11:22] fund. [00:11:23] And we're recommending pretty much the same, same as last year for the economic development [00:11:28] director and one administrative assistant. [00:11:33] Very little changes, pretty much straightforward. [00:11:36] Travel and training, we don't consume much of that, so that's going down considerably. [00:11:42] Other than that, it's, except for the increases in health care insurance, it's pretty much [00:11:46] identical to the prior year. [00:11:49] Not planning to do that much traveling or training. [00:11:55] Looks like it was five grand last year, now you've got two year marked. [00:12:01] There's a lot, we're seeing just a very strong interest in the town in terms of how it's [00:12:09] evolving. [00:12:10] Classic examples on Friday, three, one large property owner on Highway 19 and another one [00:12:16] called me and the best thing that I can do is remain accessible to the investment capitalists [00:12:20] looking at this town. [00:12:23] Some of those projects take 18 months to negotiate them, some of those projects are just business [00:12:30] owners that are generally interested in what's happening in the climate of the town. [00:12:35] I feel the greatest value that I can bring is to be accessible to those individuals within [00:12:39] New Port Richey. [00:12:42] If I see something related to economic development, obviously I will pursue that for additional [00:12:47] education, but I call it stick to my knitting year. [00:12:51] We have several irons in the fires that are moving along and at any point in time, one [00:12:57] of those individuals that we're working with will call me and I help facilitate that process [00:13:01] in conjunction with the direction the city manager provides. [00:13:05] Deputy Mayor. [00:13:08] Yeah, Mr. Mayor, underneath the expense side, I'd love for us to consider a line item that [00:13:17] would be designated to marketing and sponsorship from the economic development side. [00:13:23] I know you think you're Northwestern Mutual Insurance, the quiet company, and that you're [00:13:28] a quiet department, but we do a terrible job of tooting our own horn and if we don't give [00:13:35] you a line item for you to strategically put your face on those big boards out there, then [00:13:43] we under ... I'm not saying it's the best ... They don't want to put our faces on there [00:13:47] either, but at the end of the day, it would make sense to me if we're ... You can't market [00:13:53] something that you don't put out in front of people, so I'd like to consider that. [00:13:58] Also underneath your initiatives for this year, I just had a couple of questions. [00:14:06] You had growth of the number of marine district firms to go along with the approach side. [00:14:13] Also, the availability of the infrastructure and the CRA cooperation, and if there'd be [00:14:22] any thought to looking at a marine district overlay. [00:14:26] These are suggestions, these aren't ... I'm just throwing these out here, because this [00:14:30] is the only time we get to say it in public. [00:14:33] The other is, obviously, you've got the west and east main. [00:14:39] You talk about retail capacity, I think we ought to raise our hand and talk about, why [00:14:44] don't we just call it what it is? [00:14:47] Parking garage. [00:14:48] Look at ... Analyzing the possibility of doing some kind of a parking structure in our downtown. [00:14:57] I don't care if people know about it. [00:15:00] To me, that's an economic development tool for you. [00:15:03] We've talked about it. [00:15:04] We're engaging on it. [00:15:11] And the other is, I'll find it. [00:15:17] The other is, we don't talk much about our initiatives [00:15:20] when we talk about neighborhoods. [00:15:22] We talk about economic development. [00:15:25] I think we've been trying to get to a point [00:15:28] where we could look at some neighborhood elements. [00:15:31] Because we have money here. [00:15:32] We have money in the development. [00:15:37] So those all need to tie together. [00:15:39] So those are my questions and concerns. [00:15:41] Thank you. [00:15:43] And the other is, I'm disappointed [00:15:45] that we didn't have the CRA budget to piggyback [00:15:47] on the back of this. [00:15:48] We get to do it tomorrow night. [00:15:50] I would have thought that these two tandem together [00:15:53] would have been a much better way of talking [00:15:55] about economic development and the CRA at the same time. [00:15:59] But I know we'll get to it tomorrow night. [00:16:02] Councilman, can I ask you a question? [00:16:04] Regarding your marketing comment, [00:16:08] were you referring to marketing like our accomplishments [00:16:10] thus far, or potential developments, or both? [00:16:14] It's a big umbrella. [00:16:15] I'd like for them to be able to have some dedicated dollars [00:16:20] so that they could come to us and say, [00:16:21] I want to advertise here, or I want to do this, [00:16:25] or perfect example is, we've had some people come into town [00:16:30] that didn't finish their developments [00:16:32] in a timely fashion. [00:16:34] And we have right-of-way access in front of them [00:16:37] so that we could put up some kind of a barrier. [00:16:40] Not a barrier, but something that says, [00:16:43] you know, city of New Port Richey, [00:16:45] progress underway, or whatever. [00:16:47] Because we lived with that situation [00:16:50] at Main and Grand for almost two years. [00:16:54] I just want them to be able to have money in the budget [00:16:58] to come to us and say, I've got this idea, [00:17:01] or I want to be able to add better signage, better [00:17:06] notification. [00:17:08] You know, if he wants to go buy breakfast [00:17:10] for the board of realtors, so that he can bring them in. [00:17:14] Because part of the other thing later [00:17:15] is, we've got a whole series of surplus property here, [00:17:19] and I don't know whose silo that's [00:17:22] going to fall under. [00:17:24] But if we want to generate revenue [00:17:26] to do other economic development things, [00:17:29] I just want to make sure they've got some dedicated tools [00:17:32] to do that in talking about. [00:17:36] So those are my examples. [00:17:39] One thing I would definitely, I may agree with both sides [00:17:41] of that, but I will say, as far as marketing [00:17:43] the accomplishments thus far, since we decided to kind of [00:17:48] bring you on, instead of using the PEDC to the extent [00:17:51] we're using them, you know, a great example [00:17:53] is when Councilman Davis had the leadership, PASCA, come, [00:18:00] and we all split up and did tours around the city. [00:18:03] And these were folks attending this program [00:18:06] from all over the county. [00:18:07] And pretty much everyone in my group had no idea. [00:18:11] Sims Park was almost done. [00:18:12] They'd never heard of the Dulcet. [00:18:14] They didn't know that Main Street Landings was pretty [00:18:16] close to being back on track. [00:18:19] They had no idea that we had a Before Brady's coming in. [00:18:22] Had no idea where we were with the Hacienda. [00:18:25] And they were very, very impressed when we did our tour. [00:18:28] But I guess I agree with Councilman Phillips. [00:18:30] It'd be nice to be able to market what we've done so far. [00:18:33] I think that will help attract potential investors [00:18:36] down the road as well. [00:18:38] We've done some really good things [00:18:39] and just kind of been quiet about it. [00:18:40] Unless you live here, you don't really know. [00:18:42] So I don't know the best way to go about doing so. [00:18:44] But just that tour alone just got the word out quite a bit. [00:18:48] And I'm sure you all had the same response [00:18:50] in your particular groups. [00:18:53] Just food for thought. [00:18:54] Just a little piggyback on that. [00:18:56] It was the best part of that day for the class. [00:19:01] That's the feedback that I got. [00:19:07] Thank you very much. [00:19:07] Thank you. [00:19:11] Mrs. Wong, you're up next. [00:19:15] We've got the human resources budget for you. [00:19:19] Thank you. [00:19:28] Good evening, Mr. Mayor and members of Council. [00:19:30] Tonight, I will be presenting the human resources budget. [00:19:33] Just a quick overview of the Human Resources Department. [00:19:36] We're responsible for supervising [00:19:38] the overall operation of the city's employment practices [00:19:41] and risk management functions. [00:19:43] The division assists the city manager [00:19:45] in formulating administrative principles, practices, [00:19:48] and policies throughout the various city departments. [00:19:52] First, under professional services, [00:19:54] you'll see a dramatic decrease in account 2511, [00:19:58] which is unemployment compensation claims. [00:20:01] This was decreased from $31,000 to $10,000. [00:20:06] The past few years, average spent in this account [00:20:09] was $6,000. [00:20:15] That will decrease the personnel services 15.35%. [00:20:20] Next, under operating and capital expenses, [00:20:23] the first one is 3199, professional services [00:20:28] miscellaneous. [00:20:30] This account has been decreased from $13,000 to $10,000. [00:20:35] This account is mainly used for pre-employment drug screenings [00:20:38] and background screenings. [00:20:39] The past few years, the average spent in this account [00:20:42] has been between $6,000 and $8,000. [00:20:46] Next, under account 3413, employee support program, [00:20:55] this account has been increased from $4,000 to $6,000. [00:20:59] This is to accommodate the two employee luncheons that we have [00:21:03] and to also begin a years of service [00:21:05] program for our employees. [00:21:09] The next increases you will see are in accounts 4511, 4521, [00:21:16] and 4523. [00:21:18] These are the city's liability insurance, [00:21:21] billing and contents, and automobile insurances. [00:21:25] I spoke to our insurance representative, [00:21:29] and they said to expect an overall increase in those three [00:21:33] of 15% across the board. [00:21:35] So it's about 5% for each account. [00:21:39] We won't get those numbers until probably [00:21:42] late August or September, but that's [00:21:44] what they told us to account for. [00:21:48] That increases my total of the department's operating [00:21:52] and capital expense to 3.06%. [00:21:56] And that concludes my presentation, [00:21:58] if you guys have any questions. [00:22:02] Hearing none, thank you. [00:22:10] Mr. Bogart, we have the police department budget next. [00:22:19] And he has several divisions. [00:22:30] Start with police department supervision, if that's all right. [00:22:40] Thank you. [00:22:53] I think we really kind of skated over, [00:22:55] Bernie skated over the fact that we've [00:22:57] saved so much money in workers' compensation insurance, [00:23:01] but it really is to her credit that she's so aggressively [00:23:03] managing our cases. [00:23:05] So thank you, Bernie. [00:23:08] Thank you. [00:23:10] Obviously, we stopped paying somebody [00:23:12] who filed for us after we paid him to go away. [00:23:18] I hate going over that over again, [00:23:20] but I don't have to talk nice about the guy any further. [00:23:23] I don't have to do it. [00:23:25] You know, if you look at that line item, [00:23:28] he filed twice, unemployment against us [00:23:32] after we agreed for him to exit us [00:23:35] in a very professional manner. [00:23:37] And yes, it sticks in my craw every time [00:23:39] I see that budget item. [00:23:41] But you've done a great job this last year. [00:23:43] And obviously, between you, Joe Poblick, and the manager, [00:23:48] been able to manage those employee issues [00:23:51] very effectively. [00:23:52] And we can't thank you enough for that. [00:23:59] I'll be addressing his police supervision. [00:24:02] And because we have for six departments, [00:24:07] divisions within my department to go through, [00:24:10] what I'd like to do is to focus on the things [00:24:12] where there are changes so that, and if you do have questions, [00:24:15] please interrupt me. [00:24:17] The first spot that you'll see a change [00:24:23] is account 1516, which is the health insurance waiver [00:24:29] stipend. [00:24:29] You'll see that's gone down to nothing. [00:24:33] That program is being done away with. [00:24:36] Then the next one is under 2211, the Florida retirement system. [00:24:44] That changes, you'll have, I think [00:24:46] you should have the same notes. [00:24:47] Do you have notes out to the side on yours? [00:24:49] No. [00:24:50] OK. [00:24:50] That is due to a change in rates. [00:24:55] The next category is the police pension fund. [00:25:01] But I see that that doesn't have an indicator there. [00:25:05] Is that because we don't have a rate yet? [00:25:10] Oh, in this account, yeah. [00:25:12] That's correct. [00:25:13] I only have one person funded through that. [00:25:15] And that, actually, he's in drop. [00:25:19] So that's not, that's why there's [00:25:21] nothing in that this year. [00:25:26] Again, the 2214 is the defined contribution plan. [00:25:32] There's a change in the rates where that has gone down. [00:25:36] The health insurance and all the, [00:25:39] that's actually the increase there [00:25:41] is due to a change in the rate. [00:25:44] And, again, like in the last, like in Bernie's arena, [00:25:53] that has gone down in this category several thousand [00:25:57] dollars. [00:26:01] Employee physicals under 3131, we [00:26:05] don't have as many vacancies at this point. [00:26:07] And I anticipate less of those physicals. [00:26:11] Pay all the physicals out of that line, chief? [00:26:14] Yes, sir. [00:26:14] Every applicant that we have, once they're. [00:26:17] Every applicant? [00:26:18] Yeah, once they're actually, not I misspoke. [00:26:21] Any applicant who makes it through the process [00:26:23] and gets a conditional job offer, [00:26:24] and we begin their process. [00:26:26] When all that stuff comes back, we [00:26:28] send them off for a comprehensive physical. [00:26:29] Very good. [00:26:30] Thank you. [00:26:36] Contractual services has gone up a little bit. [00:26:39] That, that's 3499. [00:26:42] That particular category tends to go up and down, [00:26:45] depending on who we have contracts with. [00:26:47] The increase there, the $4,000 increase, [00:26:50] is due to the new software that we're bringing on board, [00:26:54] Southern Software. [00:26:55] That's for our records management system and our CAD. [00:26:59] I don't think we have 3499 in this budget. [00:27:02] No, we do not. [00:27:03] Thank you. [00:27:03] OK. [00:27:06] It goes from 34 to 4011. [00:27:10] It goes from 34 what? [00:27:11] On page 15. [00:27:12] 34, 13, 33 to 41. [00:27:16] Oh, if there's just one. [00:27:18] OK, then there's an insert there. [00:27:21] It shows a line item, and this is something [00:27:23] that we've had in prior budgets of 24. [00:27:28] There's always more than 20. [00:27:31] It's between $20,000 and $30,000. [00:27:33] Usually it's in that account for all of our contracts [00:27:35] that we have. [00:27:36] They fall under the police supervision category. [00:27:40] And it's gone from our amended budget right now of $20,000, [00:27:45] where it's going to be $24,000 in the new budget. [00:27:51] You've apparently made some type of an error, [00:27:53] so we'll correct it so that they all get what you have. [00:27:56] Correct. [00:27:57] Thank you. [00:28:10] For me, the next category with a change [00:28:13] is 4311, which is our electric, our city facilities electric. [00:28:18] And I think due to the efficiencies in our department [00:28:21] in terms of the equipment that's been installed, [00:28:24] but that's dropping $3,000. [00:28:38] Frankly, in that. [00:28:39] Everything else looks good. [00:28:40] I'm not seeing it. [00:28:42] Yeah. [00:28:43] Yeah. [00:28:43] I'm not seeing more in there. [00:28:46] The next category, or the next division, is numbered 62. [00:28:52] That includes our police support services, [00:28:55] which includes our dispatch crime scene and our victim advocate. [00:28:59] And the significant changes there are there's a $20,000 [00:29:13] increase in regular full-time wages. [00:29:22] That's the normal salary increases [00:29:25] across the board for all of the folks that work in that area. [00:29:35] Health insurance stipend, again, 15-16 is going away. [00:29:44] In that department, Chief, which employees [00:29:48] qualify for the pension fund, and which ones [00:29:52] qualify for Florida retirement? [00:29:55] Actually, in that area, everyone. [00:30:00] Dispatch, Crime Scene, and Victim Advocate are all Florida pension. [00:30:06] They're all Florida pension? [00:30:08] Oh, except for the lieutenant that's in there, the division head. [00:30:11] Okay. That's where the pension fund is for the lieutenant? Okay. [00:30:17] Some of them don't work, Jana. Yeah. [00:30:20] I have another question. [00:30:24] Your overtime wages, it's going from like $10,000 to $40,000. [00:30:30] Is it almost worthy of another employee? [00:30:35] Well, this is challenging to predict. [00:30:40] A lot of our overtime is generated in the dispatch area, [00:30:43] and if we have someone call in sick or for whatever reason can't make it to work, [00:30:51] then we're into an overtime mode almost immediately. [00:30:54] In years past, the actuals, if you go back to 1450, in this division, we were at $69,000. [00:31:07] Yeah. Well, that means you got your act together. [00:31:10] Thank you. [00:31:13] But I'm just curious. You expect it to go back. [00:31:17] In all candor, I've asked along the way for an additional position in there, [00:31:22] but it's one of those things. [00:31:25] There's more important areas right now that I feel like the overtime, [00:31:28] I'm able to have some flexibility there. [00:31:31] Sometimes when you have just a single body, [00:31:34] it doesn't accomplish what you really need to be able to do because you only need four hours here. [00:31:38] A flex schedule. [00:31:40] It gives me some flexibility to operate in that mode. [00:31:42] With that, I'm good with it. [00:31:52] Significant change. [00:31:53] If you look at 2311, that's $107,000 in the health insurance. [00:32:01] Chief, we've discussed part of that. [00:32:04] Yes. [00:32:05] Is that as of the end of last week, they got a comparable? [00:32:09] I heard that. I don't know what the rate is. [00:32:11] So that line is going to adjust. [00:32:14] It's going to adjust to our favor. [00:32:17] So there will be that difference. [00:32:20] That number that's there really doesn't have any meaning to us tonight. [00:32:24] We do know that depending on what your wage increase is, there will be a little change. [00:32:29] But, yeah, it will all blend in. [00:32:32] The other component to that is that we have to assume that a certain number of people [00:32:38] that currently subscribe to the payment in lieu of insurance program will opt to participate [00:32:44] in the city's health insurance program. [00:32:47] So we had to program some additional funds there to cover for the potentiality. [00:32:53] What I'll do, starting right now, is as I go through the rest of these, [00:32:56] I'm going to leave that category alone because it's out of my control, [00:32:59] and you'll get the final numbers later to deal with it. [00:33:04] Workers' comp, again, I've heard that with the other divisions [00:33:08] and the other departments that have been up here. [00:33:10] That's going down significantly. [00:33:16] Travel and training for this area. [00:33:19] I do spend a considerable amount of money for training, and we'll continue to do that. [00:33:25] But our trending has not been up to the level that I had at the amended budget. [00:33:29] I've had some personnel changes, and so I'm not sending to them as many training classes [00:33:36] as quickly as I have in the past for other people in there as they fit into their jobs. [00:33:41] So that's been reduced a little bit of $4,000. [00:33:53] Licensing and ID materials, what do they refer to? [00:33:57] What category are you in, please? [00:33:58] I'm sorry, 5241. [00:34:03] Well, that's, if you'll recall, a year or two ago, we developed an in-house training program [00:34:12] for our dispatchers to get them properly certified to be 911 certified dispatchers. [00:34:17] Along with that, there's a state test that they take, and then there's some... [00:34:24] I'm sorry? [00:34:26] Well, and that's what it rolls into is a certification fee that we maintain, [00:34:32] as well as some digital data. [00:34:35] It's a company that we deal with where we have data that we deal with with them. [00:34:43] And then our law enforcement, we have a field training program for dispatchers. [00:34:50] It costs us for a monthly maintenance on that, [00:34:52] so that's one thing that would fall into there as well. [00:34:55] It's a record-keeping system. [00:35:03] Unless you have a question. [00:35:10] The next is police community services, [00:35:12] which is basically our criminal investigation division, our detective division. [00:35:17] You're going to see the very first category, 1299. [00:35:24] The amount in that category went down significantly. [00:35:30] That's because I've moved some officers out of CID into a special squad [00:35:35] that I've spoken to you about before that's a street crimes unit. [00:35:39] So it just pulled that money out of there and subsequently increased it. [00:35:42] It's going to be under the police patrol section when we go over there. [00:35:46] So it's just moving from one account to another. [00:35:54] The off-duty pay, which is 1528. [00:35:58] You'll see a significant increase there. [00:36:01] And, frankly, I think before the budget's over with, [00:36:03] you'll see an even greater amount there. [00:36:05] That's off-duty work. [00:36:06] That's where the officers go work at North Bay or they work at other places. [00:36:09] So as the revenue increases coming in on one side, then there's also that money going out. [00:36:15] It's not directly a part of my immediate operating budget. [00:36:19] Is that where SROs come out of too? [00:36:23] Oh, sir. [00:36:24] That's in another spot? [00:36:25] It's strictly off-duty. [00:36:26] Let me just call it off-duty work. [00:36:28] You know, businesses that hire our officers to perform basically security operations, [00:36:33] like the wing house does that, the hospital does that, [00:36:36] and the hospital expanded our time over there to where we were putting in, [00:36:41] I think we were at eight hours a day. [00:36:45] Now we are at an additional 12. [00:36:49] Yeah, we have a total of 12 hours a day now that officers are there seven days a week. [00:36:53] Does that also include special event stuff that the organizations are paying you? [00:37:00] Part of the overtime budget. [00:37:03] Yeah, well, no, it's 50-50 on that. [00:37:08] Not exactly those proportions, but some of the special events that we do that you authorize, [00:37:15] and as part of the city thing, we kind of absorb that into my overtime budget [00:37:19] where I need extra people. [00:37:21] But then when there's an event that's held by an outside entity, [00:37:25] then that money, you know, where they pay us back, [00:37:29] that actually, if it was detectives that were working it, [00:37:33] you know, they were out there in uniform working that event, [00:37:35] then that money would, I think, fall into that category. [00:37:38] Am I not right? [00:37:41] That's the primary place where you're going to see those dollars. [00:37:45] Can I ask a practical question, Chief? [00:37:49] That off-duty pay, that overtime pay, that special event pay, [00:37:56] does that all go back into their net wages that we pay pension benefits off of? [00:38:03] Yes, it does. [00:38:07] Off-duty as well? [00:38:08] No, I don't think off-duty does. [00:38:19] Isn't their contract limited on how many hours they can go towards pension? [00:38:26] I'm not aware of that restriction on the contract. [00:38:29] That was partially the reason for my question, [00:38:33] is obviously we're doing some in-kind, or we do some in-kind for certain events, [00:38:40] and then that overtime pay that comes out, I mean, you know, [00:38:45] and this off-duty and everything else, they can make some pretty good dollars. [00:38:51] For some reason, 150 hours a year is what I thought would go towards their pension. [00:38:56] We'll get back with you with a correct response. [00:38:59] On both of those issues. [00:39:02] I'm not sure, so I don't want to try to respond. [00:39:06] I just wanted to make sure I understood the math, and, again, it changes periodically. [00:39:25] And I have an answer for you there, and that is actually there's the $70,000 that's there. [00:39:31] That is because we are required to, in the comm center, [00:39:36] to upgrade our equipment in there to something called P-25 compliant. [00:39:41] That is all of our radios that we still have that are not P-25. [00:39:46] It's a more advanced level of communications. [00:39:50] I'm sure Brian could explain the technology behind all that better than me, [00:39:54] but the county is going to a sheriff's office. [00:39:59] All around us are going to it, and we have to go to it. [00:40:03] So it's a fixed thing that we have to do. [00:40:06] But our actual individual radios, the radios in our cars, [00:40:09] they're being swapped out radio for radio at no cost to us [00:40:13] because it's coming out of the penny for pasco money, and the county is taking care of that. [00:40:18] But what we are left with, because we're separate from them with our dispatch center, [00:40:22] is our consoles, the two working consoles that are there, and that's what this pays for. [00:40:28] One time shot. Yes, sir. [00:40:31] Bill brought up a little earlier about a marketing with Mario, [00:40:36] and you have your incentive for fiscal year 17 is launch an anti-prostitution campaign [00:40:43] through signage, social media, and public service announcements. [00:40:49] And I don't see any line item here, but that's kind of a marketing thing, [00:40:54] and I thought maybe some funds might be looked into there, or if we're going to, in my opinion, [00:40:59] and Bill and I have talked a little bit about it at council meetings, [00:41:02] a communication marketing position, that maybe some of that money would be in there, [00:41:08] or maybe it's in this. [00:41:10] I'm sorry, Chief. Go ahead. [00:41:12] Well, we haven't talked. [00:41:14] Debbie and I have spoken about that, and it's something I'm pretty excited about. [00:41:18] I really want to do it, and I was going to rob Peter to pay Paul [00:41:22] and try to figure out where to find the money to do those things, [00:41:25] and some of it is potentially able to do it through maybe some forfeiture money that we bring in [00:41:34] and some of those other avenues that I've come to you in the past with and said, [00:41:37] here's something we want to do. [00:41:39] Can I spend this money for that? [00:41:41] So I was kind of thinking about going down that path and not coming in directly [00:41:45] and asking for it as part of my budget. [00:41:47] I don't know what it would cost at this point. [00:41:51] It's, again, back to the thing that Bill has, it's kind of marketing the city, [00:41:55] marketing them to go somewhere else. [00:41:58] I won't say where, but somewhere else. [00:42:00] I appreciate that because obviously somebody shared something on Facebook the other day [00:42:04] about rankings of cities in Florida, and it just ticks me off [00:42:13] because you can benchmark anything you want. [00:42:18] I can benchmark that I've got too much gray hair, it's too short, it's parted in the middle, [00:42:23] all because of the way they wrote the dynamic. [00:42:27] But again, if we don't address certain causalities of those, [00:42:32] part of it has to do with better policing, better firing, all those. [00:42:37] As Benjamin Franklin once famously noted, there are three types of lies, [00:42:41] lies, damn lies, and statistics. [00:42:44] That particular website uses the numerator as all the crime on anything. [00:42:49] It's in the New Port Richey zip code, and then for the denominator, [00:42:52] they divide it by the city proper population, and it makes us look awful. [00:42:58] That keeps showing up on Facebook about every three or four months. [00:43:02] Somebody starts quoting it again, and it was garbage the first time I saw it, [00:43:06] and it's still garbage today. [00:43:09] The point that we need to be able to get out in front of that stuff and actually. [00:43:14] We're talking in our staff, Debbie's staff, about strategies for that. [00:43:19] I wanted to back up, Chief. [00:43:20] You talked about changing out your monitors and stuff and dispatch and all that. [00:43:24] Consoles, yes. [00:43:25] Consoles. [00:43:26] Those will obviously be the same consoles that they use on the county level. [00:43:32] They're like kind, so whatever the county has, they're going to be compatible [00:43:36] so we can make that statement in a public setting that those are being changed out [00:43:42] just like the ones in emergency management, and so they're all in the same. [00:43:46] Because that was what was going to happen when they were going to do [00:43:48] the consolidated thing at one time, which is past history. [00:43:54] But I just wanted to make sure that those were like, kind. [00:43:57] You're 100% right. [00:43:58] We're all going to be on the same sheet of music. [00:43:59] Okay, super. [00:44:01] Can anybody play? [00:44:04] With the council's permission, I think we can move on to patrol. [00:44:16] You'll see in 1299 that there's an increase in the regular full-time wages, [00:44:24] and I'm asking you for permission to add two additional officers. [00:44:29] I intend to expand my street crimes unit as well as supplement where we need in patrol as well. [00:44:40] There's a couple of positions that I haven't moved back into the areas where they belong. [00:44:45] One is over in our detective division, and before I can do that, [00:44:48] I need to, in order to handle our calls adequately, increase the number of officers that I have. [00:45:00] This is also, as Jan is pointing out to me with her scribbling over here, is that that's [00:45:04] also where those two officers got moved over into this category. [00:45:07] Thank you. [00:45:08] Can we back up on one thing I read on their initiatives? [00:45:12] Increased marine presence along the river, the schedules and workload permit. [00:45:17] Do you have any desire to have our police boat more accessible on maybe a boat lift [00:45:22] like the boat launch? [00:45:24] I'd love to have something like that. [00:45:27] I know from where. [00:45:28] Because we're looking at putting a lot of money into our boat launch facility. [00:45:32] Where Richie has there is you can just drop and go. [00:45:34] Having to go over to Pine Hill Road, hook it up, bring it, drop it, park it, yank it [00:45:42] out every time an officer goes out in the water. [00:45:44] I just think it's something we should look at. [00:45:46] I don't think it would take up too much space, have a lock gate going out to it. [00:45:49] Right across from Sims Park, it shows a police presence on the water. [00:45:53] We're already looking into doing changes to the boat ramp facility. [00:45:57] I think it's something we should look into as to the cost of just building a small little [00:46:03] T-Dock out there with a lift to put our police boat on. [00:46:08] Instead of DAB, it wouldn't be that much? [00:46:10] Something like that would be so advantageous. [00:46:12] Right now, I lose two officers for such an extended period of time just to get the boat [00:46:18] in the water, out of the water, and back to storage. [00:46:21] You could drop and go, and hop in your car, and go on to whatever. [00:46:25] I think it's something we should really consider. [00:46:26] Excellent point, Mr. Starkey. [00:46:27] Great. [00:46:28] If you could be part of phase two of the park. [00:46:32] Just so you get consensus, I agree with that. [00:46:34] So that gives you two or three or four of us to put that presence there on the river. [00:46:41] Great idea. [00:46:45] How many of our officers are marine certified? [00:46:51] Right now, well, I have about four or five, but what's happened is some of those folks [00:46:56] have been promoted along the way, and they're not as successful to me. [00:47:01] So actually, we're looking forward to when the next training school is, and I intend [00:47:06] to send a couple of officers to that. [00:47:08] But short answer to your question is, right now, I have two that are readily available [00:47:12] to me. [00:47:14] I would really, I mean, considering that I want to, you know, I think this is a river [00:47:19] city that we need more than the two plus two, you know, really. [00:47:24] I had five. [00:47:25] Five or six. [00:47:26] Yeah. [00:47:27] I mean, I could see it slowly that everybody's qualified, or at least two or three people [00:47:32] on each shift. [00:47:33] You know, it's just the accident that could happen that we could never recover from because [00:47:39] we didn't have the qualified people would be enormous. [00:47:42] And I'm working toward that, to where I have some available. [00:47:44] Some don't want to do it. [00:47:45] Right. [00:47:46] Well, I understand that. [00:47:47] So, yes. [00:47:48] Chief, I've got just a question. [00:47:49] I don't want to call it a concern. [00:47:50] I'm just trying to understand this. [00:47:51] Obviously, you said you moved a couple of people into this department from the other. [00:47:52] That was one. [00:47:53] You're asking for two additional people. [00:47:54] Is that the way that I understand that? [00:47:55] Yes, sir. [00:47:56] So you've got two more. [00:47:57] I've got, is there any way, as a note, and not from your point, but from Crystal and [00:48:20] the manager's perspective, you know, we show this off-duty pay. [00:48:24] I mean, is there any way to make a note that kind of, that if somebody looked at this one [00:48:30] page in the budget, they would go, gosh, that's doubled in a year, you know, and we say we're [00:48:36] receiving revenue on another place. [00:48:40] I know you probably can't show the net number because it's into your department. [00:48:45] Just trying to, you know, trying to have a tool by where we can explain part of that. [00:48:50] And then, of course, the overtime elements. [00:48:52] I'm just trying to, a better way to know that if it's going up to 160, but I'm offsetting [00:49:01] it by income that's X, it doesn't really look like it's a true increase or total impact [00:49:10] to your department. [00:49:11] And that's the public relations side of it a little bit. [00:49:15] Understood. [00:49:16] And Crystal, is there a way to do that? [00:49:19] I think that would be helpful. [00:49:23] Yeah, just because, you know, people can, once again, the mayor talked about Benjamin [00:49:28] Franklin, but you can cite specific any page in this budget and somebody could go in and [00:49:35] try to pick it apart. [00:49:36] I'm just trying to make sure we got the discussion point. [00:49:38] Mr. Mayor, Crystal and I just noticed that the part-time wages, there's an error there. [00:49:45] We're showing a sizable increase in part-time staff. [00:49:49] And we're not proposing one. [00:49:50] So the next version of this will have the correction. [00:49:55] And my only other thing is, is this where we show or we factor in that makeup money [00:50:03] that we do to the police pension that were required here and a couple other places? [00:50:11] Because this year, through the pension board, and that's a larger conversation I'd love [00:50:16] to have before we get through with budget, but we have a police pension board and we [00:50:21] have a fire pension board. [00:50:24] We obligate them to operate and then we have to make up differences. [00:50:32] But in the same token, they're making business decisions that impact the city's bottom line. [00:50:38] I'm not sure that decisions that are made that we shouldn't have more involvement in [00:50:46] it, or in case in point, only because I looked at those reports all this last year, is that [00:50:54] the money marketing firm, they two have emerged together. [00:51:00] I would have never known about it unless I read it in the police pension board minutes. [00:51:05] And we had to make, even though we had it in our budget, we had to make a one-time lump [00:51:09] payment to kind of true up that pension fund for the year. [00:51:14] It was like $100,000, $130,000. [00:51:17] That's our obligation. [00:51:18] We obviously know that. [00:51:20] It's just that I want to make sure that those impact items, either we have more input in [00:51:28] or we know about them, because they are part and part of our budget, is because of the [00:51:32] obligations we have to our union employees. [00:51:36] So I'm just trying to make sure, because in past years it could have been an unfunded [00:51:42] mandate or an unfunded form, and also we have to find that money somewhere else in [00:51:46] the budget. [00:51:47] It's a larger discussion, but I think it's important to understand that those costs are [00:51:54] being allocated throughout your department, same thing on the fire department side for [00:51:59] the union employees. [00:52:00] I'm just trying to make sure that we've got the right model in place. [00:52:05] I just have one question. [00:52:07] You said you brought two people in and you're looking for two. [00:52:11] Are we looking at four vehicles for $100,000 or $90,000, or are two already in there? [00:52:15] We're looking for two. [00:52:16] What is the number? [00:52:17] Actually, if we're going to the vehicle portion, that is, we are asking for a total of six [00:52:23] vehicles, and those are strictly replacement vehicles. [00:52:28] We can get six vehicles for $90,000? [00:52:31] No, $211,000. [00:52:32] Yeah, but from $120,000. [00:52:36] Give me the account that you're looking at, please. [00:52:38] $64,000, $14,000. [00:52:40] My numbers may not be the same as yours in that category. [00:52:47] I'm at $211,000, $592,000. [00:52:49] Yeah, but we went from $122,000 last year. [00:52:53] Oh, $122,000 was what we spent last year, so ... [00:53:02] Oh, this ... [00:53:05] We're looking for four more vehicles? [00:53:07] Let me explain what's happened. [00:53:09] We are looking for a total of six vehicles that are replacing vehicles, high mileage [00:53:14] and vehicles that require a lot of repair, that need to be deadlined. [00:53:18] We're replacing those, but the difference is, in years past, all the equipment that [00:53:24] goes in the vehicles was separate. [00:53:27] It was in separate accounts, separate line items, and those numbers were significant. [00:53:32] It costs a lot to outfit a vehicle. [00:53:35] With this, all the equipment is ... [00:53:38] Okay, that's exactly where I'm going, because ... [00:53:40] That's what's making the difference. [00:53:41] Because you came to us and asked for vehicles, and you came to put lettering on the vehicles, [00:53:45] and you came to put lights on the vehicles, and you came to put radios on the vehicles. [00:53:48] That's ... Yeah. [00:53:50] Yeah, so we are not doing that. [00:53:52] We are coming to you with our handout one time. [00:53:54] Okay, okay. [00:53:55] That's kind of ... That makes a lot more sense here than, too, with the dollars. [00:53:58] And Chief, you're adding four people to this division? [00:54:02] No, let me back up. [00:54:03] I think there's a misunderstanding. [00:54:04] I'll make it clear. [00:54:05] I simply took two people that were in other areas of the department and moved them. [00:54:11] They were our community policing officers. [00:54:14] They were in the detective division and handling caseloads and not doing crime prevention [00:54:20] related type things that I needed them to do. [00:54:23] I simply moved those bodies over. [00:54:25] But now I'm asking for two new positions. [00:54:28] One, to make up for what I took away with the caseload when I moved those folks out [00:54:32] of the detective division. [00:54:34] And one, to go into this unit, because this unit is being incredibly productive [00:54:39] in making drug cases, prostitution cases, and some of those street crimes related things [00:54:44] that patrol can't address nor can CID. [00:54:47] So that's why I'm asking for the two bodies. [00:54:49] I'm only asking for two in that area. [00:54:51] Right. [00:54:52] So with that said, your clothing and apparel, you went from $35,000 to only $25,000. [00:55:00] Pretty well. [00:55:01] I've re-uniformed. [00:55:02] Because everybody's got the uniforms even though they're moving into another department. [00:55:05] Yeah, I've re-uniformed a lot of folks. [00:55:07] And we're all now wearing the same kinds of things. [00:55:10] And it cost me over the last couple of years to make all of that happen. [00:55:16] Now I've got it to where we're controlling. [00:55:18] We used to have a lot of different kinds of uniforms out there. [00:55:20] Now we've narrowed it down depending on what function the officers are doing. [00:55:24] And because they're already outfitted, I just have to really worry about the new ones [00:55:29] and normal wear and tear on clothes. [00:55:31] Thank you. [00:55:33] You're done with that category? [00:55:43] I just don't see in code enforcement anything that significant to speak about. [00:55:50] I think we're staying relatively the same in most categories. [00:55:59] Unless you have a question. [00:56:01] Maybe a line item for some game cameras. [00:56:04] River Drive Park, again, they picked up Friday. [00:56:08] And there's an area of Palm Fronts larger than this table the very next day. [00:56:13] I talked to Liz about it today. [00:56:15] I know she's got people watching, but we've got people dumping in the city. [00:56:19] I've talked to Brian a little bit about that. [00:56:22] I think he might have something for you, Jeff. [00:56:24] I won't need to do a line item for that. [00:56:27] No, getting a little facetious on the line item. [00:56:30] We definitely need it. [00:56:32] I think he was telling me, Jeff, that he has a possibility of a portable camera [00:56:37] that we can move to different spots. [00:56:39] That would be really good. [00:56:41] We're working on it when we've got a formal recommendation. [00:56:45] It's just a shame, literally, there's a black patch of dead grass [00:56:49] half the size of this room, and then 12 hours after it's picked up, it's covered again. [00:56:55] The last category is the Special Traffic Enforcement, [00:57:00] which I'm asking for that position. [00:57:04] This is the individual that we've had two part-time individuals [00:57:09] handling red light camera as well as our impound lot. [00:57:13] And the impound lot process, managing the impound lot, has grown significantly. [00:57:20] We have, I think, not the next meeting, but probably either the next meeting [00:57:26] or the one following, I'll be coming in and notifying you [00:57:30] that we're moving 47 vehicles out of our lot to put them in auction [00:57:36] and to manage all of that and release vehicles. [00:57:39] That job has just expanded, along with the red light camera responsibilities. [00:57:43] We've rotated through a number of people in that position [00:57:47] because it was part-time, so I'm asking for that to be increased [00:57:51] to a full-time position. [00:57:55] With that, I don't have any other comments in this category. [00:57:59] That's the one that's also handling the golf carts? [00:58:03] Oh, yeah, and the increased workload of that as well in there. [00:58:07] I'm curious about that. [00:58:09] Oh, yeah, and the increased workload of that as well in there. [00:58:13] I'm keeping my little car indoors so you guys can't stick around. [00:58:17] Krista, could you do us a favor instead of me going home and doing this? [00:58:20] Could you take his departments and give us just the bottom line [00:58:23] so we can get a look at the whole department? [00:58:27] Just the estimate amended budget and where we are now [00:58:33] so we can see what kind of increase, decrease, and difference. [00:58:37] I'm sure it's an increase, but... [00:58:41] Thanks for your time. [00:58:49] Yes, Mr. Mayor, members of the Council, [00:58:53] the next budget presentation that we have for you [00:58:57] is from the Recreation Department, and Ms. Smith will present [00:59:01] to you this evening. [00:59:11] It looks like on some of my figures, too, on the salary on recreation [00:59:15] may need some revisions to them, [00:59:19] but the biggest changes we have so far, what we're requesting [00:59:23] is with the division head salary, we're requesting to [00:59:27] take the aquatics manager position and morph that into [00:59:31] an assistant director, and that would reflect under the recreation side. [00:59:35] And then these are some figures I think need to be [00:59:39] possibly revised. We are requesting to take [00:59:43] as you heard in the 5 o'clock meeting, to add two [00:59:47] part-time fitness center supervisors, and I think [00:59:51] this was put in as full-time for that. [00:59:55] And then skipping on down to [00:59:59] contractual... [01:00:00] services. Just for your information, that's what we pay out to our instructors. That's [01:00:03] the 70% we pay out of what we collect from various recreational programs. The contractual [01:00:11] services miscellaneous, that $50,000 is for the master plan. The increase that's reflected [01:00:18] under telephone and local, that is for our alarm system and our phones. And then the [01:00:24] next line increase is with the new type of equipment we have in our fitness center, they [01:00:29] now require data lines. So that's increased for that as well as computers. Skipping down [01:00:36] to maintenance equipment, that again is the fitness center. Maintenance on the new equipment [01:00:42] that we have coming in. [01:00:43] The 4621? [01:00:44] Correct. I'm sorry, I should do it that way. [01:00:48] Yeah, thank you. [01:00:50] And then you see a big increase on 4961, which is special events hosted by the city. That [01:00:59] is for Cody Mann primarily. We didn't really have money in our budget to put that event [01:01:04] on even though we do draw in revenue on the other side from that. [01:01:07] Can we get a figure on the revenue that comes in on that one, please? [01:01:11] I can give you roughly, it's about $7,000, but I don't have an exact figure with me. [01:01:16] And then we're looking at adding some possible new special events also. So that was increased. [01:01:23] 4965, city-sponsored programs. The increase for there is the money that has been expended [01:01:32] this current fiscal year to put on the concert series that we're doing in Sims came out of [01:01:37] city council's budget, I believe. And we're requesting to go ahead and just put that money [01:01:41] into recreation budget. And that's for also other things that we do city-wide, such as [01:01:46] the river cleanup and various events like that. [01:01:48] Those concerts have been phenomenal. [01:01:50] Thank you. Thank you for that. [01:01:52] What was that splash thing? What was it called? [01:01:58] Summertime in the City? [01:01:59] Yeah. [01:02:00] Yes. [01:02:01] Would that be in this X and 2? Do we recover at $5 a person the cost of those slides by [01:02:07] chance? [01:02:08] Oh, yes. [01:02:09] Okay. [01:02:10] We more than pay for the slides. [01:02:11] Okay. [01:02:12] Yes. [01:02:13] But that's in city events. [01:02:14] That's in city events, correct. [01:02:15] Right. [01:02:16] Yes, city-sponsored programs, city events. [01:02:17] Yes. [01:02:18] The only difference is whether or not we charge for the event. [01:02:23] Right. [01:02:24] Then break those two different for me, then. City-sponsored programs and city. And where [01:02:30] is the other one? [01:02:31] Let me grab this real quick on this other. I have it explained better here. Okay. 4961, [01:02:40] special events, city-hosted. Those would be events and things that we generate revenue [01:02:46] for. So that would be Summertime in the City, our Zombie Run, Cody Man, miscellaneous events [01:02:52] like that that we generate revenue. If you go further down to 4965, city-sponsored programs, [01:03:01] those are events that we host that we don't generate revenue for, the concert series, [01:03:06] the movie nights in the park, the walks that we do with council, any number of events that [01:03:12] we do year-round, the holiday events related. [01:03:14] Then that's just the special events, city-hosted. I'd like to know the revenues that come in on those. [01:03:19] Sure. [01:03:20] Did you have a question? [01:03:21] Yeah, just a quick question. So going up to the division head salaries, you said you were [01:03:26] wanting to take the aquatic director's salary. [01:03:33] And that will show on the next, when I go into their budget. But we're recommending [01:03:37] to take that position out of the aquatics budget and move it into recreation and then [01:03:43] create an assistant director position. [01:03:45] Okay, so that would be the difference between the 104 and the 385? [01:03:50] The impetus for doing that is two-fold. First, the aquatics director position currently is [01:04:00] full-time. We don't believe that some of the off-season hours are used as efficiently as [01:04:08] they could be. And there's some need in the department for some programming and some other [01:04:13] functions that don't happen as well as they could be. So we think that if we convert the [01:04:20] position to an assistant director position, that we'll get more of those things done. [01:04:27] And the aquatics person would have the additional hours to devote to those additional responsibilities. [01:04:35] You're zeroing out 11-12 under aquatics, so there's... [01:04:40] And if I could go back to Councilman Davis's question about the revenues, too. Under special [01:04:48] events, I know you don't have the revenues there, but special events city-hosted, we're [01:04:52] projecting, with Cody Man, summertime in the city and a couple other smaller events, $13,000 [01:05:00] in revenue. And as of May, for this current year, we were already over $12,000. [01:05:07] Let me go back to that salary thing then. You know, it seems that he was somewhere around [01:05:14] $45,000, and we had somewhere around $38,000 already at division head salaries. If I add [01:05:20] those two together, it's not making $104,000. So is there... [01:05:25] Well, a typical assistant director in the city is in the neighborhood of $65,000, if [01:05:30] you look at other departments. [01:05:32] We haven't slated the position anywhere in the salary schedule at this time. This is [01:05:38] just a placeholder. [01:05:39] Okay. [01:05:40] The only other thing in this budget, Elaine, from our earlier discussion this evening with [01:05:47] regards to the consultant, I don't see anything about the website creation and or the management [01:05:55] of that particular service. [01:05:59] That would be under the software, and that comes in IT's budget, right? [01:06:03] Below. [01:06:04] Okay. [01:06:05] I can't even talk at this hour. You are anticipating that one of your existing employees will be [01:06:20] able to do the updates for the website? [01:06:23] Yes, correct. Yes, absolutely. I'm sorry, I didn't understand the question. [01:06:27] There's also the creation of the website, and it's not highlighted in the budget. [01:06:33] Brian, do you want to come on down, please? [01:06:36] And while Brian's coming to the thing, and so that personnel that... I think they had [01:06:42] between $650,000 and $1,200,000 a year to... Was it a year? To manage that website. Is [01:06:50] that what you're... [01:06:51] You just made it sound much easier than I was projecting it to be. I have a hard time [01:06:57] believing you just create a website and it runs itself. I mean, it's basically what he [01:07:00] said. [01:07:01] Brian? [01:07:02] In the proposal that we'll review tomorrow, it's a two-year agreement, which includes [01:07:06] the development of that front-facing website along in conjunction with the software, and [01:07:12] the second year of maintenance is part of that agreement. So that's why it doesn't appear [01:07:15] in the 2017 fiscal budget under recreation. [01:07:21] Okay. Under... Under 5241, licenses and ID material, that increases the public viewing [01:07:38] rights where we do for the family movie nights in Sims Park. The next one, 5243, is just [01:07:46] some... With some of the new software that we're going to need to have. And then 5246, [01:07:55] the actual marketing budget had been at $55,000, or excuse me, $25,000, and then somehow been [01:08:01] cut back to $19,000, so we're requesting to go just a little bit above what we had originally [01:08:05] had to just have some more aggressive marketing campaign, so that would put that up at $30,000. [01:08:12] The 5251, janitorial supplies, janitorial supplies are now under public works. We are [01:08:21] requesting $1,000, though, because we need to purchase fitness center sanitizer, the [01:08:27] Whizzer equipment, or spray. And then, we're not doing capital, correct? [01:08:34] Not this evening. We have a separate evening. [01:08:37] Correct. Okay. [01:08:39] Separate evening for capital improvement. [01:08:42] When you get around to doing that, you may want to hit the city manager up for either [01:08:48] another or a much larger popcorn popper. The last movie in the park, the line was never [01:08:54] less than about 25 or 30. [01:08:56] That's true. [01:08:57] I'd like to also revisit having the second movie screen, or the second monitor installed [01:09:05] in the park. I mean, we start off with two. Everyone agreed, not everyone, but the vote [01:09:10] went to one. I think we've had tremendous feedback on the one that's there, even prior [01:09:14] to using it for Chasco and Bike Week. Symmetry alone just keeps you from having to take trees [01:09:21] down so everyone can see the same screen. I just think it would look so much better [01:09:25] with two, and it's been received quite well from what I've heard, so if we could keep [01:09:30] that in mind. I'd hate to add one five, six, seven years down the road. They should kind [01:09:34] of be in line. We're purchasing in the same, I would say, 12, 18 months. [01:09:39] Back with our CIP, we're going to fold that in with the phase two for Symm's Park. [01:09:43] Very good. [01:09:44] When we approved the first screen, we asked for a marketing plan, and we still don't have [01:09:50] a marketing plan. [01:09:52] In contradiction to that, I thought we discussed the fact that we didn't really call for a [01:10:01] marketing plan. We were looking to charge vendors and promoters a fee to use the screen, [01:10:09] and I thought the majority of us had agreed that the screens are part of the park, just [01:10:13] like a restroom and whatnot, so I don't know where the marketing plan would tie in, because [01:10:17] we're looking at the marketing plan to determine what we're going to charge the promoters or [01:10:24] whoever's in charge of the events to use the screens, but I thought we agreed that we're [01:10:30] not going to go down that road and the screens are part of the park. [01:10:33] That is a marketing plan, just what you guys have been saying. [01:10:42] That was my understanding, too, in that I was working with the attorney to come up with [01:10:47] language about what people can show and can't show, and that we would charge actually what [01:10:55] our expenses are for the, which is what we did for one event already, charge what our [01:10:59] expenses are for the production crew to use it. [01:11:04] If they opt to use one. We're hoping they will, but not every promoter. [01:11:09] Do you recall this conversation? [01:11:13] I do recall it, and your recollection and mine are pretty much the same. [01:11:21] For the events in the park, I do also agree we need the second one. [01:11:28] The other option that certainly would present itself would be if somebody's ice cream shop [01:11:36] on the corner wanted to pay the city to have advertisements for ice cream running mid-afternoon [01:11:43] on a Saturday afternoon that there's nothing going on in the park. [01:11:47] I don't know that I'd turn their money away. [01:11:50] That's one example, and the other example is I don't think we should break even on a [01:11:56] user fee if it's costing us, let me give a figure of $100 an hour, then we shouldn't [01:12:02] just break even. [01:12:04] We're also maintaining it, so that would be part of the marketing plan where we're asking [01:12:09] these people to reimburse us when they use our production fees, yes. [01:12:15] Those are the type of things that I was looking at in the marketing plan, not, you know. [01:12:21] I don't believe, I think you were going to speak to the sign ordinance, or? [01:12:24] Yeah, we're not certain on what restrictions there might be on advertising, so we're waiting [01:12:30] for a ruling from the legal representative that we worked with on the sign ordinance [01:12:37] to determine what is permitted in terms of advertising. [01:12:41] If it is permitted, what do you all think about advertising on this? [01:12:45] Absolutely. [01:12:46] If it's permitted, it's one of those slippery slope things, I suspect, Lisa's over there [01:12:57] cringing at the thought of having video billboards up and down US-19 and all around town, I think. [01:13:07] If the sign ordinance allowed us to operate advertising on the two video boards in the [01:13:16] park just as part of the normal week, I wouldn't have a problem with it. [01:13:20] I think the other piece of it, and staff has done a pretty good job, I'm guessing, Brian, [01:13:28] is putting a rotating series of, for lack of a better term, ads for coming attractions [01:13:37] in the city. [01:13:38] You know, and if Ice Cream Place wanted to advertise in the midst of that, I would welcome [01:13:44] it, number one, and also, since we just bring up the rec center, we're talking about memberships [01:13:50] being from a city resident, you know, 10 or 15 or 20 percent, whatever we come up with, [01:13:56] I would welcome giving a deduction to the people that are actually, you know, have a [01:14:03] business license in the city, a discount to them, too, and that would be part of the marketing [01:14:08] plan. [01:14:09] If they own a business or reside in the city, we count that as a city resident currently. [01:14:13] Right, but I meant if they were advertising on the screen. [01:14:16] Oh, exactly, that's a good idea. [01:14:20] That's what I'm looking at as a marketing plan, those type of things. [01:14:23] I'd like the legal opinion first, because we've already seen with the advent of the [01:14:30] park and the Pokemon Go people, as well as at our recent concerts in the park, the advent [01:14:41] of free speech and free expression, and what I don't want to get into a situation is somebody [01:14:53] that we're obligated to let everybody be on those boards. [01:15:00] I don't want to deny anybody, but I don't want to create an avenue that because they [01:15:07] can come and pay us that we're not looking at them in the right light, which all comes [01:15:12] back to the sign, because that is a city sign element. [01:15:20] Like I said, we could have some pretty interesting advertising up there that we wouldn't have [01:15:25] a lot of control over. [01:15:29] I don't know. [01:15:30] It's another management element for staff and for legal and everything else. [01:15:37] That's the reason I'd like that opinion, but I'd love their money, love to offset that [01:15:42] to pay, but I also don't want to open the door and be required to let all of that occur, [01:15:52] but that's it. [01:15:54] Major TV stations have some kind of editing, so we must be able to do it at a local level, [01:16:00] too. [01:16:01] I'm interested to see what the legalities are of it. [01:16:04] My personal opinion, once again, I'm one vote out of the table here, is I'm not really in [01:16:12] favor of having businesses use those monitors throughout the week on a regular basis for [01:16:19] advertisement. [01:16:20] I don't think we're going to generate enough funds. [01:16:22] I would much rather see them used for the rec center for upcoming events in the city [01:16:26] over and over again, and let the advertisements be used more during special events. [01:16:33] That's my opinion. [01:16:34] As Councilman Phillips said, it's a slippery slope. [01:16:38] It's why we have regulations on murals in the city, because we don't want someone just [01:16:41] putting something that's extremely offensive out there, and we don't want to say, oh, you [01:16:46] can use it for advertising, but we don't like your business. [01:16:49] We're not going to let you. [01:16:52] I can think of somebody that was waving billboards or hand-held placards at one of the recent [01:16:58] events wanting to advertise on it. [01:17:01] Right, that's just my opinion. [01:17:02] It could get ugly fast. [01:17:03] I respect everyone's opinion. [01:17:04] Bring me a program, and if it's legal, and we can make a business decision at that point. [01:17:10] Absolutely. [01:17:11] I'm in favor of that. [01:17:12] Elaine, if I could ask you one question. [01:17:14] Sure. [01:17:15] Under trucks and trailers, what's happening there? [01:17:18] Well, that's CIP, and I think that's going to be pulled out. [01:17:21] That's on the capital improvement? [01:17:22] Oh, okay. [01:17:23] Yes. [01:17:24] That's going to be another night. [01:17:25] I was hoping you were going to tell me. [01:17:32] Well, I thought it was pulled out anyway, though. [01:17:38] Yeah, you pulled it. [01:17:40] It's gone. [01:17:41] In that case. [01:17:43] Just save $29,000. [01:17:45] When are we going to get more into the nuts and bolts of Phase 2 and what we really want [01:17:49] done? [01:17:50] I've heard interest in under-bridge walkways at Main Street. [01:17:55] When are we going to? [01:17:57] I thought that a good time to stage that discussion would be in conjunction with the capital improvement [01:18:03] budget discussion. [01:18:04] Then do it then? [01:18:05] Okay. [01:18:06] Yeah. [01:18:07] All right. [01:18:08] We're also trying to figure out where that Restore Act money actually was, and Joe was [01:18:14] going to ask, but Joe starts a new job today, so, you know, and I'm under the understanding [01:18:22] that the county wants to keep a little bit of the money in another one of those Restore [01:18:27] Act, not share any of the money in one of the other Pot 3, and so that's enough. [01:18:38] Figure out what we have to work with before we get into what we want to do, right? [01:18:41] The other is if we were to do Phase 2, part of that money was to clean part of the lake [01:18:47] elements, so whether we go ahead and do it and then get reimbursed for it, which my feeling [01:18:54] was, let's get that phase completed so it's done, because we have other things that are [01:19:00] coming up in the next year, year and a half, I believe, so whatever. [01:19:04] Thank you, Elaine. [01:19:05] I'm sorry. [01:19:06] Just one other quick question. [01:19:07] So where in your world does Peace Hall fall? [01:19:12] The maintenance of Peace Hall? [01:19:16] Well, the advertising, you know, you're looking at advertising marketing, and I'm still thinking [01:19:20] that we don't market that. [01:19:21] We incorporate the advertisement in with the recreation budget, and that's in part of that [01:19:25] marketing budget, too, where we've located some different web pages and so forth that [01:19:29] we can advertise that facility on there for rental, and our rentals have already picked [01:19:33] up on that facility. [01:19:35] Okay, good. [01:19:36] Thank you. [01:19:37] Okay? [01:19:38] Thank you. [01:19:39] Aquatics? [01:19:40] Do I do aquatics now? [01:19:41] In the next page you have for aquatics, 11-12, division head salary, you'll see that's a [01:19:48] zero is indicated because we've merged or recommended to merge that position into an [01:19:53] assistant director, and then you'll notice an increase in part-time wages and temporary [01:20:01] wages. [01:20:03] Part of that has to do with if we do take the aquatics manager position away, then what [01:20:09] we would be interested in doing is taking one of the head lifeguards position and for [01:20:13] six months of the year elevate them to an aquatics supervisor full-time so they can [01:20:19] oversee the entire pool operation since we wouldn't have that manager overseeing that [01:20:23] in the other six months. [01:20:24] They would be a head lifeguard just operating the one heated pool through the winter. [01:20:33] Contractual services, 34-99, that has to do with our preventative maintenance on our [01:20:39] pumps and our lightning detector system. [01:20:43] 46-11, maintenance buildings and grounds, pool heater, we need another pool heater, [01:20:49] but LED light conversion, some pool awnings, and just some general regular maintenance [01:20:55] type purchases with that. [01:20:57] 52-41, licensing, that are the required inspections and permits that we have to have for the [01:21:05] water slides from the Department of Agriculture. [01:21:09] And that's it for that one. [01:21:10] 62-99. [01:21:11] 62-99 is capital improvement. [01:21:18] So, Aline, what are you going to wind up with in aquatics full-time and part-time, [01:21:23] and what are you going to wind up in recreation full-time and part-time employees? [01:21:27] Numbers of employees or salary? [01:21:29] Numbers. [01:21:30] You know, numbers of employees, not salary. [01:21:32] Numbers of employees in aquatics would decrease by one, the aquatics manager position, [01:21:38] and then in recreation, we're recommending to increase that one full-time position [01:21:43] for making that, or transferring that position to recreation and making it an assistant [01:21:49] director, and then recommending to add the two part-time fitness center supervisors [01:21:55] to have somebody in there on the fitness floor. [01:21:57] So, total, how many employees would you have in recreation? [01:22:01] Currently, I have 11.93, and the proposed budget is 14.88. [01:22:11] That must have the two child watch in there that we took out until we decided [01:22:18] what the direction was going to be for the child watch facility. [01:22:24] We didn't get a full year impact for that because it doesn't start until you have [01:22:31] the physical plant element to work out of. [01:22:37] It's an annual number, but it only could be two. [01:22:42] And that was part of the increase, too, in recreation, one of the positions, [01:22:46] because last year it was funded one-third, and then now this year it will be fully funded. [01:22:52] So that's part of that, as you're saying, Bill, too. [01:22:57] Questions for me? [01:22:58] No? [01:22:59] Congratulations on that eighth year, consecutive year. [01:23:02] Thank you. [01:23:05] Caprico? [01:23:06] I think we need about a five-minute break. [01:23:08] Okay. [01:23:10] We could do that. [01:23:13] I'm grateful for that, Mr. Mayor. [01:23:16] We've got a presentation of the library budget, [01:23:19] and Ms. Dillinger is going to represent the budget for you. [01:23:24] I have a three-hour presentation. [01:23:30] Sherman, the PowerPoint? [01:23:32] Well, we won't go there. [01:23:33] We have some goals and objectives. [01:23:36] You have them in your budget packet, [01:23:38] but I just wanted to highlight that we're working to prepare [01:23:42] community members for tomorrow's workforce, [01:23:45] and we do that through our educational classes [01:23:48] and training for entrepreneurs. [01:23:52] We're working on creating mobile maker spaces [01:23:55] so that people that want to be creative can come in and do that. [01:24:00] I have good news in that we've been selected [01:24:03] by the state library to be one of the libraries [01:24:06] to provide career online high school, [01:24:09] so we'll be giving out high school diplomas, certified. [01:24:14] And also certifications that go along [01:24:17] with the diploma in different fields. [01:24:21] Is that like a GED? [01:24:23] No, it's a high school diploma, which is really good. [01:24:27] Some employers look more favorably towards that than a GED. [01:24:34] So those are some of our goals and objectives. [01:24:39] We want to retain and develop our existing staff. [01:24:43] We want to serve more community members, [01:24:46] and we want to comply with the Florida Public Library [01:24:49] outcomes and standards. [01:24:51] And I don't think you want me to go through [01:24:53] every one of those tonight. [01:24:55] We made a slide here. [01:24:57] It's a highlight of the substantial changes. [01:25:00] And you can see the personnel did increase [01:25:03] a little over $28,000, [01:25:06] and that was due to raises in the insurance cost. [01:25:11] There were no new personnel. [01:25:13] Internet reference services went up. [01:25:16] Say your number when you... [01:25:18] Say the code number. [01:25:20] Oh, okay. [01:25:21] 3428, Internet Reference Services. [01:25:24] Internet Reference Service. [01:25:26] We've added in some money [01:25:28] so that we can upgrade the electronic books. [01:25:32] We have a lot of requests for that now. [01:25:36] 4211, postage, and the 4799, printing and binding. [01:25:41] That was for the city newsletter. [01:25:43] That's a deductive of $10,000 [01:25:46] because that's moved to the city manager's budget. [01:25:49] 5243, computer supplies. [01:25:53] We want to replace two of our ten laptops, [01:25:56] and that's about $2,500. [01:25:59] 5298 is a pass-through from a grant. [01:26:05] 6612, library materials. [01:26:08] We're requesting $11,750 additional [01:26:13] so we can update some outdated areas in our collection. [01:26:17] I'm sorry, what number was that, Susan? [01:26:19] That was 6612. [01:26:24] You can go to the next slide. [01:26:27] And if you look at the slide, [01:26:29] you'll see the rest of the accounts, [01:26:32] how they changed back and forth. [01:26:35] The red indicate decreases. [01:26:37] The others are increases. [01:26:39] But I didn't know if you wanted me [01:26:41] to go through every line item, [01:26:43] whether it went up $310 or went down $60 or what. [01:26:47] If you want me to do that, I'd be more than happy to. [01:26:52] But the total increase in the library budget [01:26:55] was $31,654, which is a 3% increase. [01:27:03] And by the way, Creative Loafing, [01:27:06] we've been nominated for Best of Bay for Public Library. [01:27:09] So please go vote. [01:27:11] Best of the Bay, you said? [01:27:14] Just out of curiosity, [01:27:15] how did you pull off the Band of Books concert? [01:27:20] Ann worked with the Twins and Leah, [01:27:25] and that's the Rock the Boat Productions, [01:27:28] and they handled finding the bands and doing PR. [01:27:33] I believe they did the PR for that. [01:27:37] That was the coolest little concert [01:27:40] every night down by the river. [01:27:42] Two more, so come on out. [01:27:47] Anybody else have anything? [01:27:49] No, I was out of town. [01:27:51] The mayor told me about that little concert. [01:27:53] It was phenomenal. [01:27:54] It was really nice to have, [01:27:56] and where's our parks and rec people? [01:27:59] You guys got the guy from the snow shack [01:28:02] to serve snow cones, [01:28:04] which given the heat during the summer [01:28:06] was an absolute godsend. [01:28:08] He had a pretty good line [01:28:10] most of the evening, too. [01:28:12] It worked out. [01:28:14] Everybody seemed to be having a good time. [01:28:16] We want to support local business, [01:28:18] and we do that any way we can. [01:28:23] Anything else? [01:28:25] You got us, thank you. [01:28:27] Anything else for the good of the organization? [01:28:31] We can communicate tonight. [01:28:35] I'd like to thank you. [01:28:37] You projected in the last meeting [01:28:39] to look into the cost savings, [01:28:41] the potential cost savings of expanding [01:28:43] the work obsolete towards the east [01:28:45] is definitely worth looking into. [01:28:47] If we could accomplish the goal [01:28:49] and save money there, [01:28:51] I'm very interested to see what Hennessey [01:28:53] has to say regarding the cost [01:28:55] of having it up front or in the back [01:28:57] of the building with the expansion. [01:28:59] Great point, and I'm glad you brought it up. [01:29:01] I'd just like to thank our city manager [01:29:03] and all the department heads. [01:29:05] I know we just show up here and listen [01:29:07] to you all, but I know so much work [01:29:09] goes into preparing these budgets [01:29:11] with each of your departments, [01:29:13] and you've been working very, very hard [01:29:15] and you've done a phenomenal job, [01:29:17] so thank all of you for that. [01:29:19] Thank you for your kind words.
This text was generated automatically from the meeting video. It is not a verbatim or official record. For exact wording, consult the video or the city clerk.
- 3Adjournment▶ 1:29:20