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HomeMy WebLinkAboutagenda.council.worksession.20131007 CITY COUNCIL WORK SESSION October 07, 2013 5:00 PM, City Council Chambers MEETING AGENDA I. Budget Kick off: General Fund; Asset Management: Tourist Promotion; Debt Service; Employee Benefit; City Employee Housing City of Aspen 2014 Proposed Budget October 7, 2014 P1 I. Agenda for Oct. 7 •Budget Overview •General Fund •Asset Management Plan Fund •Debt Service Fund •Employee Benefits Fund •Employee Housing Fund •Tourism Promotion Fund 2 P2 I. Budget Overview 2011 Original Budget 2012 Original Budget 2013 Original Budget 2014 Proposed Budget Variance % Change Revenues $86,943,310 $93,072,954 $94,594,225 $101,713,656 $7,119,431 7.50% Operating $47,469,980 $49,941,280 $51,210,660 $54,023,000 $2,812,340 5.50% Capital Outlay $13,809,990 $21,810,300 $33,262,380 $28,216,200 ($5,046,180)-15.20% Debt Service $4,954,570 $5,293,160 $5,141,720 $4,977,250 ($164,470)-3.20% Net Appropriations $66,234,540 $77,044,740 $89,614,760 $87,216,450 ($2,398,310)-2.70% Interfund Transfers $18,603,150 $18,148,800 $16,844,510 $17,340,900 $496,390 2.90% Total Appropriations $84,837,690 $95,193,540 $106,459,270 $104,557,350 ($1,901,920)-1.80% Ending Fund Balance $66,296,633 $71,825,209 $65,548,532 $71,785,841 $6,237,309 9.50% 3 P3 I. 2014 Projected Revenues Taxes $38,676,100 38% Fees $33,249,250 33% Intergovernmental Transfers $19,354,010 19% Other $10,510,520 10% 2014 Projected Revenues = $101,713,656 4 P4 I. 2014 Projected Tax Revenue Property Tax (GF, AMP, Stormwater) $6,954,700 Lodging Tax (Transportation, Marketing) $2,549,100 Real Estate Transfer Tax (Wheeler, Housing) $8,085,000 Use Tax (Transportation) $847,600 Sales Tax (Parks & Open Space, Housing Development, Kids First, Transportation) $19,636,700 Other Taxes (General Fund) $603,000 Taxes $38,676,100 2014 Projected Tax Revenue 5 P5 I. Budget Overview 6 $8,000,000 $8,500,000 $9,000,000 $9,500,000 $10,000,000 $10,500,000 $11,000,000 $11,500,000 $12,000,000 $12,500,000 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 City Sales Tax (2.1% City, Excludes Add’l 0.3% Education) Actual Collections Inflation Adj. Collections P6 I. Budget Overview 7 $500,000 $1,000,000 $1,500,000 $2,000,000 $2,500,000 $3,000,000 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 City Lodging Tax (2.0%) City Collections City Adj. Inflation P7 I. Budget Overview 8 $500,000 $2,500,000 $4,500,000 $6,500,000 $8,500,000 $10,500,000 $12,500,000 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Housing Real Estate Transfer Tax (1.0% less first $100,000) City Collections City Adj. Inflation P8 I. Budget Overview 9 $0 $500,000 $1,000,000 $1,500,000 $2,000,000 $2,500,000 $3,000,000 $3,500,000 $4,000,000 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Use Tax (2.1%) On Deposit City Collections Realized P9 I. Budget Overview 10 $1,000,000,000 $1,100,000,000 $1,200,000,000 $1,300,000,000 $1,400,000,000 $1,500,000,000 $1,600,000,000 $1,700,000,000 $1,800,000,000 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 $3,500,000 $4,000,000 $4,500,000 $5,000,000 $5,500,000 $6,000,000 $6,500,000 Property Tax Base Property Tax Collections Add'l TABOR Revenues Assessed Value P1 0 I. 2014 Projected Fee Revenue Comm. Development / Engineering $4,887,700 Franchise Fees / Business Licenses $1,261,500 Utilities & Stormwater $14,380,600 Recreation / Golf / Parks & Open Space $3,762,600 Affordable Housing $2,986,810 Other $5,970,040 Other $33,249,250 2014 Projected Fee Revenue = $33,249,250 11 P1 1 I. 2014 Projected IGT’s General Fund Overhead $5,813,700 IT Overhead $2,194,300 Employee Housing $920,000 Debt Service $3,299,610 Employee Benefits $3,832,300 Other $3,294,100 IGTs $19,354,010 2014 Proposed IGTs = $19,354,010 12 P1 2 I. 2014 Other Revenue Housing Development $7,871,100 Housing Administration $522,400 Wheeler Opera House $684,870 Other $1,432,150 Other $10,510,520 2014 Other Revenue = $10,510,520 13 P1 3 I. Expenditure Overview •Base Budget •Equal to same level of resources as prior fiscal year, adjusted for: »Salary increases (Up to 4.0% merit pay) »Health care increases (3.0% premium increase) »Inflationary pressure on goods and services (2.0% target) •Supplemental Requests •New resource requests for expanded or new services, or for cost escalation beyond the 2.0% target 14 P1 4 I. 2014 Projected Expenses Labor $29,145,570 Training / Memberships $714,970 Professional Services $18,150,300 Materials $3,117,090 Contribitions $2,680,120 Fixed Assets $28,216,200 Transfers $17,340,900 Other $5,192,200 2014 Proposed Expenditures = $104,557,350 15 P1 5 I. General Fund 16 •Includes nearly all administrative support functions for the City •City Council and Manager’s Office •Attorney’s and Clerk’s Offices •Human Resources, Finance, and Asset Management •Also includes services that may not have sufficient dedicated fees or revenue sources and require general purpose funding •Community Development, Engineering, and Streets •Recreation and Special Events •Police and Environment Health P1 6 I. General Fund 17 Property Tax $2,150,000 9% City Share of County Sales Tax $7,469,000 30% Transfers $5,813,700 23% Community Development / Engineering $4,897,000 Franchise Fees / Business Licenses $1,577,500 Recreation $2,018,100 Other $1,368,700 Other $9,861,300 38% 2014 General Fund Revenues = $25,294,000 P1 7 I. General Fund 18 •What does the City receive for these funds? •Community safety for 6,650 full-time residents plus 20,000 visitors during peak seasons •Maintenance of 30 miles of streets, storm drains, and alleyways •Recreation facilities that include two sheets of ice, aquatic center, gymnastic facilities, artificial and natural turf fields, and more •Regulation of all construction and land use within City limits, oversight of two historic districts and over 300 historic landmarks •Enforcement of noise pollution ordinances, food safety standards, child care regulations, air and water quality •Over $1 million (excluding in-kind support) for local non-profits P1 8 I. General Fund 19 Contributions & Transfers $1,824,400 Community Development $2,574,720 Engineering $1,120,360 Police / Communications $4,944,250 Recreation $4,268,290 Envir. Health $548,130 Streets $1,944,900 Special Events $1,195,050 Council $372,520 Manager's Office $1,009,030 HR, $685,820 Clerks $678,090 Finance $1,717,600 Attorney $505,360 Asset Mgmt $421,690 Support Depts. $5,390,110 2014 General Fund Budget = $23,809,530 P1 9 I. General Fund 20 Labor $15,415,390 65% Professional Services $4,028,700 Training/Dues $456,420 Materials / Supplies $1,246,540 Contributions $1,230,810 Overhead / Transfers $1,446,850 2014 General Fund Budget = $23,809,530 P2 0 I. Supplemental Requests (2013 Requests With On-Going Impacts) Department / Fund FTE Requested Resources Ongoing / Temporary Revenue Offset As % of Total Req. Authority GF / Engineering 1.0 $101,500 Ongoing $0 % Engineer II –This position -originally sought as a Development Engineer but since downgraded - was brought before Council on July 23, 2013 as an effort to ramp up development reviews and inspection services in direct reflection of increased activity in the construction industry. GF / Community Development 1.0 $147,500 Ongoing $0 % Administrative Assistant and Plans Examiner -These position additions were brought before Council on July 23, 2013 as an effort to ramp up development reviews and inspection services in direct reflection of increased activity in the construction industry. GF / Police 0.0 $50,000 Ongoing $0 1% Wildfire Mitigation -This request was presented to Council on July 23, 2013 and reflects requested wildfire preparedness improvements from City of Aspen, Pitkin County, AVFPD, U.S. Forest Service and Holy Cross Electric representatives. 21 P2 1 I. Supplemental Requests 22 17.3 13.2 24.9 25.2 20.9 17.5 33.7 33.7 23.1 22.1 23.0 27.0 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Proj. Ac t i v i t y / F T E a n d A c t u a l F T E # o f B u i l d i n g P e r m i t s a n d C h a n g e O r d e r s Permit and Change Order Activity per FTE Activity Subject to Use Tax Activity Not Subject to Use Tax Activity / FTE FTE Count P2 2 I. Supplemental Requests Department / Fund FTE Requested Resources Ongoing / Temporary Revenue Offset As % of Total Req. Authority GF / Finance 1.0 $83,500 Ongoing $42,000 5% Accountant I -Finance proposes to assume accounting functions for three affordable housing projects -Country Inn (ACI) and Truscott II (APCHA related), and Burlingame Housing Inc. (BHI). Half of the position would be charged out to the benefitting entities, offsetting 50% of the cost. Duties would include A/R reconciliation, Active Network customer deposit reconciliation, maintenance of electronic lease files, payroll back-up, budget to actual analytics, and reconciliation of balance sheets, fund balance, etc. GF / Community Development 1.0 $75,000 Ongoing $0 3% Planning Technician -This position will cover planner-of-the-day duties, review of all sub-permits (mechanical, electrical, plumbing), approve all pre-permitting planning approval forms, and will address less complicated land use cases. When possible, this position will also assist senior -level staff with routine aspects of large cases and provide support to the Long -Range Planner and Director with policy projects. All duties will continue to improve customer service. 23 P2 3 I. Supplemental Requests Department / Fund FTE Requested Resources Ongoing / Temporary Revenue Offset As % of Total Req. Authority GF / Engineering 1.0 $95,000 Ongoing $0 8% Project Manager I -Permit activity has increased in excess of 30% and has driven a commensurate increase in inspection volume. Volumes are trending toward 2008 levels yet staffing currently resides at approximately 2 FTE below 2008 levels. Current response rates are at 30 days+ and current inspections are performed as complaints are received instead of on a regular inspection schedule. The requested resource would improve customer service related to the above areas and improve compliance. GF / Environmental Health 0.0 $3,760 Ongoing $0 1% Air Quality Monitoring -With recent upgrades to monitoring equipment coupled with efficiencies in contracts for professional monitoring, this program has to expand into monitoring a third pollutant (PM2.5). This request seeks a minimal adjustment to allow for expanded services to continue, including website reporting and greater quality assurance testing, and adoption of data by the Colorado Dept. of Public Health and Environment. 24 P2 4 I. Supplemental Requests Department / Fund FTE Requested Resources Ongoing / Temporary Revenue Offset As % of Total Req. Authority GF / Environmental Health 0.0 $3,800 Ongoing $0 1% Yard Waste Bin -In an effort to eliminate non-compliant dumping of yard waste by City residents, additional funding is sought to extend the current availability of the yard waste bin located at the Rio Grande Recycling Center for the full duration of the spring and fall seasons (estimated at 4 additional weeks). Funding provides for the cost to haul the bin to the Pitkin County Landfill site. GF / Special Events 0.0 $30,000 Temporary $0 3% Temporary Administrative Assistant -Workload has increased with the addition of the 4th of July parade, lacrosse tournament, and Pro Cycling Challenge.The requested temporary resource is sought to assist with these new events over the next two years, concurrent with the Department’s increased outreach and emphasis on permitting requirements and compliance . After the two year period has expired, it is anticipated that education and outreach with event permitting will have translated into an efficient process and existing permanent staff will be able to address existing volume. 25 P2 5 I. Supplemental Requests Department / Fund FTE Requested Resources Ongoing / Temporary Revenue Offset As % of Total Req. Authority GF / Aspen Recreation Center 0.0 $10,000 Ongoing $5,000 < 1% Labor for Learn-To -Skate –The Recreation Advisory Committee and public input have identified that this program should be provided by the facility, to extend greater equitable treatment to the two skating clubs that utilize the facilities. While not completely cost neutral, projected expenses are anticipated to be partially offset by fees charged to participants. GF / Aspen Ice Garden 0.0 $43,000 Ongoing $0 6% Labor for Adult Hockey -The number of hockey teams has grown from eight to thirty-two in recent years. Costs associated the expansion of leagues, including officiating and scorekeeping, had been absorbed through staffing vacancies in maintenance positions; however, these maintenance positions have now been filled. With the absence of ongoing vacancy savings, there are no longer sufficient budget savings to cover the additional hockey expense without new expenditure authority. As existing hockey league play expenses are already offset by revenues collected from participants, this request is for new authority without new offsetting revenue. 26 P2 6 I. General Fund 27 $0 $4,000,000 $8,000,000 $12,000,000 $16,000,000 $20,000,000 $24,000,000 $28,000,000 $32,000,000 $36,000,000 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 General Fund Long Range Plan 2010-2023 Ending Balance Revenues Expenditures Reserve (25% of Uses) Recent property tax and fee-based revenue growth (specifically from Community Development and Engineering) have positively influenced and maintained projected fund balances above the 25% of annual expenditures target . P2 7 I. Asset Management Plan (AMP) 28 •Includes all capital project development, large dollar maintenance and replacement costs for fixed assets owned and operated by General Fund programs •City Hall, Aspen Recreation Center, Ice Garden, Red Brick •Streets, Bridges, Sidewalks, and Gutters •Fleet vehicles, Copiers, Computers, Etc. •10 year forecast estimates a useful life for many items and anticipates cost escalation •Not a smooth pattern to expenses when compared to operating •Rough placeholders for a number of large ticket items P2 8 I. Asset Management Plan (AMP) 29 Property Tax $3,993,000 96% Leases and Timeshares $160,000 Interest $7,900 Other $167,900 4% AMP Program Revenues = $4,160,900 P2 9 I. Asset Management Plan (AMP) 30 Department 2014 Amount Department Fleet Replacements $747,000 Streets Curb and Gutter Replacements $269,000 Engineering Pedestrian Improvements at Mill St. $213,000 Engineering Payroll for Capital Projects $167,000 Engineering Traffic Calming and Pedestrian Improvements at Neale St.$160,000 Engineering Replacement of the Pool Slide $150,000 Aspen Recreation Center Offices, Storage, and Housing Development (Planning)$100,000 Aspen Recreation Center Police Facility Renovation and Construction (Planning)$100,000 Asset Management Facility Master Planning for Entire City (Planning)$100,000 Asset Management All Other Projects $723,500 Various Grand Total $2,729,500 P3 0 I. Asset Management Plan (AMP) 31 $0 $2,000,000 $4,000,000 $6,000,000 $8,000,000 $10,000,000 $12,000,000 $14,000,000 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 Asset Management Plan Fund Long Range Plan 2010-2023 Ending Balance Revenues Expenditures Reserve 12.5% of Uses Expenditure spikes between 2015 and 2020 reflect future plans for administrative space for City staff. Revenues, predominately from property taxes, include a one-time benefit for the sale of the Zupancis property. P3 1 I. Debt Service Fund 32 •As a home rule city, limited by City charter for general obligation debt issuance to a maximum issuance of 20% of the City’s assessed value •20% of the projected 2014 assessed valuation is $252.2 million •Current outstanding general obligation debt is $11.3 million •There is no limitation to the amount the City can enter into for either revenue supported debt or special district debt. •Revenue supported debt as of Jan. 1, 2014 equals $38.3 million P3 2 I. Debt Service Fund 33 Parks and Recreation Bonds $30,435,000 61% Facility Bonds $12,395,000 25% Housing Bonds $6,415,000 13% Energy Efficiency Lease Purchase $331,123 1% Outstanding Total Debt = $49,576,123 Paid From Outstanding Debt Principal + Interest Pmts Debt Service $37,349,850 $3,300,040 General Fund $331,123 $48,940 Electric Fund $4,835,000 $358,270 Golf Fund $645,150 $135,800 Truscott Fund $4,840,000 $705,000 Marolt Fund $1,575,000 $282,900 Grand Total $49,576,123 $4,977,250 P3 3 I. Debt Service Fund 34 Lease Revenue $594,860 18% Transfers $2,704,750 82% 2014 Revenues = $3,299,610 Trustee Fees $8,500 0% Principal $2,087,200 63% Interest $1,204,340 37% 2014 Expenditures = $3,300,040 P3 4 I. Employee Benefits 35 •The City of Aspen is partially self-insured for health, dental and vision coverage for its 286.9 FTEs •Recent years’ efforts to better control cost escalation in these benefits have turned into successes •City pays roughly 85% of premium costs; employee contributions equate to the remaining 15% P3 5 I. Employee Benefits 36 Employer Premiums $3,832,000 83% Employee Premiums $707,000 15% Other $103,000 2% 2014 Revenues = $4,641,800 Paid Claims $3,903,000 Contributions to HSAs $170,000 Administration $500,000 Consulting $92,000 2014 Expenditures = $4,665,000 P3 6 I. Employee Housing 37 •Prior Council objectives included providing housing options for roughly 45% of City employees •Assist in recruitment / retention of a quality workforce •Reduce roadway congestion / lessen pollution •Currently 20 rental and 24 ownership units •Per FTE charge of $3,375 applied to programs in an effort to set aside resources for future development (reduced by 25% from 2013) P3 7 I. Employee Housing 38 Rental & Other Income $86,500 Transfers $920,000 2014 Revenues = $1,006,500 Operating Expenses $144,160 Capital Expenses $103,000 Transfers $75,000 2014 Expenditures = $322,160 P3 8 I. Employee Housing 39 $0 $500,000 $1,000,000 $1,500,000 $2,000,000 $2,500,000 $3,000,000 $3,500,000 $4,000,000 $4,500,000 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 Employee Housing Fund Long Range Plan 2010-2023 Fund Balance Revenues Expenditures Reserve (12.5% of Uses) Revenues reflect "charges" to departments on a per FTE basis to support future housing development needs. Biannual expenditure spikes mirror placeholder estimates for constructing new housing units every other year. P3 9 I. Tourism Promotion Fund 40 •Dedicated program began in 2001 with approval of 1.0% lodging tax (50/50 split with transportation) •Marketing resources were expanded in 2011 through an additional 1.0% lodging tax •The City contracts with the Aspen Chamber and Resort Association for marketing services, including: •Guest services •Website hosting and maintenance •Social media and digital marketing, targeted marketing and groups •Tracking and reporting occupancy and average daily rate P4 0 I. Tourism Promotion Fund 41 Projected Fund Balance $87,000 3% Lodging Tax for Transportation $637,300 24% Lodging Tax for Marketing $1,912,000 73% Revenues + Fund Balance = $2,549,700 Transportation $659,200 25% Marketing $1,977,500 75% Expenditures = $26,636,700 P4 1 I. Tourism Promotion Fund 42 $0 $500,000 $1,000,000 $1,500,000 $2,000,000 $2,500,000 $3,000,000 $3,500,000 $4,000,000 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 City Tourism Promotion Fund Long Range Plan 2010-2023 Fund Balance Revenues Expenditures The small fund balances shown in recent years reflect revenues exceeding preliminary projections. The remaining 2013 balance will be distributed to preserve the 25/75 split between ACRA and Transportation. P4 2 I.