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HomeMy WebLinkAboutagenda.council.worksession.20171002 CITY COUNCIL WORK SESSION October 02, 2017 5:00 PM, City Council Chambers MEETING AGENDA I. Budget Kickoff: Overview / General Fund / Grants P1     September 29, 2017    Mayor and City Council,    I am pleased to present the proposed 2018 operating and capital appropriations budget for your  consideration.  Net appropriations for the year, excluding interfund transfers and therefore the  true expenditure request, equal $125,631,787 and is outlined in the table below.  For 2018, base  operational costs for existing service levels increased just 0.7%.  Combined with newly requested  resources above existing service levels, the operational budget request increases by 5.2%.  Capital  authority for 2018 is requested at $46,965,447, or a 10.3% increase from last year, however it  reflects a re‐adoption of 2017 authority for administrative city offices, as these dollars will not be  spent in 2017 and will be returned to fund balance.  Finally, debt service is projected to increase  by $2,884,610, or 45.6%, however much of this increase is due a one‐time partial call on  outstanding bonds related to the Castle Creek Energy Center of $1,970,000; the remaining  increase relates largely to new debt payments for administrative offices.    2017 Orig. Budget 2018 Request $ Change  % Change  Revenues $158,636,200 $152,245,485 ($6,390,715)  (4.0%)      Base Operating $66,030,250 $66,483,630 $453,380  0.7%      Supplementals N/A $2,974,520 $2,974,520  N/A Total Operating $66,030,250 $69,458,150 $3,427,900  5.2% Capital Outlay $42,564,170 $46,965,447 $4,401,277  10.3% Debt Service $6,323,580 $9,208,190 $2,884,610  45.6% Net Appropriations $114,918,000 $125,631,787 $10,713,787  9.3% Transfers $25,350,880 $27,570,160 $2,219,280  8.8%  Total Appropriations $140,268,880 $153,201,947 $12,933,067    9.2% Ending Fund Balance $121,863,553 $132,854,934 $10,991,381  9.0%     Arts and Recreation $25,578,580  17%Asset Management $24,433,790  16% Public Utilities $20,608,460  13% Affordable Housing $19,944,360  13% Transportation and  Parking $13,055,730  9% Internal Service  Funds $7,877,547  5% Debt Service $7,776,170  5% Community  Development,  Engineering $6,625,750  4% Administrative $6,180,070  4% Public Safety $5,745,520  4% Childcare,  Human  Services,  Education $5,660,070  4% Streets, Stormwater $4,416,760  3% Economic Promotion $3,338,990  2% Environmental  Initiatives $1,960,150  1% Transmittal Letter - Page 1 P2 I. Revenues  Taxes  The City has assumed a 3.0% growth rate over projected 2017 forecasted sales tax collections.   This softer growth assumption relative to Aspen’s long‐term average tax growth rate of 4.5% is  reflective of the broader uncertainty in the political and economic environments nationally and  internationally, and of the slower growth in lodging occupancy figures.    Similarly, the City has assumed a 4.0% increase over projected 2017 lodging tax collections – this  again is below the historical long‐run average growth for lodging tax collections.  While there  continues to be some upward price movement for the average room night, average occupancy  has started to level off and overall growth appears to be somewhat moderated.          $8,000,000 $9,000,000 $10,000,000 $11,000,000 $12,000,000 $13,000,000 $14,000,000 $15,000,000 $16,000,000 $17,000,000 Retail Sales Tax  Collections City Collections Inflation Adjusted $300,000 $400,000 $500,000 $600,000 $700,000 $800,000 $900,000 $1,000,000 Lodging Tax  Collections (Transportation Fund Share) Lodging Tax Transportation Inflation Adjusted Transmittal Letter - Page 2 P3 I.   Mill Levy  In addition to the previously mentioned taxes, the City has two separate mill levies: a general  purpose levy that is subject to TABOR limitation with a maximum of 5.410 mills; and a dedicated  Stormwater mill levy with a maximum of 0.650 mills.  2018 revenues generated by these two mill  levies are projected to increase by 4.6% based on the formulaic TABOR increase of inflation  (2.8%) plus annual new construction growth (1.8%).  This revenue growth is less than the annual  change in assessed valuation for property within the City, which grew by 8.9%; and therefore,  will result in projected increases in mill levy credits against the full levies possible.  For 2018, the  projected mill levies to be applied are 4.394 and 0.556 mills for the general purpose and  Stormwater levies, respectively.  All figures above are preliminary and will be revised when the  final figures from the Pitkin County Assessor’s Office are released in early December.        Fees  Fees are collected to support elective programs or services that would otherwise need to be  scaled back if general purpose revenue was not sufficient to provide them.  For 2018, fees were  evaluated individually again, and select fees were adjusted for a variety of reasons.  A summary  of the fee changes is included in your budget book, with the general rationale on changes noted  below:     recreation / golf fees ‐ select fees were adjusted based on elasticity, cost recovery, new  programming, and simplification;     community development / engineering fees ‐ clean‐up of thresholds and language,  removal of refund allowances, and refinement to permit waivers for non‐profit  organizations;    parking fees ‐ continued focus on influencing behavior and reducing traffic congestion  with adjustments to 4th hour and business/service vehicle permits; and   transportation fees – resetting ranges for car‐to‐go program fees.  $3,500,000 $4,000,000 $4,500,000 $5,000,000 $5,500,000 $6,000,000 $6,500,000 $7,000,000 $7,500,000 $0 $200,000,000 $400,000,000 $600,000,000 $800,000,000 $1,000,000,000 $1,200,000,000 $1,400,000,000 $1,600,000,000 $1,800,000,000 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 Property Tax RevenueAssessed ValuationAssessed Value  & Property Tax  Revenue Base Property Tax Revenue Add'l TABOR Revenues Assessed Value Transmittal Letter - Page 3 P4 I. Operating Expenditures  The 2018 operating budget of $69,458,150 reflects a 5.2% increase over the 2017 originally  adopted budget.  This increase is nearly all related to the $2,974,520 million in “supplemental”  requests, as continuation of base budget authority from 2017 to 2018 remained essentially flat,  increasing just $453,380, or 0.7%.  New supplemental requests reflect areas where cost  escalation exceeded inflationary targets and/or are areas where program expansion or increased  staffing are sought to address customer service levels or expanded regulation.  Because these  requests additive to existing service levels, these requests are itemized out from the rest of the  budget, for specific Council approval.    Below is a brief summary of the amounts and general focus of the supplemental resources  requested in 2018.  Further information on these supplemental requests can be found in your  budget book.    Focus Area Authority Description  Arts and Recreation $622,310  Child day‐camp and adult fitness staffing, nordic and trails  management, program expansion and additional arts grants  Outreach $330,150  Continuation of Citizen’s Academy and the Sustainability Report,  on‐going funding for Health and Human Services Officer,  downtown economic vitality efforts  Regulation or Policy  Enforcement  $277,520  Additional tax auditing resources focused around transient  vendors and short term rentals, zoning / building review services  Transit Services $515,410  EV charging stations and alternative transit services  Utility Services $602,350  Purchased power cost escalation, protection of water rights,  staffing resources, professional services and maintenance costs  Facility Related $319,050  Utilities associated with new and existing buildings, additional  internal resources for project management  Internal Operations $307,730  IT / GIS upgrades and support services, staff support for internal  process improvement and environmental health initiatives  Grand Total $2,974,520       $622,310  $330,150  $277,520  $515,410  $602,350  $319,050  $307,730  2018 Supplemental Requests By Focus Area Arts and Recreation Outreach Regulation or Policy Enforcement Transit Services Utility Services Facility Related Internal Operations Transmittal Letter - Page 4 P5 I. Capital Expenditures  The 2018 capital plan, equal to $46,965,447, is anchored by two appropriation requests for the  advancement of City administrative offices as well as for new funding tied to affordable housing  development.  Related to the City administrative offices, the $19.9 million figure includes a re‐ appropriation of the $17.0 million authority adopted in the 2017 budget – this earlier  appropriation will be returned to fund balance and is being re‐requested to correspond to the  timing of anticipated financing proceeds.    A summarized listing of capital projects of $150,000 or more is itemized below.  All capital  projects proposed for 2018 are documented within your budget books under the respective fund  supporting the project.     50257 City Offices ‐ Galena $19,911,880  50542 PPP Development Rental Housing $16,400,000  50833 General Fund Departments Fleet ‐ 2018 $865,250  50780 Fleet ‐ Parks ‐ 2018 $591,500  50693 City Offices ‐ Rio Grande $500,000  50681 Water Place Phase II ‐ Design $450,000  50258 City Offices ‐ Armory $443,500  50837 Concrete Replacement ‐ 2018 $435,000  50132 New Equipment Storage Building $350,000  50563 Ground Water Additional Drilling $300,000  50512 Orchestra Seating Replacement $255,500  50184 Micro Hydro Maroon / Castle Creek $250,000  50749 Water System Integrity Projects $225,000  50766 Electric System Replacement ‐ 2018 $200,000  50745 Backwash Pond ‐ Master Plan & Solids Mitigation $180,000  50783 Fleet ‐ Golf ‐ 2018 $154,000  50750 Distribution Replacement ‐ 2018 $150,000  All Other Projects Less Than $150,000 $5,303,817  2018 Capital Projects Total $46,965,447    Summary  I look forward to discussing this proposed 2018 budget with you in the coming weeks and  furthering its advancement for the continued quality and level of service our tourists and citizens  of Aspen deserve and expect.    Sincerely,     Steve Barwick  Aspen City Manager  Transmittal Letter - Page 5 P6 I. TOTAL CITY OF ASPEN 2018 NET APPROPRIATIONS BY FUND Fund Name Operating Supplementals Capital Debt Service Net  Appropriations 001 ‐ General Fund $26,305,210 $1,140,440 $0 $48,940 $27,494,590 250 ‐ Debt Service Fund $0 $0 $0 $5,804,920 $5,804,920 100 ‐ Parks and Open Space Fund $5,505,260 $88,450 $1,797,920 $0 $7,391,630 120 ‐ Wheeler Opera House Fund $3,095,240 $462,760 $506,500 $0 $4,064,500 130 ‐ Tourism Promotion Fund $2,802,240 $0 $0 $0 $2,802,240 131 ‐ Public Education Fund $2,700,000 $0 $0 $0 $2,700,000 132 ‐ REMP Fund $1,185,000 $0 $0 $0 $1,185,000 141 ‐ Transportation Fund $2,926,300 $500,000 $149,200 $0 $3,575,500 150 ‐ Housing Development Fund $570,370 $0 $16,400,000 $0 $16,970,370 152 ‐ Kids First Fund $1,775,700 $0 $21,200 $0 $1,796,900 160 ‐ Stormwater Fund $831,220 $0 $230,000 $0 $1,061,220 000 ‐ Asset Management Plan Fund $102,000 $0 $23,516,730 $0 $23,618,730 421 ‐ Water Utility Fund $4,183,660 $322,020 $2,380,000 $192,000 $7,077,680 431 ‐ Electric Utility Fund $7,157,130 $324,370 $666,400 $2,326,880 $10,474,780 451 ‐ Parking Fund $2,004,910 $30,000 $34,000 $0 $2,068,910 471 ‐ Golf Course Fund $1,474,310 $0 $328,400 $127,750 $1,930,460 491 ‐ Truscott I Housing Fund $631,550 $6,030 $18,100 $707,700 $1,363,380 492 ‐ Marolt Housing Fund $480,070 $8,510 $150,550 $0 $639,130 501 ‐ Employee Benefits Fund $1,428,750 $0 $0 $0 $1,428,750 505 ‐ Employee Housing Fund $236,490 $0 $556,200 $0 $792,690 510 ‐ Information Technology Fund $1,088,220 $91,940 $210,247 $0 $1,390,407 $0 All Funds $66,483,630 $2,974,520 $46,965,447 $9,208,190 $125,631,787 Operating $66,483,630 53% Supplementals $2,974,520 2% Capital $46,965,447 38% Debt Service $9,208,190 7% 2018 Net Appropriations by Type Transmittal Letter - Page 6 P7 I. TOTAL CITY OF ASPEN 2018 APPROPRIATIONS BY FUND Fund Name Opening  Balance Total  Revenues Total  Expenditures Ending  Balance $ Change In  Fund Balance % Change  Fund Balance 001 ‐ General Fund $15,768,661 $32,115,030 $32,990,620 $14,893,071 ($875,590) (5.6%) 250 ‐ Debt Service Fund $201,890 $5,808,460 $5,804,920 $205,430 $3,540 1.8% 100 ‐ Parks and Open Space Fund $5,033,454 $12,389,047 $12,268,190 $5,154,311 $120,857 2.4% 120 ‐ Wheeler Opera House Fund $31,434,976 $5,480,700 $4,630,400 $32,285,276 $850,300 2.7% 130 ‐ Tourism Promotion Fund $94,273 $2,839,190 $2,837,300 $96,163 $1,890 2.0% 131 ‐ Public Education Fund $4,152 $2,700,080 $2,700,000 $4,232 $80 1.9% 132 ‐ REMP Fund $4,197,578 $883,950 $1,185,000 $3,896,528 ($301,050) (7.2%) 141 ‐ Transportation Fund $4,169,326 $5,383,280 $5,693,320 $3,859,286 ($310,040) (7.4%) 150 ‐ Housing Development Fund $32,720,195 $15,113,438 $17,658,150 $30,175,483 ($2,544,712) (7.8%) 152 ‐ Kids First Fund $5,325,522 $2,162,690 $2,063,410 $5,424,802 $99,280 1.9% 160 ‐ Stormwater Fund $1,637,637 $1,218,050 $1,366,520 $1,489,167 ($148,470) (9.1%) 000 ‐ Asset Management Plan Fund $14,742,099 $29,900,410 $23,706,330 $20,936,179 $6,194,080 42.0% 421 ‐ Water Utility Fund $4,291,938 $8,519,540 $9,171,680 $3,639,798 ($652,140) (15.2%) 431 ‐ Electric Utility Fund $4,126,607 $9,304,830 $11,436,780 $1,994,657 ($2,131,950) (51.7%) 451 ‐ Parking Fund $4,743,384 $4,472,250 $7,362,410 $1,853,224 ($2,890,160) (60.9%) 471 ‐ Golf Course Fund $668,836 $2,278,970 $2,163,160 $784,646 $115,810 17.3% 491 ‐ Truscott I Housing Fund $472,014 $1,257,740 $1,489,180 $240,574 ($231,440) (49.0%) 492 ‐ Marolt Housing Fund $324,465 $1,228,580 $797,030 $756,015 $431,550 133.0% 501 ‐ Employee Benefits Fund $2,627,808 $5,071,060 $5,418,750 $2,280,118 ($347,690) (13.2%) 505 ‐ Employee Housing Fund $836,608 $2,444,090 $792,690 $2,488,008 $1,651,400 197.4% 510 ‐ Information Technology Fund $389,973 $1,674,100 $1,666,107 $397,966 $7,993 2.0% All Funds $133,811,396 $152,245,485 $153,201,947 $132,854,934 ($956,462) (0.7%) Less Interfund Transfers $27,570,160 $27,570,160 Net Appropriations $133,811,396 $124,675,325 $125,631,787 $132,854,934 Transmittal Letter - Page 7 P8 I. 2018 Proposed Budget October 2, 2017 P9I. 2018 Budget Process Meetings to Review Budget with Council (7)Scheduled Topics / Funds Monday, October 2 Overview,General Fund, Grants Tuesday, October 3 Internal Services Funds, Asset Management Plan Funds Tuesday, October 10 Tourism, Public School, REMP, Wheeler Opera House Funds Monday, October 16 Kids First, City Housing Funds Tuesday,October 17 Transportation, Parking Funds Tuesday, October 24 Water and Electric Utilities, Stormwater Funds Tuesday, November 7 Parks and Open Space, Golf, Component Unit (600) Funds 2 Adoption Meetings Scheduled Topics Monday, November 13 1st Reading of Fee Ordinance Monday, November 27 Budget Resolutions, 2nd Reading of Fee Ordinance Monday, December 11 Mill Levy Resolution P10I. 2018 Proposed Budget 3 Total Arts and Recreation $25,578,580 17%Total Asset Management $24,433,790 16% Total Public Utilities $20,608,460 13% Affordable Housing $19,944,360 13% Transportation and Parking $13,055,730 9% Internal Service Funds $7,877,547 5% Debt Service $7,776,170 5% Community Development, Engineering $6,625,750 4% Administrative $6,180,070 4% Public Safety $5,745,520 4% Childcare, Human Services, Education $5,660,070 4% Streets, Stormwater $4,416,760 3% Economic Promotion $3,338,990 2% Environmental Initiatives $1,960,150 1%P11I. 2018 Revenue: $152.2 Million 4 $62,015,440 $48,170,425 $27,061,910 $14,997,710 $0$10,000,000$20,000,000$30,000,000$40,000,000$50,000,000$60,000,000$70,000,000General Governmental Funds $62,015,440 000 -Asset Management Plan Fund $29,900,410 001 -General Fund $32,115,030 Special Revenue Funds $48,170,425 100 -Parks and Open Space Fund $12,389,047 120 -Wheeler Opera House Fund $5,480,700 130 -Tourism Promotion Fund $2,839,190 131 -Public Education Fund $2,700,080 132 -REMP Fund $883,950 141 -Transportation Fund $5,383,280 150 -Housing Development Fund $15,113,438 152 -Kids First Fund $2,162,690 160 -Stormwater Fund $1,218,050 Enterprise Funds $27,061,910 421 -Water Utility Fund $8,519,540 431 -Electric Utility Fund $9,304,830 451 -Parking Fund $4,472,250 471 -Golf Course Fund $2,278,970 491 -Truscott I Housing Fund $1,257,740 492 -Marolt Housing Fund $1,228,580 Debt Service / Internal Service Funds $14,997,710 250 -Debt Service Fund $5,808,460 501 -Employee Benefits Fund $5,071,060 505 -Employee Housing Fund $2,444,090 510 -Information Technology Fund $1,674,100 Grand Total $152,245,485 P12I. 2018 Revenue: $152.2M 5 Licensing, Permits, Charges for Services $48,636,098 Other Revenues $5,914,527 Transfers $27,570,160 Debt Proceeds $17,500,000 City 2.4% Sales Tax $18,340,800 City 2.0% Lodging Tax $3,783,100 City Share of County Sales Tax $9,076,000 Property & Ownership Taxes $8,290,800 Housing and Wheeler RETTs $10,463,000 City 2.1% Use Tax $1,100,000 Occupation Taxes & Franchise Fees $1,571,000 Taxes: $52.6M P13I. Property Tax Collections $7.1M General Fund / AMP Fund; $900K Stormwater Fund 6 $0 $200,000,000 $400,000,000 $600,000,000 $800,000,000 $1,000,000,000 $1,200,000,000 $1,400,000,000 $1,600,000,000 $1,800,000,000 $2,000,000,000 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 $0 $1,000,000 $2,000,000 $3,000,000 $4,000,000 $5,000,000 $6,000,000 $7,000,000 $8,000,000 Property Tax: 2018 AV Growth = 9.5%, Revenue Growth 4.6% Base Property Tax Collections Add'l TABOR Revenues Assessed Value Assessment Yr: 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 1.434 2.198 2.124 0.894 0.755 0.426 0.273 1.006 0.809 1.016 0.000 0.500 1.000 1.500 2.000 2.500 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 General Purpose Mill Levy Credit Mill Levy Credit P14I. 2.1% City Sales Tax Excludes 0.3% Tax for Public Education 7 $8,000,000 $9,000,000 $10,000,000 $11,000,000 $12,000,000 $13,000,000 $14,000,000 $15,000,000 $16,000,000 $17,000,000 Actual Collections Inflation Adj. Collections 55% of 0.45% Kids First $1,843,400 45% of 0.45% Housing Dev. $1,508,200 0.15% Transportation $1,117,200 1.0% + 0.5% (Sunsets) Parks & Open Space $11,172,000 2017 Forecast: 1.0% 2018 Projection: 3.0%P15I. 2.0% Lodging Tax Tourism Promotion Fund (1.50%) / Transportation Fund (0.50%) 8 $500,000 $1,000,000 $1,500,000 $2,000,000 $2,500,000 $3,000,000 $3,500,000 $4,000,000 City Collections City Adj. Inflation 1.5% Tax - Tourism Promotion $2,837,300 0.5% Tax - Transportation $945,800 2017 Forecast: 4.0% 2018 Projection: 3.5%P16I. Real Estate Transfer Taxes Housing Development Fund (1.0%), Wheeler Opera House Fund (0.5%) 9 $500,000 $2,500,000 $4,500,000 $6,500,000 $8,500,000 $10,500,000 $12,500,000 City Collections City Adj. Inflation 1.0% RETT - Housing Development Fund $6,750,000 0.5% RETT - Wheeler Opera House Fund $3,713,000 2017 Forecast: $9.0M & $6.8M 2018 Projection: $5.0M & $3.7M P17I. 2.1% Use Tax Transportation (2.1%) 10 $0 $1,000,000 $2,000,000 $3,000,000 $4,000,000 $5,000,000 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Projected 2018 Projected Use Tax On Deposit Realized Use Tax 2017 Forecast: 12.0% 2018 Projection: 10.0%P18I. 2018 Revenue: $152.2M 11 Taxes $52,624,700 Other Revenues $5,914,527 Transfers $27,570,160 Debt Proceeds $17,500,000 Utilities $16,945,300 Arts & Recreation $5,245,290 Affordable Housing $8,733,650 Development $11,063,638 Transportation & Parking $4,361,250 Other Fees $2,286,970 Charges for Services, Licensing Permits: $48.6M P19I. 2018 Revenue: $152.2M 12 Taxes $52,624,700 Transfers $27,570,160 Other Revenues $5,914,527 Licensing, Permits, Charges for Services $48,636,098 Debt Proceeds for Administrative Offices $17,500,000 Debt Proceeds: $17.5M Square Feet Project Cost Financed Cash Reserves Admin Building 28,400 $22,142,000 $17,500,000 $4,642,000 Armory -City Hall 19,800 $15,890,000 $0 $15,890,000 Rio Grande 6,400 $500,000 $0 $500,000 Total 54,600 $38,532,000 $17,500,000 $21,032,000 P20I. 2018 Revenue: $152.2M 13 Taxes $52,624,700 Transfers $27,570,160 Licensing, Permits, Charges for Services $48,636,098 Debt Proceeds $17,500,000 Employee Health Premiums $728,000 Investment Income $2,681,230 Miscellaneous Revenues $1,185,200 Refund of Expenditures $1,320,097 Other Revenues: $5.9M P21I. 2018 Revenue: $152.2M 14 Taxes $52,624,700 Licensing, Permits, Charges for Services $48,636,098 Other Revenues $5,914,527 General Fund Overhead $4,980,800 IT Overhead $1,550,200 Employee Housing $1,126,600 Debt Services $5,049,150 Other Transfers $1,188,740 Franchise Fees $1,284,000 Parking / Transportation $1,750,000 Employee Health Premiums $3,990,000 Capital - Administrative Offices $6,650,670 Transfers: $27.6M P22I. 2018 Proposed Expenditure Authority 15 •Base Budget •Equal to same level of resources as prior fiscal year, adjusted for: »Wages -Up to 4.0% merit pay »Healthcare Premiums -4.0% increase (employee & employer) »Goods & Services -2.0% Inflationary Increase (held flat 2017) •Supplemental Requests •New resource requests for expanded or new services, or for cost escalation that could not be absorbed P23I. 2018 Proposed Budget Overview 16 2017 Original Budget 2018 Proposed Budget Change Base Operating Budget $66,030,250 $66,483,630 0.7% Supplementals (New Requests)N/A $2,974,520 N/A Total Operating Budget $66,030,250 $69,458,150 5.2% Capital Outlay $42,564,170 $46,965,447 10.3% Debt Service $6,323,580 $9,208,190 45.6% Net Appropriations Request $114,918,000 $125,631,787 9.3% Transfers $25,350,880 $27,570,160 8.8% Total Request (Excluding Transfers)$140,268,880 $153,201,947 9.2% Ending Fund Balance $121,863,553 $132,854,956 9.0%P24I. 2018 Capital 2018 Budget City Administrative Office $19,911,880 PPP Development Rental Housing $16,400,000 Fleet –General Fund Departments $865,250 Fleet –Parks and Open Space Fund $591,500 Rio Grande Building Renovation $500,000 Water Place Phase II –Design $450,000 City Hall Armory –Design $443,500 Annual Concrete Replacement $435,000 Utilities Equipment Storage Building $350,000 Ground Water Additional Drilling $300,000 All Other Projects < $300,000 $6,718,317 Total Capital Outlay $46,965,447 17 P25I. 2018 Debt Service 2017 Adopted Budget 2018 Proposed Budget Debt Service Fund (ISIS Theater)$595,270 $595,270 Debt Service Fund (Parks Bonds)$3,041,000 $3,041,100 Debt Service Fund (Police Department)$1,155,040 $1,156,450 Debt Service Fund (Admin. Offices -Estimated)N/A $1,012,100 Truscott Housing Fund $707,600 $707,700 Marolt Housing Fund $390,200 N/A Water Utility Fund (Land Acquisition -Estimated)N/A $192,000 Electric Utility Fund (Castle Creek Energy Center)$357,900 $2,326,800 Golf Course Fund (Facility)$186,550 $127,750 General Fund (McKinstry Energy Efficiency Project)$48,940 $48,940 Total Debt Service $6,323,580 $9,208,190 18 P26I. Questions?P27I. General Fund 20 •Share of County Sales Tax: 3.0% Increase •Property Tax (25% Split): 5.2% Increase •Overhead Allocations: 8.1% Increase •Department Collections: 9.9% Increase Department Related Collections $12,418,900 GF Overhead Allocations $5,190,100 City Share of County Sales Tax $9,076,000 Property & Ownership Tax $2,034,400 Occupation Taxes $1,571,000 Transfers $1,424,260 Other Revenues $400,370 Revenues = $30,690,770 $303,160 $103,550 $188,990 $444,000 $1,066,700 $2,305,500 $8,007,000 $0 $2,000,000 $4,000,000 $6,000,000 $8,000,000 $10,000,000 All Other Depts Env. Health Police Streets Engineering Recreation Community Development P28I. General Fund 21 Administrative Plus Grants $8,594,450 ComDev and Engineering $5,182,550 Recreation $4,690,830 Police $5,349,820 Parks (Downtown) $147,890 0% Streets $1,968,990 Environmental Health $713,550 Events $846,510 IT Overhead $1,010,400 3% Transfers $4,485,630 14% Uses = $32,990,620 •Base Budget: 0.8% Decrease 2017 One-Time Appropriations ($466K) Turnover in Higher Level Positions •New Supplementals: 4.3% Increase Facility Related: $305K Outreach: $300K Enforcement: $278K Internal Operations: $172K Recreation and Transit: $87K •Transfers: 80% Increase Re-Appropriate $2.0M Reserve to AMP Debt Service of $1.9M for APD / Admin Offices P29I. General Fund: Supplementals 22 •Managers Office: $221,800 Business Analyst (1.0 FTE -Termed) -$89,120 Management Analyst II (1.0 FTE) -$88,970 Management Analyst Intern -$20,710 Citizens Academy -$23,000 •Finance and Human Resources: $184,000 Tax Auditor (1.0 FTE) -$92,000 1-Year Support Services Contract (ERP) -$92,000 •Asset Management: $293,610 Asst. Capital Asset Manager (1.0 FTE) -$122,610 Placeholder for Utilities / Maintenance Police Dept. Building -$171,000 P30I. General Fund: Supplementals 23 •Planning and Building: $131,420 Zoning Enforcement Supervisor (1.0 FTE) -$95,520 Ersi Contract Hours (GIS) -$10,000 Utilities / Custodial Services at Mill Building -$10,900 Development Review Services Contract: $15,000 •Police: $99,060 Human Services Officer (1.0 FTE) -$99,060 •Env. Health / Canary: $59,450 Climate and Efficiency Specialist (1.0 FTE -Termed) -$44,040 Operational / Maintenance Costs for EV Charging Stations -$15,410 P31I. General Fund: Supplementals 24 •Engineering: $80,000 Ersi Contract Hours (GIS) -$5,000 Inspection and Review Services Contract: $75,000 •Recreation: $71,100 Recreation Specialist II for Day Camp (1.0 FTE) -$46,100 Adult Fitness Temporary Labor Funding -$25,000 P32I. General Fund 25 Net Change to Fund Balance: $377,510 $0 $5,000,000 $10,000,000 $15,000,000 $20,000,000 $25,000,000 $30,000,000 $35,000,000 $40,000,000 2017 Forecast 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 Ending Fund Balance Revenue Expense 25% Reserve Requirement P33I. 2018 Grants 26 2017 Budget 2018 Request 2018 Recommended Percent Change General Fund -Community Non-Profits $222,910 N/A $150,870 (32%) General Fund -Health and Human Services $445,010 $486,840 $453,910 2% General Fund -Other Non-Profits $434,070 $603,050 $442,750 2% General Fund –Monetary $1,101,990 $1,089,890 $1,047,530 (5%) Parks and Open Space –Monetary $33,500 $21,000 $21,000 (37%) Wheeler Opera House Fund –Monetary $350,000 $652,000 $400,000 14% Total Monetary Grants $1,485,490 $1,762,890 $1,468,430 (1%) General Fund –In Kind *$53,150 $61,000 $61,000 15% Parks and Open Space –In Kind $700 $0 $0 (100%) Wheeler Opera House Fund –In Kind $0 $7,000 $14,500 N/A Total In-Kind Grants $53,850 $68,000 $75,500 40% Total All Grants $1,539,340 $1,830,890 $1,544,030 0% * Recreation In-Kind Grants do not reflect rent waiver for Silver City Gymnastics or Junior Hockey Fall Face -Off ice time.P34I.