Budget carves out $1M for landslide costs
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Barbara Diamond
City officials shored up landslide funding in the 2005-06 budget,
drastically pared down from the draft presented at a public workshop
held May 7.
Tuesday, the City Council unanimously approved the $59-million
budget, $38 million of it in the general fund, which was balanced, as
required by law. The balance is precarious, leaving the city coffers
with only $2,000 above the mandated reserve of 10% of the general
fund.
A $1-million allocation toward restoration and for services
associated with the Flamingo Road landslide was carved out of the
general fund by slicing almost every proposal made at the workshop
and tapping both the contingency fund and a Cox Cable grant.
“We didn’t include anything, even if you told me to include it and
with that, we have a balanced budget that will get us through the
next two months,” City Manager Ken Frank told the council. “It’s not
like you have a choice.
“In a period of 15 minutes on June 1, the city’s budget was
seriously battered. Within two weeks, the city has spent roughly
$300,000 for emergency public safety and public utility operations.”
Frank scraped together the $1 million by siphoning $500,000 from a
one-time windfall, negotiated as part of the renewal of the Cox Cable
franchise, and draining the entire $500,000 contingency fund,
proposed years ago by Councilman Wayne Peterson for just such
situations.
“It won’t be enough,” Frank said.
“Maybe it will be enough to pay for emergency measures that will
be essential before the rainy season if there is federal and state
assistance, participation by the Laguna Beach Water District and
cooperation from the private property owners.”
Frank opined that, most likely, a supplemental appropriation will
be needed by the end of 2005.
“There is not enough money for anything else,” Frank said.
Frank’s recommendations were approved with minimal discussion,
mostly on how to divvy up the $650,000 Cox grant, that in part was
supposed to fund an estimated $150,000 in upgrades to the equipment
used to televise council meetings, and a request for a $21,000
appropriation to complete the city’s website by hiring a duplicate
server to put the database outside the city’s firewall.
“The final step in the project is important not only for the
convenience of public access to city records via home and office
computers, but will impact the efficiency of city staff and diminish
traffic congestion downtown,” former City Clerk Verna Rollinger said,
in support of the expenditure.
A motion to appropriate the funds failed on a 3-2 vote, council
members Toni Iseman and Jane Egly in favor.
The Community Assistance Grants, which totaled $175,000, took
longer to approve.
Gallimaufry Performing Arts founder Steve Josephson successfully
lobbied for a larger grant for educational programs. The council took
the additional funds from the Business Improvement District Fund.
The BID fund is a voluntarily contribution by Laguna Beach
hoteliers to arts groups or individuals that attract tourists.
Community Assistance Grants are funded by Festival of Arts lease
revenue.
About 40 applications for the $175,000 fund were submitted to the
city. The two highest recommended grants, $20,000 each, were
earmarked for the Cross Cultural Council and the Laguna Relief and
Resource Center.
The council redistributed some of the recommended grants to add
another $1,000 to the recommended allocations to the Crosscultural
Council, the Coastal Family Therapy Services and Friendship Shelter.
The vote for the reallocation was 4-1, Iseman opposed. She wanted to
cut the $10,000 grant to the Friends of the Sea Lions to pick up some
more funds for groups she thought were more locally focused.
“Friends of the Sea Lions is regional and it has a lot of sizzle,
but they can raise money outside of Laguna,” Iseman said. “If we
reduced it to $4,000, we would have $6,000 that I would like to see
distributed among other [applicants] that are exclusively Laguna.”
The council approved modifications to the 2004-05 budget and
adopted resolutions approving changes from the preliminary budget;
modified rates the city pays Waste Management; increased salaries
for city employees, police officers and firefighters and
cost-of-living and merit raises for City Clerk Martha Anderson and
Treasurer Laura Parisi; increased monthly retainer and hourly rate
for legal services, which City Atty. Philip Kohn agreed to defer for
three months; and the city’s annual appropriations limit.
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