Financial Solutions
Problem: We have been running our city on debt. Our high interest (7%) cost is increasing from $1 to $2 million, which diverts critical funding from infrastructure. Our employee pensions are not secure. Our balance sheet [net value] has diminished from $88 million to $50 million. We are now running cash deficits and depleting our savings. Our Capital reserves are gone. Each of these issues has worsened in the past four years.
This is not sustainable.
Measure E will sunset in 2028 and the city polling shows residents do not support increases, yet the budget has not been reduced.
Approach: I lend a fresh voice and viable solutions to help solve problems, collaborative with the Council. I will build trust with residents using candor, disclosure and fact-based decisions. Expenditures should be based on resident priorities. Problems need to be solved holistically to avoid tax stacks and retore trust. Residents are respected as our trusted partners.
Source: page 36: https://www.pvestates.org/home/showpublisheddocument/15984/637641844126900000
Fiscal year 2024 began 7/1/23
PROPOSED SOLUTION
Build trust by re-establishing Transparency as mission and standard practice for the city. Full disclosure and candor are critical.
Transition to an accrual-based budget and include all costs even if purchased using debt.
Transition to an accrual-based long-term financial plan Continue to utilize our long-term financial plan for appropriate decision making to ensure the multi-year impact is considered in appropriations. Now all the budget, long-term plan and the balance sheet will tell one story and one truth.
Increase revenue with non-tax revenue:
Reinstate the non-tax revenue ad-hoc committee and include residents
Revitalize Malaga Cove and Lunada Bay plazas to increase revenue and beautify these areas
Charge for parking like Del Cerro park, which will may also reduce congestion and litter on the coastline
Charge development fees that cover the full cost of planning/ staff/consultants, rather than have residents continue to supplement development costs
Offer more optional fee-based services by the city
5. Reduce costs:
Conduct an operational review and implement efficiencies
Conduct a line-item budget review and eliminate low value spending
Implement financial and operational controls. s
6. Implement a real pension policy that prevents more debt by paying the full cost each year. Then pay off existing debt so high interest costs are avoided; redirect the savings to infrastructure.
Stop pension debt growth:
Pay the full cost of pensions each year. This is approximately 70% of salaries. If CalPERS has a bad year, pay off any incremental new debt the following year.
Pay off existing pension debt:
We are paying 7% interest on about $20 million in debt, which is growing quickly. We need to come up with the best mixture of savings verses risk using a mixed combination of available funds, a temporary tax, and a loan at a lower rate. The annual savings ($1-2 million) should then be redirected to fund infrastructure.
7. Communicate and collaborate with residents.
Publish clear graphs to express our current state and future trajectory (use OpenGov).
Understand resident priorities and what they are willing to pay for: police, infrastructure, parkland, fire abatement, beautification, etc.
Listen and respond to what residents need, and expect to evolve in an atmosphere of respect, engagement, and continuous improvement.
8. Taxation
When we reach a point where tax increases are needed and we have done the due diligence and resident engagement, we move forward together.