HomeMy WebLinkAbout08/14/2017 - Special Minutes - City Council MINUTES OF THE CITY COUNCIL BUDGET WORKSHOP
CITY OF COLLEGE STATION
AUGUST 14, 2017
STATE OF TEXAS §
COUNTY OF BRAZOS §
Present:
Karl Mooney, Mayor
Council:
Blanche Brick
Jerome Rektorik
Linda Harvell
Barry Moore
Julie Schultz
James Benham
City Staff:
Kelly Templin, City Manager
Jeff Kersten, Assistant City Manager
Jeff Capps, Assistant City Manager
Aubrey Nettles, Special Projects Coordinator
Mary Ellen Leonard, Finance Director
Courtney Kennedy, Budget Manager
Carla Robinson, City Attorney
Mary Ann Powell, Deputy City Attorney
Tanya McNutt, City Secretary
1. Call to Order and Announce a Quorum is Present
With a quorum present, the Budget Workshop of the College Station City Council was called to
order by Mayor Karl Mooney at 3:13 p.m. on Monday, August 14, 2017 in the CSU
Meeting/Training Facility, 1603 Graham Road, College Station, Texas 77842.
2. Presentation, possible action, and discussion on the FY 2017-2018 Proposed Budget.
Jeff Kersten, Assistant City Manager, provided a review of the proposed FY17-18 budget and
citywide budget issues. Public hearings for the tax rate are scheduled for August 30 and September
11,both at 7:00 p.m. Key decision points include public safety,maintenance needs,capital project
plan and funding, compensation and benefits plan, water rate increase, commercial and residential
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sanitation rate increase, service level increases to address growth and maintenance needs; and tax
rate, etc. The budget and tax rate are scheduled to be adopted September 25. The revised FY17
Budget has an authorized decrease of($2,855,804). Current estimate is that there will be a slight
increase in fund balance when the year closes.
GENERAL FUND
Revenues
Sales Tax, our largest revenue stream, accounts for 37%. The FY17 forecast is 5.2% higher than
FY16 (FY17 forecast includes several one-time sales tax settlements and purchases). Staff is
projecting a 2% increase over FY18 year-end estimate for an estimated revenue of$28.5 million.
Ad valorem taxes account for 31% of our general fund revenues. Our certified property valuation
is $8.9 billion, for an approximate 11.41% increase in value over last year. New Value is 45% of
that increase or $409 million. We are continuing to see growth on the property value side. Our
current tax rate is 47.25 cents. The effective tax rate is 44.4262 cents and generates approximately
the same revenues on the same properties this year as last year. The rollback rate is calculated at
51.7358 cents. The property tax revenue coming into the General Fund is estimated to be $23.9
million, and the Debt Service Fund portion is estimated to be $19.1 million. Staff is proposing a
tax rate of 49.75 cents. Council will need to discuss the tax rate,vote to increase tax revenues, and
call and hold the Public Hearings on the tax rate to be considered.
Total transfers from all Utilities are being proposed in the amount of$11.9 million which is an
estimated 15% of General Fund revenues. The electric transfer rate policy remains the same as
FY17.
Minimal changes are proposed in other revenue categories such as licenses and permits, charges
for service, etc. The other General Fund revenues are estimated at$12,763,174.
Expenditures
Police and Fire account for almost half of the General Fund expenditures. Department summaries
were provided, along with Service Level Adjustments (SLAB) and proposed projects:
• Key factors to consider include growth, students and pay plan. To attract and retain a
well-qualified workforce, the budget includes a 2% market increase and 1.5% merit pay
pool.
• Retiree Healthcare: Change in administrator from BCBS to Cigna, PPO option,
employee premiums increases 10%, high deductible plan employee premiums increases
5%, and City contribution for healthcare increases 5%.
• Police: Four positions absorbed in base(previously SROs). SLAs:two detectives,special
investigator, two public safety tele-communicators, police canine program, training and
incentives for two SWAT operators, and two police assistants. The Service Level
Adjustment total is $796,770.
• Fire: Six grant funded firefighters absorbed in base. SLAs: Three additional positions
(safety captain, accreditation manager, and fire inspector), , Phase 1 of multiple
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equipment replacements,thermal imaging camera,tech gen gear, 12 lead EKG monitors,
and bike EMS program. The Service Level Adjustment total is $1,210,550.
• Public Works: $1,766,675 in service level adjustments for traffic signal technician,
facility maintenance (corrective increase), traffic calming initiative, streets dump truck
and equipment operator, curb repair funds (Summit and Casltegate II), landscape
maintenance increase, and ADA compliance upgrades (Municipal Court/UCS).
• Parks and Recreation: $470,785 in service level adjustments for business services
manager, GIS analyst, equipment purchases, and Weathermatic system. Asset
management plan items are budgeted in CIP. Also included are items that are 50% -
100% funded by hotel occupancy funds: various equipment purchases, Toro workman
HDX auto & pro sweep attachment (50% GF & 50% HOT), operations supervisor &
vehicle (50%GF & 50%HOT),TAAF Games of Texas Fee& Operations(100%HOT),
and Turf maintenance increase (100% HOT). Revenue projections for recreation
programs are $850,150 with expenditures of$3,388,674. The FY18 estimated subsidy
is $2,538,524.
At 5:10 p.m., the Mayor recessed the Budget Workshop.
The Budget Workshop reconvened at 5:40 p.m.
• Library: $21,260 in service level adjustments for increased operations and maintenance
proposed by the City of Bryan.
• Planning and Development Services: $304,405 in service level adjustments for
Staff/Senior planner, Engineer, laptops for building inspectors, and implementation of
neighborhood plans.
• Information Technology: $106,463 in service level adjustments for phone system
gateway replacement, and VMware vRealise operations manager software.
• Fiscal Services: $93,787 in service level adjustments for temporary assistance for
auditing court backlog, Finance Support Specialist, and training dollars for HPRR and
fixed asset annual training.
• General Government: $182,984 in service level adjustments, including the City
Council's Office (Supplies, sponsorships and registration fees, memberships and travel
and training),the Community Services(transfer of.5 FTE from CD fund to general fund),
the Internal Audit (Peer Review), and Human Resources (temporary assistance, annual
compensation survey and intern in connection with TAMU program).
With the consensus of the Council, the U.S. Conference of Mayor's membership was removed
from Council's FY18 budget and decreased$9,000.
• Economic Development: General Fund budget includes $500,000 transfer to Economic
Development Fund for cash assistance Economic Development activities were moved
from City Manager's Office to establish a separate department in FY16.
Non-departmental expenditures include:
• General and Administrative transfers to offset expenditures incurred by service
departments.
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• Public Agency Funding for various public agencies, such as Lions Club, RVP, Arts
Council, Health District, Appraisal District, and Animal Shelter.
• Interfund Transfers including a transfer-out to the Economic Development Fund as well as
transfers-in from HOT Fund for qualifying tournaments and special events and for Public
Communications staffing and marketing, from the Benefits Fund for Fitlife programs for
Police and Fire, from Drainage Fund for streets, and from various CIP Funds to offset cost
of project management.
• Other items including contingency, consulting, and SLAs for City Floor City Hall paint
and flooring and for study of FM 2154/SH 40 Interchange.
With the consensus of Council, the state legislative lobbying fund was removed and the FY18
budget decreased $40,000. Council consensus was that the budget for these services could be
included in the budget during legislative years and if there was a necessity to pursue a specific
legislative item during a non-legislative year,the budget could be amended. Council directed staff
to bring back a report on the results of this year's lobbying efforts.
GENERAL FUND FINANCIAL FORECAST
Revenues: We will continue with conservative revenue estimates and includes property value and
tax rate increases.
Expenditures:New expenditures as proposed,the Pay Plan as proposed,and includes the estimated
O&M on CIP projects.
GENERAL GOVERNMENT CAPITAL PROJECTS
Streets and Transportation: street rehabilitation projects, including Lincoln and Francis; extension
and capacity improvement projects, including Royder Rd Phase II; traffic projects, including TX
at Brothers and Barron at Alexandria traffic signals, pedestrian projects, and future sidewalk
projects, including Munson.
Parks: parking lot rehabilitation, project design for Southeast Park, field redevelopment and
renovation of parks restrooms, and system-wide park improvements (lights at Central Park).
Facilities Projects: Facility projects include the library expansion,arts council building renovation,
storage tank and containment rehabilitation, Public Works compliance upgrades, City gateway
signage #2, new Police Station construction, New City Hall design, Facilities maintenance
relocation. Council's consensus on moving forward with the $2 million on the design of the new
city hall on Texas avenue location.
Technology Projects: Technology projects include ERP system replacement, , fiber optic
infrastructure, wireless replacement, video surveillance system.
Special Revenue Capital Projects: Special Revenue projects include Hotel Fund (Veterans Park
Synthetic Fields), Community Development (Northeast Trunkline, Georgia Fitch Park, SW
Parkway Sidewalks, Bus Shelter-Lincoln Center), Drainage Utility (Various minor drainage
projects), and Sidewalk Zones (various minor sidewalk projects).
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Parkland: Fun For All Playground design, various park development projects, improvements at
Northgate Park, Wolf Pen, Crompton Park, Reatta Park, Bachmann Park (parking lot rehab), and
minor amenity improvements at various parks.
DEBT SERVICE FUND
The FY18 rate of 22.0339 cents will generate an estimated property tax revenue of$19.1 million
and will satisfy the FY18 debt service requirement. 50%of the Cemetery debt service will be paid
from the tax rate in FY18, with the other 50% coming from the Cemetery Fund.
At 7:29 p.m.,the Mayor recessed the Budget Workshop.
The Budget Workshop reconvened at 7:42 p.m.
SPECIAL REVENUE FUND—HOTEL TAX
Hotel Tax revenue is down 4.85% through June 2017. The HOT Revenue for hotels open for 2
years or longer is down 8.45%. Operating expenses are down 38.24%due to lower budgets related
to Veteran's Park and Southeast Park construction projects. HOT expenditures for Southeast Park
are expected to resume in FY19—which will result in an increase in expenditures.
FY18 projected revenue reflects 1% increase over FY17 estimate. Expenditures include $4.6
million for City operations, capital projects, preferred access payment, and miscellaneous
programs and events. Also included is proposed funding of$2.99 million for HOT funded outside
agencies including CVB, Arts Council, Easterwood Airport, and the Chamber of Commerce.
CVB: The FY 18 proposed budget presented the amounts requested by CVB of$1,929,115 for
CVB O&M and$450,000 for the CVB grant program. Staff recommended a reduction of $317,065
and $50,000, respectively. The O&M amount would reflect the City of College Station's portion
of funding at 81% and the City of Bryan's funding at 19%. This agency request is less than 1%of
the total City budget. The City of College Station and City of Bryan staff have met multiple times
regarding the funding request in detail and agree on the recommendation.
Council was in consensus to fund $1,846,991 for the CVB O&M budget and $400,000 for the
grant program.
3. Presentation, possible action and discussion on the 2017-2018 ad valorem tax rate; and
calling two public hearings on a proposed ad valorem tax rate for FY 2017-18.
This item was not discussed.
4. Adjournment
MOTION: There being no further business, Mayor Mooney adjourned the budget workshop of
the College Station City Council at 8:31 p.m. on Monday, August 14, 2017.
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