HomeMy WebLinkAbout07/19/2021 - Workshop Minutes - City CouncilWKSHP071921 Minutes Page 1
MINUTES OF THE CITY COUNCIL SPECIAL (BUDGET) MEETING
VIA IN-PERSON & TELECONFERENCE
CITY OF COLLEGE STATION
JULY 19, 2021
STATE OF TEXAS §
§
COUNTY OF BRAZOS §
Present:
Karl Mooney, Mayor
Council:
Bob Brick
John Crompton – via remote
Linda Harvell
Elizabeth Cunha
John Nichols
Dennis Maloney
City Staff:
Bryan Woods, City Manager
Jeff Capps, Deputy City Manager
Jeff Kersten, Assistant City Manager
Mary Ellen Leonard, Finance Director
Carla Robinson, City Attorney
Mary Ann Powell, Deputy City Attorney
Tanya Smith, 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 via In-Person and Teleconference at 1:03 p.m. on Monday, July 19,
2021 in the Council Chambers of the City of College Station City Hall, 1101 Texas Avenue,
College Station, Texas 77840.
2. Executive Session
No Executive Session was held.
3. Take action, if any, on Executive Session,
No Executive Session was held.
4. Special (Budget) Agenda
WKSHP071921 Minutes Page 2
4.1 Presentation, possible action, and discussion on the FY 2021-2022 Proposed Budget.
Bryan Woods, City Manager, provided housekeeping items and explained the overall format for
the budget workshops:
Revenue Overview
Recurring Expense Requests
One-Time Expense Requests
Fund Balance & Future Years
Proposed Property Tax Rate
Jeff Kersten, Assistant City Manager and Mary Ellen Leonard, Finance Director, provided a
review of the proposed FY21-22 budget and citywide budget issues. The proposed FY21 budget
is $353,737,474; this is 15.4% increase over last year’s proposed budget. A Public Hearing for
the Budget will be held on Thursday, August 12, 2021 at 6:00 pm. Key decision points include
public safety, maintenance needs, capital project planning and funding, compensation and benefits,
wastewater rate increase, service level increases to address growth and maintenance needs; and
the proposed tax rate is 53.4618 cents per $100 of assessed valuation and which is the same cents
per $100 assessed valuation as the FY21 overall tax rate. The budget and tax rate are scheduled
to be adopted September 26th.
Mr. Kersten presented to Council an overview of the continued population growth in the city. The
estimated City population is 125,881 as of May 2021. College Station has the third lowest
unemployment rate in Texas at 5.5% as of March 2021. Travelers to Easterwood Airport have
increased 67% year over year for FY21, trending towards pre-pandemic levels. According to the
Texas Health & Human Services COVID-19 50.84% of the State over the age of 12 is considered
fully vaccinated. In 2019, Texas A&M indicated that ~18% of students could be housed on-campus
with the remaining 82% housed off campus.
Property Tax Assumptions
Estimated Taxable value $10.73 billion
5.75% overall increase in taxable value over last year
Existing value increase is 3.92%
New Value increase 1.83%
Percentage of Taxable Property by Type
16.5% Commercial
17.6% Multi-family
17.2% All other including exempt
46.9% Residential
1.8% New Value
FY22 Sales Tax Revenue Estimate ($3.0 Million over Actual FY20 Receipts)
FY20 to FY21 Year End Variances
$2.2 Million Over Fy20 Receipts
$555 thousand from “Wayfair” agreement including single local rate payers
$452 thousand, net from top 12 taxpayers
$385 thousand from Comp Plan regions with ~1/3 each from Post Oak Mall businesses and
businesses on G. Bush to SW Parkway
$266 thousand from new businesses in FY21
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Transfers $4.3m, net
Primarily transfers into General Fund for Replacement Purchases and out of General Fund
for shared departmental costs
Utility Transfer $14.5m
No change from prior year
Electric 9%
Water 10%
Wastewater 10%
Solid Waste 10%
All Other $15.3m
Midtown Land Sale = $3.2M
Ambulance Charges = $2.4M
Court Fines = $2.3M
Licenses & Permits = $1.6M
All Other = $5.8M
FY22 Fee Adjustments – Proposed General Fund Fee Changes
Planning (CPI-U Indexed)
Rate tied to CPI-U for all sections administered by Department
Increase thru Dec 2020 of 1.7%
Anticipating increase for FY23 of ~5% or more
Parks (Added Cemetery Dual Columbaria Niche)
Rates typically change in the late wintertime frame annually
Fire (No FY22 Rates Changes)
Clarified 2 person minimum to standby special events
Ambulance Billing contract is out for bid currently
Fiscal Services (No FY22 Rates Changes)
Court Fees are primarily determined by the State Legislature
Clarified Consolidated Court fee.
No change in rate
Clarified NSF and Notary fee.
No Change in rate
Coronavirus Grant Receipts TDEM, CARES and ARPA Funds are included in a Special Revenue
Fund
Allocations
$6.4 million CARES received in FY20 and FY21
$2.12million CDBG received in FY20 and FY21
$29.48 million ARPA allocated for FY21 to FY24
Community Grants
$1.7 million sub-granted to the community Hospitals
$1.52 million expended on CDBG community needs
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Assigned Reserves
$4.3 million of the funds are currently held in Special Revenue Account for future needs
GENERAL FUND EXPENDITURE OVERVIEW
Mary Ellen Leonard, Finance Director, explained that in the General Fund alone, approximately
74% of total operating and maintenance expenditures are salaries and benefits. Fixed Costs, which
are Maintenance, Utilities, and Miscellaneous expenses for City Facilities are made up of 10%,
Professional, Purchased Services, and Supplies at 11% consist of Temporary Help, Contractual
Services for studies, annual services, and departmental supplies, lastly Replacement Costs is 5%
the Charges to the departments for future equipment and expenses for current equipment.
Mrs. Leonard stated that the General Fund is the chief operating fund and primary governmental
fund of the City of College Station that includes: The Police and Fire that is made up 50.6% of the
total General Fund and General Fund Expenditures. The other departments that make up is General
Fund are: Public Works 9%, Parks 11.5%, Planning 4.7%, Information Technology 7.2%, Fiscal
Services 5.3%, and General Government 11.7%.
FY22 Recurring Additions - All Departments Received 75% of the Reduction of Expenses from
Covid-19
Police
2 Detectives with Vehicles for CID
1 Sergeant with Vehicle for CID
Upgrade to Patrol Fleet
Fire
5th Ambulance Overtime Staffing
Fleet Maintenance
Fleet Service Technician
Community Services
1 Code Enforcement Officer
City Hall
Overtime for PD to staff Security at City Hall
2 Custodians for City Hall
FY22 One-Time Additions – Paid from Fund Balance
Police
CSTEP Ticket Writers
Extended Range Impact Weapons
Fire
5th Ambulance
Diesel Exhaust Removal System
Public Works
Facility Maintenance Corrective Increase
Traffic Calming
Tree Spade
Signal Camera Replacement
Parks
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Reaccreditation
Library Materials Cemetery Software
Planning
Comprehensive Plan Implementation
Redevelopment Area Planning
Computer Upgrades
IT
Beyond Trust Password Safe
System Center Configuration Manager (SCCM) Reconfiguration
Camera Maintenance
Fiscal
Temporary Help for Court Software Upgrade
General Government
HR Compensation Survey
Fleet
2 Laptops
At 2:42 p.m., the Mayor recessed the Special (Budget) Workshop.
The Special (Budget) Workshop reconvened at 2:57 p.m.
FY22 Compensation - All Fy21 Frozen Positions added back in FY21 Budget Amendment #3
Non-step cost of Living Adjustment is a 3% scale adjustment has been allotted for all employees
that are not uniformed; Public Safety (Step) Employees Cost of Living Adjustments is a 3% scale
adjustment has been allotted for all step-plan based, (primarily uniformed) employees. Step
increases are included as earned; and Non-Step One-Time Merit Based Bonus Pool, a one-time
expense of 3% has been allotted for a merit-based bonus pool for non-step employees.
The FY22 Benefits / Insurance Funds is 10% Healthcare estimate, and the contract is currently out
for bid to try and lower the cost. As of now there is no significant changes to the workman’s comp,
unemployment, and property and casualty.
FY22 General Fund Assigned Balances (Total Assigned Balance = $13.2m)
Key Assumptions – Assigned Fund Balance
Reserve for Future Operational Needs - $3.8M
Transfer to CIP - Midtown Business Park Improvements - $3.1M
Additional reserve for Bond Rating - $3.0M
Accounting items (Tyler Credits & Court Transfer)- $575K
IT Replacement Transfer - $2M
TDEM Grant Funds – transferred to separate fund
Misc Council Requests - $575K
General Fund Five Year Forecast
FY22
Proposed
FY23 FY24 FY25 FY26 FY27
WKSHP071921 Minutes Page 6
Reserve for Future
Operational Needs
$ 3,810
$ 5,320
$ 6,830
$ 8,350
$ 9,880
$ 11,410
Additional reserve
for Bond Rating
$ 3,070
$ 3,110
$ 3,190
$ 3,270
$ 3,350
$ 3,440
Technology /
Account Items
$ 2,580
$ 2,200
$ 2,000
$ 2,000
-
-
Future Economic
Development
$ 150
$ 150
$ 150
$ 150
$ 150
$ 150
Misc. Council
Requests
$ 580
-
-
-
-
-
Total Assigned Fund
Balance
$ 10,190
$ 10,780
$ 12,170
$ 13,770
$ 13,380
$ 15,000
Ending Unassigned
Fund Balance
$ 26,930
$ 26,890
$ 26,270
$ 26,190
$ 28,570
$ 29,060
Total Reserve %
38.62%
38.95%
38.82%
39.37%
40.33%
41.66%
Unassigned Reserve
%
23.48%
21.59%
21.36%
20.70%
20.79%
23.80%
The proposed budget recommends a tax of 2.8777 cents per $100 of assessed valuation . The
proposed tax rate is 53.4618 cents per $100 assessed valuation with the Maintenance and
Operations rate being 31.8175 cents per $100 assessed valuation; and the Debt Service rate being
21.6443 cents per $100 assessed valuation.
No-New-Revenue and Voter Approval Rates not available from Tax Assessor/Collector until July
25, 2021
WKSHP071921 Minutes Page 7
FY22 Proposed Budget Next Steps
Valuations from BCAD from April 30th to July 25th
Special Council Meeting - Budget Public Hearing - July 27th
Special Council Meeting- Call Tax Rate Public Hearing -August 3rd
Budget and Tax Rate Adoption, Election - August 12th
Budget and Tax Rate Adoption, No Election - August 26th
At 3:57 p.m., the Mayor recessed the Special (Budget) Workshop.
The Special (Budget) Workshop reconvened at 4:13 p.m.
ENTERPRISE FUNDS
Erik Walker, Budget Manager, provided Enterprise funds summaries that total $146,587,462;
along with Service Level Adjustments (SLAs) and proposed projects:
The Electric Fund: Cost Per Meter Absorbed by City $1,108. Cost of Winter Storm to date
$48,333,000:
Power Supply Replacement Cost = $13,665,000
Ancillary Costs = $34,678,000
Amount and due date of Uplift - Total amount of charges is not known; Rule is subject to change
by Governor and / or TX Legislature; Uplift Charges (max $15.0m) - ERCOT rules currently allow
for charges from bankrupt companies to be spread across remaining users at $2.5M per month. It
will take 96 years for the Uplift charges to be paid; and Pass-thru charge to customer - If uplift
charges get passed to the City, we will need to pass through those charges to customers to maintain
financial stability, and charges will appear as a separate line on the bill.
Impact of Winter Storm Uri Impact on Reserve Balance – Electric working Capital 2004-2026. In
2004 the reserve balance was around $10M, the highest amount was in 2020, roughly between
$50M and $60M but the forecast shows that by 2026 the amount is around $30M.
The Water Services Operations: neither COVID-19 nor Winter Storm URI significantly affect
operations.
Water System
43 employees
40,356 connections
Average consumption 12 MGD
10 wells with capacity of 35 MGD per day
Wastewater System
47 employees
43,169 connections
381 linear miles of sanitary sewer
3 treatment plants with capacity of 11.5 MGD
Mr. Walker explained that all FY22 Major Enterprise Fund Requests with departments will receive
back 75% of the reduction of expenses from COVID-19.
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Electric (One-Time)
2 4x4 Trucks
Wastewater (One-Time)
Laboratory Software
Industrial Pretreatment Program Study
Minor Enterprise Funds Requests
Solid Waste (Recurring)
Front End Loader Operator and Vehicle
Vehicle Routing System
Northgate (One-Time)
Pay Stations Replacement
Street Meter Dome Replacement
Drainage (One-Time)
4 Yard Dump Truck
Roadway Maintenance Fee and UCS
Roadway Maintenance
No requests
Utility Customer Service
Call Center Recording Software (Recurring)
Temporary Help for System Upgrade
Mr. Walker summarized the proposed Utility Rate/Fee Changes. On the Water and Wastewater
rates is waiting on the rate study decision. The Electric Rates there were TDA reclassifications,
such as reclassifications to better account for Transmission Delivery Adjustment and possible
change if Uplift charges from Winter Storm are revised but no overall FY22 changes.
Northgate Parking
All Rates to Increase to competing levels with University Garages
Solid Waste
Rate tied to CPI-U
Increase thru Dec 2020 of 1.7%
Anticipating increase for FY23 of ~5% or more
Drainage
Rate tied to CPI-U
Increase thru Dec 2020 of 1.7%
Anticipating increase for FY23 of ~5% or more
Roadway Maintenance
Rate tied to CPI-U
Increase thru Dec 2020 of 1.7%
Anticipating increase for FY23 of ~5% or more
Mary Ellen Leonard, Finance Director, presented a brief overview on the FY22 Hotel Tax Fund
and the ways in which COVID-19 has impacted operations and maintenance. ($19,554,865)
FY22 Revenues
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Exceeding budget by $1.4M in Hotel receipts and $427K from closing EBCS
FY21 Expenses
Under budget in Tourism by $1.4m because of unspent FY20 grant funding (due to
COVID) that rolled over into FY21 Budget
Grant Funding by $323k
FY21 Fund Balance
Budgeted ($4.0M) use in FY21
Projecting ($100K) use for FY21 due to expense savings
FTE added in FY21 Budget Amendment #3 to Tourism
FY22 Hotel Tax Expenditures
Tourism: 48.5% - 10 FTE’S and advertising expenses focusing on bringing events to College
Station.
Parks & Recreation: 11.1% - Project based charges and supplies for personnel maintaining
Veteran’s Park and managing sporting events.
Public Communications: 3.8% - Project based charges for personnel creating advertising for
sporting and other HOT events.
Grant Programs: 24.8% - of which 69% is for Sports & Tourism and the remainder is for Arts &
Culture.
Collection / G&A / Contingency: 8.5% - Tax collection, Hotel Audit, shared services, and facility
charges including a 3% overall fund contingency
Agency Funding: 3.3% - Arts Council, Chamber of Commerce and Veterans Memorial funding.
Capital and Preferred Access
Texas Independence Ballpark at Midtown: $6.8M of the estimated $15.0M cost of
construction to be paid for by Hotel Tax funds.
Visitor Center: $750K budgeted for renovations to the former Fire Station 1 for Tourism
division.
Preferred Access: City & County pay $1.225M from hotel tax receipts to Texas A&M for
facility access thru 2043.
5. Adjournment
MOTION: There being no further business, Mayor Mooney adjourned the budget workshop of
the College Station City Council at 5:28 p.m. on Monday, July 19, 2021.
________________________
Karl Mooney, Mayor
ATTEST:
________________________
Tanya Smith, City Secretary