By Anna McAndrew and Lauren McCally
University of Kentucky School of Journalism and Media
“Our surplus right now is enormous,” Mayor Grayson Vandegrift said Monday evening as he offered the City Council a 2020-21 budget that would reduce the surplus by fixing sewer lines and building new sidewalks.
University of Kentucky School of Journalism and Media
“Our surplus right now is enormous,” Mayor Grayson Vandegrift said Monday evening as he offered the City Council a 2020-21 budget that would reduce the surplus by fixing sewer lines and building new sidewalks.
Vandegrift said the
surplus is “three times bigger than the average” of a U.S. city in terms of
months of revenue – a year’s worth rather than four months’ worth. Spending on the infrastructure projects, mainly sewers, will “bring the surplus down to two times bigger than the
average, which means eight months’ worth of money instead of one year,”
he said.
The current surplus is about $1.1 million. The
projected surplus is about $900,000 mainly because about
$150,000 would be spent fixing sewer lines on the east side of town and $75,000 is budgeted for sidewalks -- $25,000 of which would go to cost-sharing that the city is already doing with property owners.
The rest would build a sidewalk on the Midway University side of Stephens Street to the entrance to the Homeplace at Midway. Some of the $75,000 is contingent upon a grant. There are so many grants available for sidewalks, Vandegrift said, “I don’t think we should construct any new sidewalks without one.”
The city has amassed a surplus largely on occupational-tax
income from the Lakeshore Learning Materials distribution center in Midway
Station and other business expansions.
In the current fiscal year, the tax was budgeted to generate
$650,000, but the mayor said the city is on track to collect $832,000. His
proposed budget for next year estimates $825,000. “Most of our revenue numbers are done conservatively,” he
said.
This is the main source of money for the city, about 45
percent of the predicted income total. The proposed budget predicts increases
in most other forms of revenue, such as property tax, business licenses,
alcohol licenses and franchise fees.
The surge in occupational tax led the city to cut property
taxes more than 30 percent in the last two years. Asked after the meeting if
another property-tax cut is in the offing, Vandegrift said, “Maybe that’s
coming down the pike, too. It’s possible; there’s been some discussion.” But he
added, “People seem happy so you don’t want to do it too much.”
The
mayor plans to hold budget workshops with the council, probably in the next two
weeks, to agree on the budget before putting it into an ordinance. “This is
something we are going to work on as we always do,” he said.
The city
has about $290,000 in certificates of deposit that mature this year, starting
next week. Noting that the highest interest rate on the three CDs is 0.93
percent, he named three council members -- Sarah Hicks, Logan Nance and John
Holloway, as a committee to look at investment alternatives, with Nance as
chair.
Vandegrift announced that the $10,000 grant for a stage in the park, which the city recently gave up, is being held for it by the Bluegrass Community Fund. “They believe that it is such a worthy project that they are going to hold the funds indefinitely while we figure out how to pay for that project,” he said.
The city gave up the grant after the Parks Board said it didn’t have the additional resources to do the project. Holloway, who is also the unpaid park manager, said last month that some merchants didn’t like the idea because it would create an alternative entertainment venue to Main Street.
The
council approved permits for two events: Race Rise, a 5K run on May 9 to raise
money for a nonprofit veterans group that uses equine therapy for mental
health, in conjunction with Mental Heath Awareness Month; and a Family Fun
Festival to be held in Walter Bradley Park from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. May 30.
The festival will be an event for families and
will include face painting, rock painting, and pine cone feeders, organizers
said, adding that they plan on generating only one cubic feet of waste that cannot be recycled.
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