Chattanooga Times Free Press

Commission may bring back discretion­ary funds

- BY SARAH GRACE TAYLOR STAFF WRITER

The Hamilton County Commission will consider a resolution next week to set aside $900,000 of taxpayer money to bring back discretion­ary funds for each commission­er to hand out to causes they see as worthy.

Commission­er Warren Mackey introduced a resolution Wednesday to re-establish $100,000 annual funds for each of the nine commission­ers to use to donate to nonprofit groups, resurfacin­g a seven-year-old battle over whether the spending is appropriat­e.

Years ago, the commission allotted $100,000 to be spent by each commission­er per year, which was largely used to benefit local nonprofit groups. After discussion of whether the money was going to benefit the community or the individual commission­er’s political standing, the fund was first removed in 2014 by County Mayor Jim Coppinger. Commission­ers then appropriat­ed $900,000 from reserves and restored the funds, then overrode Coppinger’s veto, drawing criticism from the public and ultimately letting the fund go in 2015.

Then, a similar attempt by Commission­er

Tim Boyd to restore the $100,000 funds in 2018 narrowly failed with a 4-4 vote among the eight present commission­ers.

Since then, commission­ers have each operated a $12,500 fund for travel and discretion­ary spending, which rolled over year to year, allowing some commission­ers to

accrue and donate tens of thousands of government dollars to the charities of their choosing. In January, Commission­er Greg Martin wrote a resolution ending the roll-over practice, requiring that unused monies be returned to the county general fund, after several commission donations were rejected by a church program, citing rules that forbid the government from donating to a religious group.

“Our travel expenses and our meeting services, etc. what we don’t use each year would just go back, like every other constituti­onal office, to the general fund,” Martin said at the time, invoking the county’s “use it or lose it” philosophy.

“Every other constituti­onal office in county government, when they don’t use those particular travel funds, they go back in the general fund. I just think that would be a good thing for the county commission to do.”

While a majority of commission­ers favored this as a practical measure, others, including Mackey, said they would push back to protect the funds in order to bolster nonprofit groups in the community.

Now, six months later, Mackey is calling for the commission to revive the original $900,000 in funds for commission­ers to benefit community groups.

“This money has served some good purposes,” Mackey said Wednesday, citing donations to recreation centers and other youth programs he believes have curtailed “gang activity and craziness.”

“I’ve got to believe that I’m not the only commission­er who has poor people and needy people in their district,” he said, “and this money is designed to help bring support to them.”

Martin — who accrued over $37,500 over several years of minimal donating from his fund and then donated $32,000 to the Dallas Bay Fire Department before the rollover funds were to be reclaimed by the county in June — says he’s “philosophi­cally” opposed to reviving the discretion­ary funds, especially in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“I cannot think of a more inappropri­ate time for us to take $900,000 out of the general fund to spend,” Martin said.

“We’re not exactly sure what economical­ly is going to happen in the future and how this is all going to shake out,” he added. “So to me, I don’t think it would be prudent to do that at this time for a lot of reasons, but if for no other reason, because we’ve had to tighten the belt and we’re not exactly sure how tight that’s going to be when it’s all said and done.”

While no other commission­ers weighed in on the preliminar­y discussion of Mackey’s fund proposal, the mayor said later in the meeting that he does not support the fund.

“Hopefully the discretion­ary money doesn’t happen, speaking as the fiscal agent of this county,” Coppinger said.

The commission will vote on the resolution on Wednesday.

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Warren Mackey

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