Marin Independent Journal

Council declares fiscal emergency

- By Jeremy Hay

In a 3-1 split vote, the Sebastopol City Council declared the city is in a fiscal emergency, but decided a parcel tax ballot measure is not the way to address its budget woes.

The fiscal emergency resolution on Tuesday is essentiall­y rhetorical, since it doesn't specifical­ly call for a special election to put a general sales tax measure before voters.

An emergency resolution that would have led to a 1/2-cent sales tax being placed on the March 2024 ballot failed on Nov. 14 to gain the unanimous approval it needed, with Council members Jill McLewis and Sandra Maurer opposing it.

The fiscal emergency resolution is “not tied to any other action,” said Alex Mog, the city's outside legal counsel on the issue. “It's really just about options that the city could do internally.”

For example, Mog told the council, “When you move forward with your budgeting process it could be a basis to use that as sort of a statement in order to propose cuts and things like that. It's simply adding an emphasis. But without that unanimous approval you're not able to put a general tax on the ballot.”

The city is dipping into its reserves to meet a $1.67 million general fund deficit, and according to the projection­s of a council budget subcommitt­ee and staff will run out of those reserves in three years.

But Maurer and McLewis, who was absent Tuesday, had questioned the projection­s, saying previous forecasts have been widely off.

“These numbers didn't pan out. You're talking on relying on projection­s into the future that historical­ly haven't played out,” Maurer, who recently joined the budget subcommitt­ee, said Tuesday.

Council member Stephen Zollman, who also sits on the budget committee, said that current and recent budgets have included one-off infusions of funds, including federal COVID-relief monies, insurance payments, and one-time bequests to the city's police and fire department­s.

“I'm looking forward to when everybody has a bigger and more in-depth understand­ing of the budget to be able to figure out that there have been one time contributi­ons consistent­ly since 2018,” he said.

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