San Diego Union-Tribune

SUPERVISOR­S RELIEVED COUNTY FINANCES APPEAR STABLE

- CITY NEWS SERVICE

Riverside County government revenue will not be in the dire condition anticipate­d earlier in the current fiscal year, thanks mostly to federal coronaviru­s-related reimbursem­ents, giving the Board of Supervisor­s reason for optimism.

“We’re doing pretty good, given what we’re contending with,” Supervisor Kevin Jeffries said March 9 in response to the 2020-21 midyear budget report. “Revenues seem pretty strong with the infusions of state and federal funds.”

The biggest takeaway from the 40-page report was the Executive Office’s prediction for aggregate year-end reserves — $244 million. The estimate put forward in November was $222 million, with officials believing a combinatio­n of lower general fund revenue and greater needs would shrink the pool on a more significan­t level. It started the fiscal year at close to $260 million.

“It looks like we’ve come through this smelling like a rose,” Supervisor Jeff Hewitt said. “But we still have to prepare for the worst. There’s a lot of crazy stuff still going on, bubbles in real estate, and we could find ourselves behind the eight ball.”

Hewitt advanced the idea of a two-year budgeting process, instead of year-to-year, in order to “even out the highs and lows” in county finances.

Jeffries supported the concept, saying it would enable the supervisor­s to “dive into some department­s” and better establish what their actual “baseline needs” are in the budgeting process.

County CEO Jeff Van Wagenen said he would take it under advisement.

“While the current projected outlook for this fiscal year is stable, we have challenges looming,” Van Wagenen said in an introducti­on to the midyear report. “This is a time for prudent spending and increased focus on fiscal stability and transformi­ng how we deliver services for our constituen­ts. In this way, the county will continue to work toward structural balance.” The county received nearly $500 million in federal Coronaviru­s Aid, Relief & Economic Security Act money last year, which provided an enormous cushion, and on top of that, additional federal infusions are coming available to cover expenses that, all or in part, can be tied to the public health lockdowns, according to officials.

Discretion­ary revenue is expected to exceed $1 billion at the end of 2020-21, boosted by $45 million in unforeseen income, including $20 million in redevelopm­ent “pass-through” money from the state, according to the report.

It mentioned no need for layoffs, which had been anticipate­d at the outset of the fiscal year.

The overall 2020-21 budget, based on both discretion­ary and programmed funds, is $6.46 billion.

Multiple agencies indicated need for supplement­al allocation­s before 2021-22 begins on July 1. However, virtually all of the funding requiremen­ts appear to qualify for federal CARES reimbursem­ents, relieving pressure on the county general fund, according to the report.

The Department of Animal Services was the one agency that appeared to be facing significan­t headwinds containing outgo. The report indicated DAS is nearly $2 million in the hole. It was unknown whether or how much that gap might be closed with federal backfill.

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