The Denver Post

DENVER COUNCIL APPROVES $2B CITY BUDGET

More money for roads and sidewalks coming; more DIA gates approved too

- By Jon Murray

The city’s operating budget and contract for a gate expansion at Denver Internatio­nal Airport get the OK on Monday night.

Two high-dollar items won approval Monday night from the Denver City Council: a $2 billion city operating budget for 2018 and a $1.5 billion set of contracts for a gate expansion at Denver Internatio­nal Airport.

In the case of the budget, which the council approved 10-3, its members have exacted several concession­s from Mayor Michael Hancock in recent weeks, including the addition of more money for sidewalks, a commitment to develop a transporta­tion demand management plan to improve the use of roadways and a firmer commitment of taxpayer money for a new legal defense fund for immigrants, including some living in the country illegally.

For some council members, though, misgivings remained — including on the administra­tion’s approach to affordable housing programs, homeless programs and other council priorities.

The DIA contracts with four firms won approval with less disagreeme­nt and will set in motion the largest gate expansion in the airport’s 22-year history. The project will add 39 gates across all three concourses in the next four years by making use of the parallel structures’ original “telescopin­g” design, which allows them to expand eastward and westward at the ends.

Hancock proposed the budget in September, and his office says the changes made in discussion with the council will still maintain the city’s general fund reserves at just over the target of 15 percent next year.

The general fund, budgeted for $1.4 billion in spending next year, covers most day-to-day city operations. It is projected to increase 5.4 percent over this year.

Among the notable features of next year’s budget:

• It increases spending on transporta­tion and mobility by $33 million — for more bike lanes, fixes to crumbling intersecti­ons and other projects — which is more than 40 percent over typical funding levels. It begins tackling what Hancock has proposed as a 12-year, $2 billion “Mobility Action Plan.” That includes an additional $1.5 million that Hancock has agreed to add to build more sidewalks, though that change fell $1 million short of what the council wanted in one of its budget requests.

• The city soon will roll out details of a $4 million sidewalk repair assistance fund. Denver places responsibi­lity on property owners for their frontage, but the plan calls for subsidizin­g sidewalk constructi­on or repairs in some areas of the city for households that meet low-income requiremen­ts as well as making three-year loans available to bet-

ter-off property owners with crumbling sidewalks.

• The city will tap into $10 million in banked marijuana-tax proceeds to pay for $5 million in deferred transporta­tion maintenanc­e, $4 million in parks-and-recreation repairs and $1 million to set up a community budgeting fund.

• About $21.6 million will go toward affordable­housing subsidies and related programs.

• The budget includes $1.8 million to hire 100 police officers, offsetting retirement­s and providing an estimated net increase to the ranks of 22 officers. The Denver Sheriff Department will hire 32 additional deputies, including to staff the new Building 24 women’s facility at the county jail on Smith Road.

•The city will spend more than $1 million on new and expanded support services that address addiction to heroin, pain relievers and synthetic drugs that are fueling the national opioid crisis.

•City employment is projected to increase by 3.7 percent, to 12,918 permanent and temporary positions.

The council and the mayor disagreed most pointedly on how to provide money for the city’s new Immigrant Legal Defense Fund, which Hancock ordered created as part of an immigratio­n executive order in August. The city also plans to seek outside donations.

The council last week approved two budget amendments that together direct $200,000 to the fund and make it an active budget item. Hancock’s original proposal would have budgeted half as much money and done so in a tentative way, pending recommenda­tions from a new immigratio­n working group.

But with one of the council amendments drawing veto-proof support from nine of 13 members, Hancock agreed to the council’s position.

Most disagreeme­nts were ironed out, but Councilwom­an Robin Kniech cited a lack of transparen­cy from the administra­tion on potential affordable housing and tenant-rights programs as the reason for her “no” vote. Kevin Flynn voted no because of his opposition to the immigrant legal fund.

Rafael Espinoza, for his part, said the council should have sought more concession­s from Hancock after some of its budget priorities weren’t reflected.

“I’m voting against this budget in the hope that in this next go-around, when the council lays out its priorities … that we follow through with some very tough decisions, and modify and shape the (2019) budget in that vein,” he said.

For the DIA gates expansion, the council approved agreements worth $65 million each for Jacobs Engineerin­g and HNTB Corp., which will perform for architectu­ral and design work; a $655 million constructi­on contract for a Holder-FCI joint venture; and a $700 million constructi­on contract for a Turner-Flatiron joint venture.

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