Dayton Daily News

Area cities cut millions, await federal relief

Budget reductions include layoffs; some first responders at risk.

- By Nick Blizzard, Bonnie Meibers and Cornelius Frolik Staff Writers

Layoffs are among the budget cuts some Dayton-area city leaders are making amid the COVID-19 pandemic while await

ing word on a Congressio­nal funding relief package, which has gained momentum recently.

Other local municipali­ties are outlining millions of dollars set to be slashed due to revenue lost by business shutdowns and job losses that one official said could have “an enormous” impact on cities.

Beavercree­k, Dayton, Fairborn, Kettering, Lebanon, Troy and West Carrollton have all instituted furloughs and/or hiring freezes and are considerin­g future

cuts, including layoffs of first responders.

Trotwood, West Carrollton and Xenia have sliced spending plans, and Riverside also plans to trim its budget, possibly with layoffs.

The loss of income tax revenue and related issues brought on by the coronaviru­s may have “an enormous, if not devastatin­g impact on economies of Ohio and specifical­ly, the city of Troy,” that city’s service director, Patrick Titteringt­on, said in a memo.

Meanwhile, two national groups are lobbying for federal aid for local government­s, as much as $500 billion nationwide, a figure some Congressio­nal leaders say they can support.

The National League of Cities, and American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees last week both pushed for Congressio­nal relief.

The national cities group is calling for $500 billion in direct federal aid and economic relief from the COVID-19 pandemic over the next two years for communitie­s.

But any Congressio­nal funding package should not impose undue mandates on local government­s, but should earmark funding for COVID-19 related issues, said John C. Green, director emeritus Ray C. Bliss Institute of Applied Politics at the University of Akron.

Local government­s “are affected as much as small businesses and individual­s” by the coronaviru­s, he said.

Green said local government­s are “critical institutio­ns when it comes to dealing with health issues,” but noted later “I think Congress needs to think very carefully on what it wants to achieve by making funds available to local government­s.”

First responders might not be spared

Ohio cities are especially vulnerable to income tax revenue losses caused by COVID-19 business shutdowns because of a heavier reliance on those funds, a Brookings Institutio­n report shows.

Local city leaders have said early projection­s range from a 10% to 20% drop in income tax collection­s. Dayton stands to lose the most locally, as it had budgeted about $131 million in income tax revenue for its 2020 general fund.

The city initially furloughed 479 workers, Mayor Nan Whaley said. But after Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine’s announceme­nt to reopen the state this month, that number dropped to 132, according to Diane Shannon, the city’s director of procuremen­t, management and budget.

The city has implemente­d a hiring freeze, limited expenditur­es to only essential services and functions, cancelled $8 million in capital projects and ordered all general fund department­s to cut their 2020 budgets by 18%, said City Manager Shelley Dickstein, city manager.

Further reductions — such as pay cuts, mandatory cost-savings days and position eliminatio­ns — are likely, Dickstein said.

Without federal rescue funds soon, cities will be forced to cut first responder jobs, Whaley and Kettering Mayor Don Patterson have said.

“And that’s a real danger,” Green said. “Because so much of the (COVID) crisis has been cooperatio­n between the federal state and local government. The federal government doesn’t have a lot of policemen .... so the policemen, the first responders, the health officials are basically employed by local government­s.

“So if the federal government were to completely ignore local government­s, they could hamper their own efforts to fight the virus,” he added.

Green said there is “a very strong rationale” for federal aid for local government­s involving coronaviru­s issues.

“But local government­s, some of the are very well run and fiscally sound. Some of them are not well run and have big deficits,” he said.

“And probably it’s unwise to get into the business of fixing broader fiscal problems with an aid package simply because that gets com- plicated fast and the funds may not be focused where the need is,” Green added.

More cuts are expected in June

He said he expects approval of a Congressio- nal relief package to include local government funds this month. In the U.S. House of Representa­tives, No. 2 Democrat Steny Hoyer said last week that party leader- ship is hoping for bipartisan backing for the upcoming bill, according to the Asso- ciated Press.

Hoyer said he backs $500 billion in aid to state and local government­s with a supplement­al aid package for smaller cites left out of previous aid bills, The AP reported.

The office of U.S. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Dayton issued the following statement when contacted about this article:

“I have supported and Congress has approved relief for state, county, and local government­s for all coronaviru­s related expenses. Mont- gomery County received $92 million directly as a result of the CARES Act. I continue to be in constant contact with our local leaders as this pan- demic evolves.”

Meanwhile, Dayton projects an 18% general fund shortfall and proposals for more cuts are being developed by department­s heads, Shannon said in an email.

Those recommenda­tions will go to the city commission, “with some possible reductions occurring in June,” she said.

The city announced Thurs- day two of its three golf courses — Kittyhawk and Madden — would permanentl­y close this year.

In Kettering, about 240 part-time city employees were laid off April 27, City Manager Mark Schwieter- man said.

“City administra­tion is and will be working with city council to propose expen- diture reductions to assist in covering the anticipate­d decline in revenues — specifical­ly the income tax revenue,” he said in an email.

Some cities not talking cuts

Beavercree­k has fur- loughed six part-time and seven full-time workers, and has frozen or is not filling 80 seasonal and intern jobs, City Manager Pete Landrum said.

Although the city has no income tax, it has been affected through other reve- nue sources, including local government fund, lodging taxes, property taxes and gasoline taxes, among others.

Riverside will make a final decision on initial budget cuts on May 21, said City Manager Mark Carpenter. The city has not furloughed any employees, but is consider- ing plans to lay off workers.

“There are so many unknowns right now,” Car- penter said. “We don’t want to cut so deep that we take the city backwards.”

No jobs have been cut in Fairborn, but the city has a hiring freeze on seasonal workers and positions cur- rently open in the face of a projected $2.8 million shortfall, said City Manager Rob Anderson.

Some road projects also

may be in question. “We have started the projects that have already received funding but are unsure about what the state will do with their capital and operations budgets that have yet to be approved,” he said.

Troy has identified more than $2.24 million in budget reductions for this year as Titteringt­on estimated reve- nue shortfalls could total at least $3.1 million – most of that in income tax receipts - in the city’s general fund.

The reductions take effect immediatel­y.

officials in Centervill­e, Miamisburg, Oakwood and Springboro said there’s been no serious discussion­s yet about possible budget cuts.

Centervill­e, Miamisburg and Springboro officials said it is too soon to project how the COVID-19 issues will impact their budgets.

Oakwood has sufficient reserve funds for 2020 budgeted expenses, said City Manager Norbert Klopsch.

Wayne Baker, Nancy Bowman, Lawrence Budd and Sarah Franks contribute­d to this report.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? KETTERING MAYOR DON PATTERSON
KETTERING MAYOR DON PATTERSON
 ??  ?? DAYTON MAYOR NAN WHALEY
DAYTON MAYOR NAN WHALEY
 ??  ?? RIVERSIDE CITY MANAGER MARK CARPENTER
RIVERSIDE CITY MANAGER MARK CARPENTER

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