San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

FACING DEFICIT, ESCONDIDO WEIGHS SALES TAX HIKE

City could see cuts to police, fire and library services

- BY JOE TASH Tash is a freelance writer.

Escondido faces deep cuts to such services as police and fire protection, graffiti removal and library hours under a projected $8 million budget deficit in the next fiscal year if the city does not come up with a source of new revenue, according to a presentati­on to the City Council at its meeting last week.

The discussion came as the city considers placing a sales tax increase of between a half- and full cent on the November ballot. After the presentati­on, the council directed staff to survey city residents on whether they would support such a measure.

“That would be the logical next step in this conversati­on,” City Manager Sean Mcglynn told the council.

It would take four votes of the council, or a supermajor­ity, to place a sales tax increase before voters in November, and then a simple majority at the ballot box to approve the measure. The deadline to place the question on the fall ballot is Aug. 12. A similar measure failed to garner four council votes in 2020, with Councilmem­ber Mike Morasco in opposition.

Over the past several months, a council subcommitt­ee of Mayor Paul Mcnamara and Morasco has been researchin­g issues related to a potential sales tax measure. They presented their findings to the full council last week.

City staff presented the council with four revenue scenarios, and outlined potential impacts from each scenario on the city’s budget. The scenarios included no new revenue, and potential sales tax hikes of a half-cent, three-quarters of a cent and one cent. The potential tax rate increases were labeled, in ascending order, “surviving,” “stabilizin­g” and “thriving.”

“Operating revenue has not kept pace with the growing costs of municipal services,” Christina Holmes, the city’s finance director, told the council. In compiling the presentati­on, she said each city department was asked to provide cuts it would need to make if no new revenue becomes available.

Among potential cuts listed in the report were 10 police officers (from the current total of 160), 12 firefighte­rs, three emergency medical technician­s and the closure of one fire station (the department currently has 93 firefighte­r/paramedics).

Other potential cuts included reduced library hours, reduction in park maintenanc­e, possible closure of city pools, reduction or eliminatio­n of the city’s graffiti removal program, and a reduction in staff needed to process developmen­t and home remodeling plans.

On the flip side, with a full one-cent sales tax increase, the police department could add 25 to 35 new officers, bringing it to the median per capita range for police staffing in San Diego County, said the report. The fire department could increase its staffing by 12 firefighte­rs and 12 emergency medical technician­s under the one-cent scenario.

According to the report, a one-cent sales tax increase — to 8.75 percent from the current 7.75 percent — would raise $28.3 million per year, while a half-cent increase would raise $14.1 million per year.

With no new revenue, said Holmes, the city’s budget deficit is projected to grow from $8 million in the fiscal year that begins July 1 to $23 million by 2036.

Among the expenses fueling the city’s future projected budget deficits, said Holmes, is an annual payment for the city’s unfunded pension liability, required by the state’s pension system for public employees.

Those payments will range between $15 million and $22 million annually over the next several years and the payments will continue until 2044, Holmes said.

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