As you can see on the graph below, expenditures have exceeded revenues for the past few years. If this continues (and it appears to be), a huge municipal tax hike (31%) is in our future.
Here is a warning from the borough's finance manager, taken from the October 10, 2019 budget meeting. It states that the fund balance will be exhausted in 2021.
The link I've included below includes a recording and transcript of Borough Manager Rebecca Denlinger warning (and slightly scolding) Council President Kelly Murphy about overspending. She warns him that the borough is spending beyond its means and asks him if his plan is to just keep taking from fund balance and then hike taxes "a whole bunch."
Here's the LINK.
This open letter from former Columbia Borough Manager Norm Meiskey, lays out several complaints against the current borough council, in particular, overspending.
Meiskey has also addressed council about overspending and other issues HERE, HERE, and HERE. Unfortunately for borough taxpayers, council ignored his advice and passed a 21.2% municipal tax increase for 2019.
As a result, over 1,150 taxpayers signed a petition (shown below) demanding that borough council hold a special meeting to eliminate $800,000 allocated to the borough's Revolving Loan Fund in the 2019 budget, repeal the Revolving Loan Fund, and repeal the tax hike.
The link I've included below includes a recording and transcript of Borough Manager Rebecca Denlinger warning (and slightly scolding) Council President Kelly Murphy about overspending. She warns him that the borough is spending beyond its means and asks him if his plan is to just keep taking from fund balance and then hike taxes "a whole bunch."
Here's the LINK.
Meiskey has also addressed council about overspending and other issues HERE, HERE, and HERE. Unfortunately for borough taxpayers, council ignored his advice and passed a 21.2% municipal tax increase for 2019.
As a result, over 1,150 taxpayers signed a petition (shown below) demanding that borough council hold a special meeting to eliminate $800,000 allocated to the borough's Revolving Loan Fund in the 2019 budget, repeal the Revolving Loan Fund, and repeal the tax hike.
Signed petitions were presented to council members, but council did not schedule a meeting with taxpayers. Subsequently, taxpayers held several meetings/petition drives of their own to continue collecting signatures and discuss issues.
At a regular borough council in January of this year, council dismissed the petitions, thus ignoring the stated demands, as Columbia Spy reported HERE.
In response, taxpayers formed the Columbia Concerned Citizens Association (CCCA), which filed a lawsuit against the borough to repeal the Revolving Loan Fund and tax increase. The fund was created to loan taxpayer dollars from the general fund to private business. Even though the borough's auditors warned that the funds could not be used in this manner, council went ahead anyway. Due to pressure from the CCCA, the borough finally relented and repealed the loan fund. The tax increase remains in place, however. The loan fund's $800,000 balance was transferred to the borough's general fund a few months ago.
2 comments:
Stop street sweeping every week!
Yeah.... That would fix everything
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