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Slow growth in the housing market has had a negative impact on Asheville’s budget this year, resulting in a $1.3 million deficit, city leaders said Monday.
However, City Council members said they would not raise taxes to make up for the shortfall.
Rather, council may try to save money in areas such as employee benefits, cracking down on tax deadbeats, and lowering staffing levels by not filling vacancies.
Council members dicsussed the budget at their annual retreat where they set goal for the coming year.
Councilwoman Holly Jones said that slow growth in property
values and in sales-tax revenue are the main causes of the deficit, as
well as rising employee costs.
Property values rose only 2.3 percent last year, the lowest rate
in a decade. By comparison, property values jumped 5.5 percent the
previous year.
Property taxes make up the bulk of the city’s income, along with
sales taxes, which have also slowed. Sales-tax revenue for the coming
fiscal year is projected to be below 5 percent.
However, Vice Mayor Jan Davis downplayed the projections, noting that revenues often surpass early estimates.
Mayor Terry Bellamy proposed saving money by shifting employee health care from a city-managed system to a private firm.
Bellamy noted that the city’s biggest expense is employee wages,
salaries and fringe benefits. That includes $801,000 allocated for
hiring 30 new employees this year and next fiscal year. The new hires
include city planners and police.
She also suggested increasing tax-collection rates, financing
security improvements at city recreation facilities to spread out
costs, and seeing if the city’s state-funded street repair fund would
be increased because of new roads.
Councilman Carl Mumpower blamed city regulations for
necessitating increased staff in the planning department and urged the
city to not fill vacancies.
But Davis countered that keeping an adequate planning staff helps increase revenues by ensuring better planning.
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