$42,000 Down The (Historically Reviewed) Sewer

Reviews that come in to play when a property is sold or remolded or torn down? Make the property owner foot the bill.

The City of Pacific Grove is going to pay a consultant more than $40,000 to get a better handle on the city’s historic buildings. The P.G. City Council voted Wednesday night to spend $42,400 to prepare an “historic context statement,” which will include describing how the city’s architecture evolved.

While spending $40,000 on a report in a city that is having severe financial troubles may seem superfluous, Burgess said in the long run, the report could save money for the city and residents, who must fork over from $200 to $1,000 for a historic evaluation.

$42,000 Down The (Historically Reviewed) Sewer

Trust Us, The Taxman Sayeth

Vote Machine

I still do not support any more taxes until cuts are made elsewhere. Fool me once…

There was a sense, Headley said, that Measure J would only “save the library at the level it had sunken to.”

Language in the new initiative has been written to assure the public that funds raised would support only the library and not be transferred to other city departments, she said. The parcel tax is expected to raise $600,000 in additional revenue each year. The ballot measure requires that the city continue to fund the library at the rate of 2.83 percent of the total general fund budget.

Trust Us, The Taxman Sayeth

Election Dysfunction

Vote Machine

One of the measures, titled the Sustainable Retirement Benefit Reform Initiative, which drew objections last Wednesday from City Manager Thomas Frutchey and City Attorney David Laredo, would ultimately cap city retirement pension benefit contributions at 10percent of the employee’s salary, though employees could contribute more to their own plans if desired.

Frutchey said he would have difficulty recruiting quality employees under those terms and Laredo said the initiative would likely bring lawsuits against the city by public employees and their unions.

Another measure that would levy a $90 annual parcel tax — $45 for rental units — to support the city’s public library was approved last Wednesday by the council. Details of the ballot measure’s wording should be hammered out today, including language specifying that revenue from it would be used for library operations only and that the fund could not be diverted to other city uses.

A third measure, calling for amendment of Measure C, a ballot measure passed by voters in 1986 that limits the number of rooms hotels and motels can add, was endorsed by the City Council last month but has been withdrawn by proponents.

The retirement/Union situation – you can pay people $700 and hour to work in a room where the heat goes up a degree every day – soon they will quit no matter what the pay. To work in P.G. is a benefit that is not touted much. I don’t want to attract burnouts from Watsonville or Salinas that will retire at 55 and leave town.

The new liberry tax will not be diverted. Who said that? Same people that divert sewer funds? I’ll never trust a politician on anything to do with taxes.

Lastly the cheesy motels in P.G. don’t need more rooms, they need to tear down and rebuild on the space they have.

Election Dysfunction

Hide Your Wallet, P.G. Budget Approved

14.8 million and another tax vote in the works. When will they go away?

Some of these savings are expected to come from shared fire administration and police services with the city of Carmel; a 40 percent reduction in the consulting budget for Frutchey’s office and a 50 percent cut for a retirement plan analysis in the finance department; funding reductions for the stormwater program; and elimination of a half-time code enforcement officer.

Not included in the coming year’s budget, Frutchey said, are costs expected to be incurred by placing three or more measures on the ballot: a library parcel tax; an amendment to a 1997 ballot measure, Measure C, that loosens limits on new hotel room development in the city; and a measure amending city employee retirement funding.

Hide Your Wallet, P.G. Budget Approved

Another Tax With Every Election

Constant fail, tax for more Library services. Need to pay for more non-reading events.

Liberry

The City Council voted unanimously late Wednesday to place a parcel tax measure on the November ballot that would provide money for the city library.

The tax would need approval by two-thirds of voters to pass. A similar measure for a $95 parcel tax failed in November 2009 because only 65.91 percent of voters supported it.

Another Tax With Every Election

Buzzword For Broke: Unsustainable

What better crisis story to begin a push for yet more taxes? I’ll never vote for any tax increases as long as spending continues on follies like the ineffective Chamber Of Commerce or “ICLEI”, the Local Governments for Sustainability.

Budget ”unsustainable,” P.G. financial official says

 

Property tax revenues have remained steady, but sales and hotel room taxes are down, he said. Some recovery on those two sources of revenue is expected in fiscal 2012-13.

But by fiscal 2014-15, Becklenberg said, costs will begin outstripping revenues and the city will have to explore new sources of money.

Buzzword For Broke: Unsustainable

Our Taxes At Work, $$ For House Flipping

Tough to imagine that there are still any unmolested homes in the retreat area that have not been torn down and replaced by re-creations by the likes of Juan The Builder.

Pacific Grove residents living in the town’s aging Victorian and Edwardian treasures who can’t afford to fix leaking plumbing, sparking electric wires and termite damage can get help from City Hall.

Pacific Grove has received federal Community Development Block Grant and state home improvement grant funding that it can draw from to help homeowners who qualify, said Laurel O’Halloran, housing program assistant for the city.

“We have some money to spend,” she said, and it must be used up during the next 18 months.

Juan the Builder’s Victorian House Flipping Before:
Juan The Builder Remodel

After:
Juan The Builder Sunk It

Our Taxes At Work, $$ For House Flipping

Revenue – Burglar Alarm Fees

Palo Alto is collecting $250 for late filed burglar alarm permits. For a city that not only fails to collect from businesses that park all day long in 2 hour spots, does P.G. even collect alarm fees?

Art Sklaroff is one of more than a dozen residents who showed up for an administrative hearing earlier this month to contest the fine, which he said came without warning. Like the others, he explained that he had been renewing his mandatory $35 permit each year, but forgot this year because he didn’t receive the city’s usual courtesy reminder.

Like each of the others, he was told that it was no excuse. The rules are the rules.

Revenue – Burglar Alarm Fees

Revenue – Tax Bicycles

(desmoinesregister.com)

I paid a bike license fee when P.G. collected them. Sounds good, eh?

Does the bicyclist have to pass driver exams and pay fees to learn to drive safely? Does he pay taxes and fees for license plates and vehicle registration? Trucking fees are very expensive. Does he pay high fuel taxes intended for repairs and building roads? What expense does the bicyclist have except maybe a small sales tax on his bicycle?

Revenue – Tax Bicycles

Revenue – Alcohol Taxes

The country voted for change right?

Beall’s (D-San Jose)plan would generate about $1.4 billion a year, with the money going toward alcohol- and drug-related programs. He and other supporters noted at a Capitol news conference Monday that California’s alcohol taxes haven’t been raised since 1991. Backers also said it’s time for the industry to bear more of the costs it imposes on society — including drunken driving accidents, alcoholism and other problems.

Revenue – Alcohol Taxes