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Finance committee presents 2026 budget that meets state levy and expenditure rules; holds vacancy mandates and new fees to close gap
Summary
City staff told the finance committee the recommended 2026 budget complies with state levy limits and expenditure restraint while using one-time revenues, mandated vacancies and new fees to cover near-term costs; departments also proposed service reductions and deferred capital.
The City Finance Committee met at City Hall and reviewed a proposed 2026 spending plan that city staff say meets the state levy limit and expenditure restraint requirements while using one-time revenues, mandated vacancies and new user fees to close a near-term gap. Mary Anne, a city staff member who presented the document, said the levy in the book is set at about $38,000,001, an increase of $738,946 (roughly 1.98%).
The budget meets the two legal constraints that govern property tax and spending growth. "This budget meets both of those requirements," Mary Anne said, referring to the levy-limit and expenditure-restraint tests that limit tax rate and allowable spending increases. She told the committee city staff used a mix of measures — mandated hiring freezes, targeted one-time cuts and modest revenue changes — to produce a balanced proposal.
Why it matters: the levy and expenditure-restraint rules determine…
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