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Augusta officials outline 2026 budget shortfalls and hard choices, warn of $6–7M health‑care hit

3846649 · June 16, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Interim finance director Tim Schreier told commissioners the city faces a structural gap for the 2026 budget driven by rising health‑care claims, streetlight costs and the end of one‑time ARPA revenue, with options including program cuts, service reductions or a millage increase.

Interim Finance Director Tim Schreier told the Augusta City commission at a June budget retreat that the city faces a multiyear budget squeeze that will force “tough decisions” for the 2026 fiscal year, including possible cuts to services, personnel reductions or a property tax (millage) increase.

Schreier said general fund revenues are projected to fall from $127 million in 2024 to about $118 million in 2026 as one‑time American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) dollars are no longer available. He said the city currently has about $3 million in ARPA funds remaining that must be spent by the end of 2026.

“The next one is health care costs,” Schreier said. “EPIC is projecting that we’re gonna have a 20% increase in our cost from last year, and that's about 6 to $7,000,000.” He said the projected health‑care overage is across all funds and that the city expects to file stop‑loss claims that could reduce the net exposure.

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