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Fayetteville council trims FY2026 priorities; approves police pay action, boosts microgrants and community engagement funding
Summary
Fayetteville — The City Council on May 29 narrowed a slate of proposed additions to the recommended FY2026 budget, confirming staff direction on police and fire pay compression, increasing microgrant funding for neighborhood programs, and reserving funds for a single new water feature while asking staff to return with detailed plans on sidewalks, project closeouts and development‑process reforms.
Fayetteville — The City Council on May 29 narrowed a slate of proposed additions to the recommended FY2026 budget, confirming staff direction on police and fire pay compression, increasing microgrant funding for neighborhood programs, and reserving funds for a single new water feature while asking staff to return with detailed plans on sidewalks, project closeouts and development‑process reforms.
The council approved a policy direction and funding for pay compression work for public safety and set aside staff money for microgrants and boards-and-commissions outreach. Finance staff briefed the council on the general fund fund balance and on how outstanding bond reimbursements and receivables appear on the city’s cash statements, leading to several requests from members for clearer, visual accounting of how borrowed or reimbursable money travels through the city’s pooled cash.
"Your fund balance above your 10% policy level is right at $3,300,000 and about $800,000 less than your 12% goal," budget presenter Missy Yates told the council, using the March 31 cash‑basis snapshot. She said the staff is counting receivables and encumbrances on the balance sheet and stressed those items are already appropriated or encumbered for projects.
Why it matters
Council members said they wanted to keep recurring obligations small while finding one‑time money for community needs. Councilors pressed for clearer accounting of the $25 million of previously authorized general obligation (GO) bonds, bond reimbursements and project closeouts and wanted assurance that when bond proceeds repay temporarily advanced cash, council can see where that money is redeployed.
What the council approved and directed
- Public safety pay/compression: The council affirmed the previously discussed funding posture for police and fire compression and approved setting aside the…
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