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Council reviews proposed FY2025–26 budget; debate centers on road paving priorities and staff cuts

3157278 · April 30, 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

City staff on Tuesday presented a proposed fiscal year 2025–26 budget that trims every general‑fund line item by 7% and keeps $18.5 million in capital projects across multiple funds, while leaving the council to decide which major road paving projects to prioritize.

City staff on Tuesday presented a proposed fiscal year 2025–26 budget that trims every general‑fund line item by 7% and keeps $18.5 million in capital projects across multiple funds, while leaving the council to decide which major road paving projects to prioritize.

The budget presentation opened with a staff overview of the process and constraints. “I know that one of my job duties … is to present a balanced budget to this board each year. Just kinda emphasize, this is my fourteenth time presenting to the board of an annual budget,” a staff member said as they summarized fund restrictions and the work to pare requests from 10 departments.

Why it matters: council members focused most of the discussion on how to apply limited paving dollars amid competing public‑safety and quality‑of‑life claims from neighborhoods. Staff warned that a shortfall in the general fund required cuts and reassignments and that some funds are legally restricted and cannot be moved for general uses.

Most important facts

- Staff reported a list of proposed cuts and realignments that initially totaled about $1.6 million; an additional $418,000 in requests were shifted from the general fund into other, allowable funds where possible.

- To close the remaining gap staff applied a 7% cut to every general‑fund line item, which produced a projected general‑fund reserve (fund balance) around 22% after the reductions.

- The budget maintains $18.5 million in capital projects across the city’s 15 funds and includes funding to support a new public services building; staff said operations for that building add roughly $400,000 in recurring costs.

Paving showdown: Wilkinson cluster vs. Pleasant Grove and Boyles

A large portion of the meeting…

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