Staff briefing: Talent's general fund trends show rising personnel costs; staff outlines efficiency, service and fee options

Talent City Council ยท November 5, 2025

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Summary

City staff told committee leaders Oct. 29 that Talent's general fund is facing a long-term imbalance as personnel and retirement costs have grown faster than core property-tax revenues.

City staff presented a financial briefing to committee leaders at the Oct. 29 study session, warning that long-term general fund trends require action though they do not constitute an immediate year-to-year emergency.

The presenter said the city's general-fund accounting is like a storage tank: revenues (property taxes, fees) fill the tank and expenses draw it down. As an illustrative budget example staff noted a budgeted starting fund balance of $4,000,000, projected revenues of $4,600,000 and budgeted expenses of $5,800,000, which would imply a drawdown in fund balance if realized (00:60:44). Staff emphasized that while budgeted numbers are conservative, actuals tell a similar story of expenditures rising faster than core revenues.

Staff attributed the long-term expenditure growth mostly to personnel costs. Over roughly a 10-year horizon, personnel-related expenses rose by nearly 78%, driven by higher retirement and health-care costs and market adjustments to retain police officers, the presenter said (01:06:58). By contrast, property-tax revenues grew more slowly; staff showed property-tax revenue rising roughly from $1,000,000 to $1,600,000 in the period discussed, constrained by Measure 50 limits on permanent rates (01:14:02).

To address the gap staff outlined three broad approaches: find efficiencies and improve internal systems (for example, moving away from paper and using software to automate some finance processes); consider service reductions or delayed capital projects if staffing is cut; and pursue revenue options. Staff cautioned that grant funding is not a reliable long-term substitute because securing grants typically requires staff capacity (01:16:25).

On revenue options, staff said the most common approach among Oregon cities is to increase user fees, pointing to examples such as public-safety fees and facility-cost-recovery fees. Council has already increased a public-safety fee in the recent period; staff proposed automatic inflation indexing and deeper review of community-development fees that may not fully recover staff time. Staff noted a local gasoline tax is restricted for street uses and cannot be used to plug general-fund gaps (01:14:02).

Participants also asked about annexation and large redevelopment sites: staff said annexing small'value parcels currently in-city limits would produce negligible property-tax revenue; a $10 million increase in taxable value would yield only a few thousand dollars a year in city property-tax revenue under current permanent-rate rules (01:29:25). Staff advised early engagement of committees in the budget process and requested committee-submitted work plans and budget priorities in time for next year's base budget discussions (01:35:57).

"We're not in a dire year-to-year budget emergency," the presenter said, "but the long trend in the general fund is not sustainable without adjustments," and staff urged early action to smooth needed changes (00:58:21).