Hamilton Township council reviews 2024 budget priorities in workshop

Hamilton Township Council · April 18, 2024

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Summary

At an April 15 budget workshop, Hamilton Township Council reviewed 2024 operating and capital priorities across recreation, senior services, events, animal control and public facilities, and heard a detailed wastewater plant briefing on infrastructure and regulatory risks.

Hamilton Township Council convened a budget workshop on April 15 to review departmental operating and capital plans for 2024, focusing on recreation programs, facility rentals and fees, animal control staffing, and public works projects.

Director Kathy Fitzgerald presented recreation and events line items, saying the only material contractual increase for Winter Wonderland was restrooms and that most program changes were driven by inflationary supply costs. The council pressed for clarity on a new donation‑based stipend structure for local leagues; Fitzgerald said the recreation committee will finalize a recommendation and that any change would not affect the 2024 figures. Councilors raised equity concerns after noting that some programs (for example, Hamilton Babe Ruth) receive larger stipends than other leagues and that cross‑jurisdiction usage by Northern Burlington complicates allocation decisions.

The council also reviewed facility rental fees for venues such as the Nottingham Ballroom and Grafton. Staff noted recent ordinance revisions that recategorize some users for fee purposes and said they would confirm nonprofit status for groups like a local Red Cross blood drive and report back to council. On rental operations, staff said cleaning and janitorial charges are tied to the renter and that public works may sometimes subsidize or provide services when vendors are unavailable.

Animal control and shelter budgets generated extended discussion. Councilors questioned why overtime projections remained low even as salaries rose; staff explained vacancies and recruitment challenges for part‑time attendants have driven overtime use in recent years and said one additional full‑time attendant position was approved to reduce operational strain. Councilors discussed budget transfer options and underscored the need to monitor overtime closely.

Several seasonal events and capital items were discussed, including Oktoberfest, Zadio Fest and golf‑cart rentals for large events. Staff cautioned that buying large numbers of carts would create ongoing maintenance and storage costs and recommended evaluating needs before purchasing.

The workshop concluded with thanks to department staff and an acknowledgement that a number of items—stipend structure for rec leagues, nonprofit fee status, and specific vendor arrangements—will be resolved by committees or administration and brought back to the council.

The council did not take formal votes during the workshop; the meeting served to review and clarify departmental requests before ordinance or budget hearings.