The council took public comment and direction May 20 after staff explained that the City of Fullerton brought this year’s State of the City event in‑house after the Chamber of Commerce decided not to host. Deputy city staff said the city reduced ticket prices from $85 to $65, expects to be net positive on the event so far and will stream the presentation to make it available to residents who do not attend in person.
Staff also announced a separate parks grant: the city received a Kaboom grant to add a playground at Union Pacific Park and expects a community design day and volunteer build day in September or October. "We did receive that grant award," a deputy city manager told the council, noting sponsorships and in‑kind support would reduce taxpayer exposure.
Several public speakers and councilmembers expressed concerns that a ticketed, partially private reception could be perceived as elitist and urged that the public presentation be widely accessible and that staff report full hard costs (including staff time and public safety support). Staff acknowledged some in‑kind staff time is not captured in the line‑item estimate and agreed to return with fuller accounting. Other residents and council members supported hosting the event with the city as producer and emphasized the marketing value of a professional video and mayoral address.
Outcome: Council voted to receive and file the State of the City report and directed staff to provide the full cost accounting and options for increasing public access (streaming, public presentation).