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Cumberland County budget review highlights reliance on federal inmate revenue; commissioners warned of tax impact if it disappears

Cumberland County Finance Committee · December 15, 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

County Manager Jim Geely presented a high-level budget showing a proposed 3% nonunion COLA, rising health and workers'‑comp costs, and heavy reliance on more than $3 million in federal inmate revenue (US Marshals/immigration) that keeps the proposed tax increase at 5.37%; without that revenue the increase would be 13.77%.

County Manager Jim Geely told the Cumberland County finance committee that the county’s proposed fiscal plan hinges on federal inmate revenue and rising personnel costs as he gave a 30,000‑foot overview of the coming budget. "We're proposing a 3% nonunion COLA," Geely said, and he warned that health insurance and workers' compensation costs have climbed substantially.

Geely outlined the budget’s most consequential figures: an anticipated 3% cost‑of‑living adjustment for nonunion staff; health insurance projected to rise about 12% through the Maine Municipal Employees Health Trust; a large increase in workers' compensation partly tied to jail injuries; and roughly $1.5 million in new money needed to fund recent union contract increases across four bargaining units. He described a package of roughly $317,000 in non‑debt capital spending and a proposed…

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