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Cottonwood Heights retreat highlights structural budget gap; city weighs tax increases, cuts and a citizen budget panel
Summary
A financial-sustainability model presented at the Cottonwood Heights retreat showed the city's projected general-fund revenues lagging inflation and rising requests, pushing reserves toward policy minimums. Staff and consultants proposed scenarios ranging from cuts and fee studies to a one-time property-tax increase plus annual inflation indexing, and the council agreed to form a citizen advisory committee to help prioritize options.
A financial-sustainability model presented at the Cottonwood Heights city council retreat showed the city faces a structural gap between revenues and expenses that will erode unrestricted reserves unless the council adopts revenue increases, cuts or both.
Scott, the city's finance lead, told the council that property-tax revenue has been relatively flat and that new-growth property taxes add only about $50,000 a year on average. That limited upward pressure on revenue, together with slowing sales-tax growth, fed the consultant's projection that the city's $4.0 million unrestricted fund balance could be consumed within several years under a do-nothing scenario.
Consultant findings and why they matter
The consultant ran…
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