City’s six‑year CIP proposes $409.8M year‑one appropriation, funds Great Neck rec center and $330M Princess Anne project
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Summary
Staff presented a six‑year capital improvement program totaling about $5.3 billion with $409.8 million proposed for year one; the CIP programs a fully funded Great Neck Recreation Center ($42M) and a Princess Anne High School renovation/replacement project estimated at $330M, plus substantial stormwater, roadway and courthouse investments.
Budget staff told council the six‑year CIP totals roughly $5.3 billion and that only the first year of the program is appropriated now; the proposed year‑one appropriation is about $409.8 million.
Staff said stormwater and flood-protection projects are the largest CIP category, followed by roads and schools (each about 18% of the total). The proposed CIP included 10 new projects and — notable this cycle — no items newly added to the deferred list.
Key year‑one projects called out by staff include:
• $42 million to fully fund the construction of the Great Neck Recreation Center, with construction anticipated between FY27 and FY28.
• The Princess Anne High School renovation or replacement project reflected as fully funded in the CIP at an estimated $330 million over the six‑year program.
• A $20.2 million courthouse reinvestment allocation in year one (elevator replacements and ADA‑accessible courtroom upgrades) and $3.0 million for initial schematic/design work for an aquarium modernization project.
• Fire‑service equipment funding: $10 million in CIP year‑one programming for SCBA replacement and a year‑one increase of about $9 million in the apparatus replacement program to address an identified backlog.
Staff also described investments supporting economic-development projects (resort parking and initial maintenance funding for a new dome site facility), a proposed SSD boundary and related public hearings for Pembroke Square, and road projects that are now fully funded for construction (Lookout Road and Woodstock Road sidewalk projects; Holland Road phase 1 received an added $11.9 million).
Staff said the proposed CIP preserves about $156 million in future charter bond capacity and added roughly $35.8 million of programmed increases across the six years. The proposed unfunded list still totals hundreds of millions (staff noted $547 million in requested but not fully funded projects across 47 items).
Ending: Staff will bring focused CIP briefings to council workshops; council members asked for follow‑up briefings on specific projects and on the sustainability of long‑term funding commitments.

