City Budget

Budget Roadshow Pivots In Newhallville

by | Nov 28, 2018 2:25 pm | Comments (28)

Markeshia Ricks Photo

Mayor Harp at the Newhallville Community Management Team meeting.

In a twist on her current budget roadshow, a Harp administration official asked neighbors for ideas about how to address the city’s fiscal challenges.

A hand went right up, and a suggestion followed: Stop budgeting state money the city doesn’t have and isn’t going to get.

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Harp: State Must Let City Raise More Revenue

by | Nov 21, 2018 8:48 am | Comments (20)

Thomas Breen photo

Mayor Toni Harp at Tuesday night’s Downtown-Wooster Square community management team meeting.

The city has a revenue problem.

And if New Haven residents don’t want to bear that burden through higher property taxes, then they need to lobby the state legislature for increased tax-exempt-property reimbursements, fair education funding, a slice of the state’s sales tax receipts, and other state-enabled means for cities to raise more money.

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Steak Dinners, Trips Go Unreported

by | Oct 1, 2018 7:22 am | Comments (78)

Markeshia Ricks Photo

Controller Daryl Jones and Mayor Harp announce new credit-card monitoring procedures this month.

The Harp administration told lawmakers that a trip to Washington, D.C., for the U.S. Mayors Conference this January cost roughly $2,500. The real cost ended up at least $7,225.

The Harp administration reported that a trip to Boston for another U.S. Mayors Conference this June cost roughly $4,500. The real cost ended up at $10,450.

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Can Building Boom Fill The Gap?

by | Sep 11, 2018 2:46 pm | Comments (24)

Paul Bass Photo

Officials break ground on Audubon Sq.: Will cranes save city’s finances?

As New Haven reckons with two recent credit downgrades, a substantial structural deficit, and a double-digit tax increase, city officials are banking on a bright light at the end of the tunnel to guide the Elm City towards future financial health.

That light? New construction.

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Police, Fire Chiefs: Overtime Budgets “Unrealistic”

by | Aug 14, 2018 12:12 pm | Comments (17)

Thomas Breen photo

Police Chief Anthony Campbell, CAO Mike Carter, and Fire Chief John Alston on Monday night.

Five weeks into the current fiscal year, the police department’s actual weekly overtime is double what’s in the budget. The fire department’s weekly overtime is one and a half times over budget.

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Record Bond Sale OK’d; Discipline Vowed

by | Aug 2, 2018 11:07 pm | Comments (54)

Underwriter Carlos Desmara: City loses 10 million — or 83 million.

Christopher Peak Photos

Alders Richard Furlow, Tyisha Walker-Myers at Thursday night’s vote.

New Haven went ahead Thursday night with a $160 million restructuring of the city’s debt, after three key players — alders who had to vote to approve it — won a commitment from the Harp administration to develop strict spending controls aimed at avoiding fiscal ruin.

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Like Hartford, New Haven “Scoops & Tosses”

by | Jul 31, 2018 4:31 pm | Comments (19)

Christopher Peak Photo

City Controller Daryl Jones.

A city’s stark choices: One in a series.

Governments use a practice known as scoop and toss” when they’re desperate for cash. But it brought Hartford to near-bankruptcy.

Now, financial analysts say, New Haven is resorting to the practice — while the mayor promises she has a plan to guard against fiscal blowback.

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Projected City Deficit Drops To $11.5M

by | Jul 30, 2018 1:21 pm | Comments (2)

City of New Haven

Expenditure changes from May 2018 to June 2018.

The city is now looking at an $11.5 million projected deficit for the fiscal year that ended June 30 — $3.5 million less than projected a month earlier.

The city credits the 23 percent reduction to the projected deficit in comparison to last month’s projections in part to unexpected savings in the police and fire department budget salary lines.

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Fixing The Budget: Fire Choices

by | Jul 27, 2018 4:59 pm | Comments (25)

Christopher Peak photo

NHFD’s Keith Kerr treats man who overdosed on heroin.

A city’s stark choices: One in a series.

Cutting four firefighter positions and merging medical and fire response units could save New Haven over $1.7 million each year.

In the view of the fire union, it could also mean fewer firefighters available to respond to the next serious blaze.

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Mayor Plays Hardball Back

by and | Jul 18, 2018 2:07 pm | Comments (14)

Thomas Breen photo

Harp: Alders can’t cut. Walker-Myers: We respectfully disagree.

Mayor Toni Harp vowed to fight the Board of Alders — perhaps” even taking it to court — if it proceeds with plans to strip $483,172 from city departments to reduce the new 11 percent tax increase.

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Alders Play Hardball With Mayor’s Raises

by | Jul 10, 2018 8:19 am | Comments (34)

Thomas Breen photo

Alders Charles Decker, Dolores Colon, Adam Marchand, Evette Hamilton at Monday night hearing.

City department heads, executive management, and “confidential employees” observe the heated debate.

The average city homeowner will save around $10 on his or her new property tax bill if alders follow through on plans to strip city department budgets by nearly half of a million dollars and put that money instead towards reducing the new 11 percent tax increase.

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Hey, Buddy, Can You Spare $30 Million?

by | Jul 6, 2018 12:34 pm | Comments (37)

Thomas Breen Photo

Controller Daryl Evans, Mohit Agrawal square off at a FRAC session.

Thomas Breen Photo

Recent tax-venting meeting: Outrage galore, solutions scant.

Eliminating 106 police positions could save New Haven over $4 million a year.

It could also, in the view of some people, cost us more in lost lives and a more dangerous city.

We could save hundreds of thousands of dollars eliminating or combining a bunch of higher-level management positions — if we believe we won’t lose out in the long run.

New Haven is now wrestling with those choices. Choices that can produce savings or cuts in the millions, not thousands. Choices that force the city to rethink what tasks city government can continue to perform in an era of finite help from the tottering state government.

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