Mr. Fix-IT Makes A Plea
| Mar 26, 2014 5:12 pm |
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Controller Daryl Jones said the city’s computer technology is so “antiquated” that city workers sometimes can’t even open messages received from more newfangled email systems.
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Controller Daryl Jones said the city’s computer technology is so “antiquated” that city workers sometimes can’t even open messages received from more newfangled email systems.
Thomas MacMillan Photo
Mayoral staffers looking to convince lawmakers to create a new four-person grant writing department faced a question from East Rock Alder Anna Festa: Why not try it before you buy it?
Continue reading ‘Harp Administration Grilled On New Positions’
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| Mar 14, 2014 12:11 pm |The People’s Caucus, a dissenting bloc of seven members of the Board of Alders, has postponed a public meeting planned for Saturday to unveil an alternative to Mayor Toni Harp’s proposed new $511 million city budget.
Continue reading ‘People’s Caucus Postpones Public Session On Budget’
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Perez: What about leasing trucks?
Why does the budget assume an extra $2 million from the state? Why isn’t the Livable City Initiative expected to collect a single penny in fines? And what’s this about short-term borrowing for cash-flow purposes?
Mike Stratton didn’t get to say as much as he wanted during a hearing Thursday night on the proposed new city budget, but he held forth at length afterward, sharing the details of a plan he claims would save taxpayers $105 million.
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As she unveiled a proposed $511 million budget, Mayor Toni Harp asked New Haveners to pay more taxes, so the city can move from short-term fixes to a “sustainable financial future.”
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Two days before unveiling a budget proposal, Mayor Toni Harp Wednesday gave New Haveners the tools to explore why their tax bills may go up.
In addition to learning how much their taxes may rise, New Haveners can now click on a colorful line graph and …
Continue reading ‘Web Surfers Invited To Dive Into City Budget’
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| Feb 25, 2014 9:15 am |Melissa Bailey Photo
COO Clark and board President Carlos Torre.
The school board voted to ask for an extra $5.3 million in city taxpayer money to keep the schools running next year — and prepared to make cuts if that money doesn’t come through.
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New Haven Mayor Toni Harp issued an advance warning to city taxpayers Friday: the mill rate may soon go up.
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New Haven has $457,500 to spend on new signs. Should we buy one, trend-setting big LED sign that reveals the exact number of free nearby parking spots?
Or a bunch of traditional signs for drivers at major intersections like Ella Grasso Boulevard and Route 34? Or on neighborhood thoroughfares like Grand Avenue?
Or newfangled maps to direct walkers, to let visitors know that it’s only a short walk to from downtown to Frank Pepe’s?
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Alder Morrison asked where the money would come from.
Faced with the new mayor’s first big request, city lawmakers refused to get on board — until the administration can explain why it needs seven new staffers, and how it will pay for them.
Continue reading ‘Alders Balk On Approving Harp’s New Positions’
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Harp & Harries Monday night.
Mayor Toni Harp rejected a new school spending plan as soon as it was proposed, arguing city taxpayers cannot afford to spend an extra $5.3 million a year on education.
Continue reading ‘Harp Frowns On $5.3M Schools Budget-Hike Ask’
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Harp chats with aide Tomas Reyes at a storm meeting Wednesday.
When the governor opens the new legislative session Thursday, he will propose millions of new dollars for New Haven — and, according to one person familiar with the plans, an $8 million statewide boost in “PILOT” reimbursements.
“It looks like a pretty good budget,” New Haven Mayor Toni Harp said Wednesday.
Continue reading ‘Harp: Guv’s Budget “Pretty Good” For New Haven’
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Mendi Blue.
New Haven Mayor Toni Harp is planning a new four-person grant-writing office that she expects to pay for itself.
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| Jan 8, 2014 1:14 pm |New funds will wash into the city’s depleted “rainy day fund,” thanks to a vote of approval by the Board of Alders.
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| Dec 24, 2013 5:32 pm |Melissa Bailey Photo
$82 million. Not $186 million.
That is now the official assessed value of the eco-friendly 32-story apartment tower at State and Chapel Streets, the DeStefano administration agreed — ending one last piece of rancorous unfinished business in its final days in office.
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Looking over the city’s electric bill, Giovanni Zinn noticed something odd: United Illuminating was charging New Haven three times more than Connecticut Light & Power would to keep streetlights lit.
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| Dec 12, 2013 3:33 pm |Savings today would mean “dissavings” tomorrow.
An aldermanic committee voted to recommend a plan to restore the city’s depleted “rainy day” fund — using dollars borrowed from the year 2020.
Continue reading ‘Rainy Day Fund Fix Saves Now, Pays More Later’
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| Dec 12, 2013 12:50 pm |Thomas MacMillan Photo
In the wake of a prank call that shut the city down and then socked it with a huge policing bill, Chief Dean Esserman assured aldermen that he’s working to rein in overtime spending and plans to finish the year on budget.
Continue reading ‘Gunman Hoax Cost City Over $30K In Overtime’
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The city refinanced $16 million in bonds and came up with an extra $4.1 million, which might start to close a budget hole.
Third of four parts on where mayoral candidates stand on major issues.
Dick Lee squeezed past John W. Murphy and Kermit Carolina in the latest preference poll for mayor — among the four Democratic mayoral candidates currently seeking to win his old job. The candidates offered their vision for how best to manage city government, as well as some ideas for how to get there.
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| Aug 29, 2013 1:33 pm |The city has refinanced $16 million in bonds to grab a lower interest rate.
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Harp, Fernandez.
Henry Fernandez suggested a way to defuse New Haven’s pension ticking “time bomb”: convince the city, the state, and government workers to cooperate on a rescue plan. Toni Harp called Fernandez’s plan “sophomoric”; even if it made sense, she argued, he couldn’t pull it off.
Continue reading ‘Fernandez, Harp Differ On Proposed Pension Fix’
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Kottage.
Fire union President Jimmy Kottage (pictured) arrived Friday morning at the steps of City Hall with reinforcements in his fight against a change in lieutenant staffing — black and Latino firefighters who back him.
Chief Administrative Officer Rob Smuts showed up with reinforcements of his own — eye-popping statistics on a list of the top overtime earners in the department.
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Clerkin reports to aldermen Monday night.
As New Haven’s bond rating falls, Budget Director Joe Clerkin announced a new sign of trouble: The city will likely empty out its “rainy day fund” for the first time since the early ‘90s.