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WPCNR COMMON COUNCIL CHRONICLE-EXAMINER. By John F. Bailey. September 25, 2009: The Common Council tonight heard two suggestions from Commissioner of Public Works, Joseph Nicoletti which they will take up Tuesday afternoon at 6 PM to reinstate curbside leaf pickup that White Plains has enjoyed in the past. The plan under consideration will cut the leaf pick up season off at December 1, and rehire ten full-time workers on a part-time basis and reinstate 7 part-time hires at a cost of $275,000 to execute curbside pickup, as opposed to spending $850,000 to return to the service in place (full curbside leaf pickup by the city) for twenty five years.
The Council learned from its Commissioner of Finance that the city was looking at a $3.8 Million shortfall in the current 2009-10 budget at this time, but that it was early in the year, and a rebound in the second quarter could tell a different story financially. The council.set a public hearing on the sale of 4 Cromwell Place; transferred $2,0000 to specific Police, Fire, CSEA and Teamsters, and Benefits accounts; entertained a request by the owner of 1133 Westchester Avenue for a 3 year site plan extension. It also had an executive sesson on a series of small property certiorari settlements, the amount of which was not disclosed.
Commissioner of Public Works Nicoletti told the CitzeNetReporter the full-time workers tentatively to be hired back on a part-time basis would be paid Civil Service wages. The part-time hires would be hired at a regular hourly rate. He said if the Council agreed to the plan, he thought he could hire the full-time workers needed for a shortened 7-week pickup season, scheduled to begin October 13 and end December 1.The workers hired back to work full-time would be laid off at the end of the leaf season. Nicoletti said he needed Corporation Counsel Edward Dunphy’s approval to do this.
The council all agreed it was a good idea to go to the bagging system eventually, but due to what Dennis Power said was the strongest reaction on any issue he had received in his twenty years memory as Council member in the early 90s and the last three years, and what Thomas Roach described as an issue where he has taken some 40 calls, the council (Mr. Power, and Mr. Roach particularly) felt they needed to do a better job of educating the public over the next year to be ready for bagging next fall. Dennis Power and Tom Roach, the councilmen agreed this could be a solution to the public outcry, with a minimum expenditure. The council and the Mayor agreed to return to action Tuesday afternoon at 6 to make the leaf decision.
It was also made clear to WPCNR by Mr. Nicoletti that residents could not dump leaves in the roadways of White Plains because it violated the city’s ordinance against “blocking the road.” He did not know what the fine was. If the Council adapts the $275,000-cost, short leaf pickup season Tuesday, bagging would not be required. About 500 bags have been sold to residents at the Department of Public Works Gedney dump. No refund policy was discussed.
WPCNR cautions readers this was a solution in flux, scheduled for further discussion and possible action Tuesday at 6
Deficit Budget Pegged at $3.8 Million at this time.
In other action, Commissioner of Finance, Gina Cuneo Harwood, said the city was facing $3.8 Million of red ink in the current 2009-2010 budget at this time. She said reports of a $6 Million deficit (based on the first two sales tax collection figures) were premature, saying it was too early to tell the trend. She said if the second quarter rebounded the 11.6% decline in sales tax collections could be reversed.
“It’s too early in the fiscal year to do much forecasting,” she said. “We won’t see trends until the second quarter.”
She attributed the fall-off to the loss of Filene’s (last August), Fortunoff (last spring), and Circuit City (also last spring).
She said she felt sales tax would come in at $45 Million, $2.3 million shy of the 2009-10 forecast. ($47.3 Million was budgeted for 09-10 sales tax collections.) “We don’t have real actuals (at this time) for the first quarter,” that hard numbers would be in for Quarter 1 October 23. The Mayor observed the city has an opportunity to fill the vacant space before the end of the year.
Harwood did reveal that county reports Septmenber Mortgage Tax down 56% September to September,from $1.3 Million in September 08, to $626,000 this September leaving the city $1 Million off forecast there unless housing sales picked up. Building permits were off $600,000. Parking Department revenues were 10% off so far, and projecting at $18 Million instead of the budgeted $19 Million,
Hotel Tax was projected based on the number of hotels in the city which appeared larger than expected as bringing in $400,000 to $500,000.
Expenses she said were as budgeted, “no surprises.”
This adds up to about an $3.8 Million off the expected revenues:
-$2.3M Sales Tax
-$1 M Mortgage Tax
-$1 M Parking
+ $500,000 Hotel Tax
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$3.8 Million Running Deficit
Harwood said there would be no increase in the pension contribution in the 09-10 budget year, but did say there would be one in 2010-11, as reported by WPCNR earlier this week. She did not project what that increase might be, though it should be 11.9% for New York State Employee Retirement System workers and 14% for Police and Fire employee wages.
The Council expressed no suggestions that the current budget must be cut at this time.
Kensington to begin construction first of year.
Susan Habel, Commissioner of Planning brought good news on the Kensington assisted living project, as the council set a public hearing at the October 5 Common Council meeting to designate 4 Cromwell Place as desinated developer of that lot.
She said the last hurdles had been met, that Kensington LLC had the Department of Housing and Urban Development backing for insuring their loans, and had secured a Construction Manager and submitted a construction plan, with construction beginning in the new year coming up.
Benjamin Boykin told WPCNR that the buyers of 4 Cromwell Place paid the city $1.7 Million for the property, which the city had purchased from Westchester Legal Aid Society for $2.9 Million to facilitate building of the recently opened (2008) Longview Avenue garage to provide parking for White Plains Hospital Medical Center and the Kensington Assisted Living Project.
Robert Weisz Requests 3 Year Site Plain Extension
Because of Financial Market.,
Robert Weisz asked the Common Council for a 3 year site plan renewal of his planned hotel and office building addition to his 1133 Westchester Avenue property approved last year. Weisz said it would help him two ways: giving him enough time to obtain financing in a credit market he told the council was beginning to loosen but was still taking babysteps. Weisz said he had recently refinanced loans for $120,000. He also said it would give him better negotiating ability with hotels and businesses be allowing him a three year window to allow for a company to analyze and approve any possible deal.
Rita Malmud worried that this might be precedent setting. Thomas Roach said that the council should preserve its right to be discretionary and explore longer term site plan windows depending on the client. Benjamin Boykin agreed that the council should look at granting longer than one year site plans in the future.
The Weisz request coincidentally comes three weeks after the Common Council gave White Plains Hospital Medical Center a five year site plan approval to get the hospital campus makeover under way for similar financial reasons.
Surprising the Mayor
The council surprised the Mayor be introducing amendments to a resolution that specifies where $2 Million being transferred from the Reserve for Financing was to go in the General Fund in the 2009-10 budget. The Mayor and Councilman Glen Hockley voted to table the amendments. The Mayor’s motion to table, because he had not studied the resolution or been informed of it by Mr. Boykin, was defeated by the votes Mr. Boykin, Mr. Roach, Mr. Power, Ms. Milagros Lecuona and Ms. Malamud. The Council then voted by the same 5-2 to transfer the $2 Million specifically to Police, Fire, CSEA, Teamster and Benefits accounts. The reason for the transfer was not explained by Mr. Boykin.
Just be coincidence, if binding arbitration, currently underway with the police and fire unions results in a 4% wage settlement across the four city unions mentioned in the transfer, that would cost the city $2,340,502 in retroactive pay for 2009-2010. The transfer apparently would cover most of that.
The Mayor was laughing in indignation saying, “for the last 12 years I’ve heard I need more time to study (from the Council).”
Surprising the Mayor II.
Mr. Boykin then introduced three more resolutions. The Mayor declined to accept them. (In order to introduce a resolution for the first time at a council meeting, it has to unanimous.) Mr. Boyking then called for a special meeting for 8:30 A.M. Friday morning to take up the resolutions
The Resolutions transferred $70,000 from the Library Fund Reserve to Retroactive Payments for Fiscal Year 2008-09 liabilities; $50,000 from the Water Fund Reserve to retroactive payments to the waterfund in Fiscal Year 2008-2009; and $5,000 from the Self Insurance Fund Reserve to the Self Insurance Fund for retroactive payments to record accrued liabilities for Fiscal Year 2008-2009.