UG tax cut appears unlikely at this time

A tax cut does not appear likely after hearing Unified Government commissioners’ comments at Thursday night’s budget meeting.

UG Chief Financial Officer Kathleen VonAchen presented two options for the commission with slight tax reductions.

She had been asked by Commissioner Melissa Bynum and other commissioners to present some options of what a tax reduction would look like.

While Commissioners Jim Walters and Tom Burroughs were in favor of cutting taxes, some of the other commissioners were not, at least not at this time.

Commissioner Brian McKiernan said these options were coming “late in the game” for the 2022 budget. The UG Commission is scheduled to vote on the budget next week.

The local government is still getting back on its feet from a cash flow perspective currently, he said, and the UG needs to invest more in infrastructure, he said. He was in favor of “staying the course” for the 2022 budget, and considering a tax cut in the 2023 budget.

The administrator’s proposed budget of over $400 million kept the same mill levy rates as last year, however, the assessed valuations have gone up throughout the county, which could result in a slightly higher tax bill for some residents.

Commissioner Angela Markley agreed with Commissioner McKiernan. When the commission lowered the mill levy by 6 mills previously, in different years, it did so as part of a long-term strategic plan, according to Commissioner Markley. She said she would like to UG to look at a longer-term strategy for reductions in the future.

Commissioner Christian Ramirez agreed and said he felt personally frustrated, that this information should have been brought to the commission months ago. Since budget adoption is scheduled a week away, he said he could not vote on it in that time and needed more time to go over it.

“Since the budgeting season started, I have at every opportunity suggested that we consider reducing the mill levy,” Commissioner Walters said. The fact that the staff didn’t respond to it until tonight, and then commissioners were reasonably concerned about the late-breaking information, was disappointing to him, he said.

He talked about the large reserves that are planned for the 2022 budget.

“It appears we have just gotten caught flat-footed and don’t have projects that we think are ready to go, even though millions of dollars from ARPA have been in our possession for months,” Commissioner Walters said.

He said he didn’t want to completely redo the budget, but if they consider a mill levy reduction and change nothing internally in the budget, except reducing the reserves, it would have no impact on anything that has already been presented, but would give taxpaying residents some relief.

To the point that reducing the mill levy is a long-term goal, Commissioner Walters said it’s a one-year commitment. The commission will have the opportunity to adjust the mill levy in later years.

“I’m not convinced by anything I heard tonight that we should not consider a mill levy reduction,” he said.

Commissioner Bynum said the options presented by Von Achen on Thursday night were the result of the mayor asking commissioners two meetings ago to send in questions. She sent in questions about the effect of a 1 mill reduction on the county side, and a ½ percent off the PILOT (payment in lieu of taxes) fee on the Board of Public Utilities’ bill.

She added she had been asking for a mill levy reduction for a number of years also. She said it was worthy of more consideration. She added she is going on record to have serious, deliberative and strategic conversations about tax relief for the 2023, 2024 and 2025 budget. If the commission doesn’t come to a consensus for this budget cycle, it should start early for the next one, to consider bringing some level of tax relief to the community, she said.

Commissioner Tom Burroughs said in his experience, he has seen budgets presented in a manner where things they hold dear are hurt or damaged because of a reduction in funds. Calling out the jail or employee wages pulls at people’s heartstrings, he said, and then they say they can’t do that.

The 2022 UG budget includes an amount below $30 million in American Rescue Plan Act funding, out of a total of $79 million being received by the UG from ARPA, according to UG officials.

Commissioner Burroughs suggested the UG could generate revenues in the community by putting people to work, and getting the funds out to the community, instead of putting them in the reserves.

“Every year we are told we are broke, there’s no money and we can’t do anything,” Commissioner Burroughs said. However, this year they are sitting on cash, with extra funds available, he said.

“I am supportive of a mill rate reduction in the county and city,” Commissioner Burroughs said. “Our budget can absorb it.”

Commissioner Gayle Townsend said she agreed more with Commissioners McKiernan and Markley. The UG is the only entity that is charged with supplying major services such as infrastructure and public service, she said. Only after it does that, should it start to cut the mill rate, she said.

In the past, when the UG Commission cut the mill levy rate, it did not result in a decrease in the checks that taxpayers were writing, she said. It was a combination of the valuation increasing and other taxing entities setting their mill rates, according to Commissioner Townsend.

Commissioner Harold Johnson said other taxing agencies in Wyandotte County should be having the same discussion about reducing the mill levy. The city and county mill levies, that the Unified Government sets, are only 46 percent of the property tax bills, he noted. Schools, the community college and library levies make up the rest of the property tax bills. There needs to be a conversation with these other groups in the future, he said.

Mayor David Alvey discussed a chart comparing Wyandotte County to other jurisdictions, including Johnson County. He said the infrastructure is older in Wyandotte County, requiring more repairs. The county doesn’t have the funding now to fix all the curbs and have the storm sewers it needs, according to the mayor. Fifty-nine percent of the UG’s budget goes to public safety, he said, and no one is asking for cuts in public safety coverage.

Also, 70 percent of the UG budget goes to employees, he added.

Mayor Alvey said residential tax reductions would have to be several hundred dollars before people would notice them. A one-mill reduction would save a resident of a $500,000 home about $57 a year, he said. But one mill generates revenues that would pay for about 10 miles of road for the UG, he added.

Commissioner Jane Philbrook agreed with Commissioners Johnson and Ramirez about meeting with other jurisdictions. She added that Commissioner Bynum has been advocating for that since being elected. She said she hears from constituents about the need for good roads, code enforcement and safe parks.

Commissioner Mike Kane said he was concerned that they were still in a pandemic, and they don’tknow what will happen in the next 10 to 12 months. He also said a lot of employees are leaving the UG and 3 percent raises were not enough.

He also wanted more time to work on a strategy, and said one week was not enough. He thought they should start soon, and figure out in January what they can do for next year.

The UG Commission didn’t take any official action on the budget at the meeting Thursday, and could make changes if they wanted next Thursday.

The commission took a nonbinding straw poll on whether to add an investigator position in the Sheriff’s Department, after a presentation by Sheriff Don Ash. The position was recommended by Sheriff Ash, who talked about the increasing number of crimes being investigated by the Sheriff’s Department, including crimes at the local parks, which the Sheriff’s Department has jurisdiction over.

Commissioners voted unanimously in the nonbinding straw poll to fund the additional investigator position.

Another nonbinding straw poll that received unanimous approval was moving $250,000 from the parks operations fund balance to pay for a modified park on Hutton Road near the new Piper fire station. The idea was proposed by Commissioner Kane.

Running for re-election in November are Mayor David Alvey, Commissioners Tom Burroughs, Gayle Townsend, Mike Kane, James Walters and Jane Philbrook.

The UG Commission will have a public hearing on exceeding the revenue neutral rate and a final budget public hearing at 5 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 7. The meeting will be at the fifth floor meeting room at City Hall, 701 N. 7th St., Kansas City, Kansas. Because of the risk of COVID-19, the public has been seated in the City Hall lobby, where they can make comments. The meeting also have been on Zoom and accessible by telephone.

Then, the UG Commission is scheduled to adopt the budget at 7 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 9.

For information about access to the meetings, visit https://www.wycokck.org/Departments/Clerks-Office/BOC-Virtual-Meeting.

The budget details are contained in a budget book of almost 1,000 pages online at https://xfer.wycokck.org/public/file/XwtZzjJiCUWudaJv1Z2WUw/Unified%20Government%202021%20Amended%202022%20Proposed%20Budget.pdf. There is also a slide presentation about the budget online at https://www.wycokck.org/files/assets/public/finance/documents/2022-administrators-budget-presentation.pdf.

Thursday’s UG Commission budget discussion is online at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bBH8GamvxhY.

To see an earlier story on the UG budget, visit https://wyandotteonline.com/federal-funds-playing-a-role-in-2022-ug-budget/.

UG budget workshop to be Thursday

The Unified Government Commission will hold a special session at 5 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 2, for a budget workshop.

According to the meeting notice, the public will be able to observe the meeting live on YouTube, UGTV and through Zoom. Access also is available by phone. Also, the public may go to the lobby of City Hall, 701 N. 7th, and watch the special session on a link there.

The Zoom link is at https://us02web.zoom.us/s/89567826979?pwd=VnZveTB6WE5IUnFqRVNtQXdKbFNjZz09.

The passcode is 994795.

The webinar ID is 895 6782 6979.

Those who want to connect by telephone may call 877-853-5257 or 888-475-4499.

Next week, the UG Commission also will have a public hearing on exceeding the revenue neutral rate and a final budget public hearing at 5 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 7.

The Zoom link for the Sept. 7 meeting is at https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84006610377?pwd=M0JOQ2VpOVpPdi9VQm1adHZ6NkhRZz09.

The passcode is 059680.
The webinar ID is 840 0661 0377.

To connect by phone, call 877-853-5257 or 888-475-4499.

UG budget information is at https://www.wycokck.org/Departments/Finance/Budget.

$1.85 million in housing assistance approved by UG

An extra $1.85 million in housing insecurity assistance and other assistance was approved by the Unified Government Commission on Thursday night.

The funding will come from the $87 million in federal American Rescue Plan Act funds that the UG is receiving.

At the meeting, UG Commissioner Jane Philbrook thanked UG Administrator Doug Bach and the UG staff for putting together the housing assistance proposal that the commissioners had requested a few weeks ago. She thanked them for understanding that this is an emergency and not something they can put off for a few months.

“Some of these folks are already in the streets,” Commissioner Philbrook said.

Ten to 12 Wyandotte County nonprofit agencies could receive funding to help with housing insecurities.

Just around an hour or so after the UG voted, news came out about the end of the national eviction moratorium. The U.S. Supreme Court vacated a stay on evictions on Thursday. The court wrote, “It strains credulity to believe that this statute grants the CDC the sweeping authority that it asserts.”

Justice Stephen Breyer dissented from the majority’s opinion, including in his opinion a chart of the cases and deaths from COVID-19 and the Delta variant, which are currently rising in the nation. He cited irreparable harm from vacating the stay, as COVID-19 rates have spiked in recent weeks. The opinion is online at https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/20pdf/21a23_ap6c.pdf.

At the UG meeting, UG Commissioners Gayle Townend and Melissa Bynum also had spoken in favor of allotting more money for direct housing and basic needs assistance for Wyandotte County residents. The measure passed unanimously.

Commissioner Bynum said with an injection of revenues that they have never seen before, the UG has an amazing opportunity to take a problem that impacts every corner of the community and put in a structure that solves it, with their community partners. They have an opportunity to make a huge leap forward for many struggling residents in the community, she said.

Commissioner Christian Ramirez said he was in support of the housing insecurity funding, and other ARPA funding remaining will be an opportunity for real change in the community.

Commissioner Tom Burroughs urged the UG to get those dollars out to the community to those in need, and not to wait.

The housing assistance program will go through the UG Health Department, according to officials. Juliann Van Liew, Health Department director, said it will be run similar to the CARES Act funding, which went through the United Way to distribute funding to several nonprofit agencies in Wyandotte County that have traditionally handled this sort of assistance.

While there has been a state program funded with federal dollars to assist renters with housing and utility needs, they have been hearing from nonprofit agencies that residents had trouble accessing the program funding, and that the agencies needed funding to help the residents with their applications. The state program was narrowly defined as to who would be eligible for the funding.

With the UG’s allocation, the nonprofit agencies would have broader discretion on helping individuals with housing needs, according to Van Liew.

Commissioner Townsend was in favor of broader discretion in helping individuals. The objective would be to keep residents in their dwellings, she said.

Besides housing assistance, the plans are to use the funding for utility and food assistance, according to Van Liew.

Evictions have been linked to COVID-19, as some residents have lost jobs because of the economic effects of the pandemic. Others may have contracted the virus and been unable to work. Some families have lost income earners to death from the virus.

The details of the UG’s program are expected to be announced at a later time. The program would run through January 2022, according to the UG resolution.

The UG Commission also approved the $87 million that is being allocated from ARPA funding.

About $11.7 million will be spent on “immediate needs.” This plan was outlined at a meeting a few weeks ago. The $1.8 million for housing assistance is in addition to the $11.7 million.

Most of the $87 million the UG is receiving in ARPA funding is going to revenue loss replacement from COVID, according to UG officials, including $31 million for the city and $11 million for the county.

The remainder of the funding, $24 million for the city and $21 million for the county, is available to be spent on other ARPA categories as outlined by federal guidelines, according to UG officials. There is currently a UG administration proposal to use some of the funds to build up the UG’s reserves for a year or two.

The UG received around half of the federal funding this year, with the rest to be received next year. The UG will have a few years to make decisions on how to spend the remainder of the funding that was not allocated for revenue loss replacement.

Of the $11.7 million in “immediate needs,” public health will receive $5.95 million; while $2.38 million will go to reduce negative economic impact; $1.07 million will be for disproportionately impacted communities assistance; $422,000 will go to ARPA grant support; and $1.93 million will go toward online processing and technology investment.

According to UG officials, there is still time for residents to suggest their ideas on how to spend the money through an online forum at https://dashboards.mysidewalk.com/american-rescue-plan-act or by email to [email protected].

More information on the UG meeting is at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zbq2U0j3Rn8.