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Last night the Council was introduced to four new staff members, including a neew police officer, and three new administrative personel. And while staff turnover is a normal circumstance, it is great to have a full compliment of staff to support the community. There remains one role that is still open in the Public Works area.
- We also discussed the timeline of acitvities related to a sales tax measure, and the renewal of the LMD. The discussion focused on what role the Council has, what role staff has, and when various activities will take place. This included how and when ballot language would be drafted, when staff would hold informational town halls to inform about each measure, and the timing of each. The Council gave its preference that staff hold two informational townhalls - one each before and after ballots were mailed to residents.
There was a question posed by a resident which I wanted to address. The gist of the question was, given the City has a healthy reserve, why is it appropriate to seek a tax increase rather than spend down reserves?
At first glance, it may not make sense to hear that the City needs more tax revenue when it is maintaining a large reserve. After all, reserves are like savings. But savings alone do not keep a a household or a City financially healthy if ongoing operations exceed revenue.
Reserve spending may be appropriate in some circustnaces. Things like emergency response, smoothing during short term economic downturns, one time investments for major equipment, or even costs to cover efforts during reorganization may be appropriate. These are all one time in nature and time bound.
A city’s reserve works like a rainy-day fund. It exists to help during emergencies, economic downturns, or unexpected events where a large expenditure may be required. Reserves are not designed to pay for routine, ongoing costs such as wages or maintenance. Reserves are a fixed pool of money. Operating deficits repeat every year. If we spend reserves on routine services, it is choosing to spend down a limited asset to cover an unlimited problem. That math never works. It only postpones the moment when the money runs out.
At our December 2, 2025 meeting, staff presented a projection of the general fund if no new revenues were implemented:
And the gap will likely grow. City revenue is largely based on property taxes. Because the increase in property taxes is capped, inflation has been outpacing proprty taxes for several years. This means that while our operational costs rise, our revenues are not able to rise at the same rate. With a sales tax that puts us inline with neighboring cities, the projection looks quite a bit different:
There is also a fairness issue. Using yesterday’s savings to pay today’s bills pushes the cost of current services onto future residents. Rather than address the underlying cause of operational deficits, using reserves asks future generationsn to solve and pay for the the services that are being consumed today. We as a Council are elected to make decisions and address issues that impact the City. We know this is an issue, and it should be addressed.
Increasing tax revenue addresses the core problem. It brings ongoing revenue in line with ongoing costs. That balance protects essential services, preserves reserves for true emergencies, and helps ensure the city remains stable and resilient over the long term. In short, savings provide security, and in some cases can buy some time. But only stable revenue buys sustainability.and keeps the City running.


One thing still hasn’t been answered.
ReplyDeleteIf reserves are supposedly untouchable, why do they keep growing every year? And if they keep growing, why can’t that money be used to benefit the residents who paid it in the first place?
Reserves aren’t abstract numbers — they’re taxpayer dollars. Letting them pile up year after year while asking residents for higher taxes makes no sense.
If the City can afford to grow its reserves, it can afford to use some of that money to relieve pressure on residents, maintain services, or delay another tax increase.
Saving endlessly while taxing more isn’t fiscal responsibility. It’s hoarding taxpayer money.
Use the money we already have before asking for more.
Use the interest from the reserves. How much money do we make on the interest? Someone should know the answer to this question..
DeleteI keep hearing the explanation that reserves are “off limits” and that the only responsible option is to raise taxes. That doesn’t line up with reality.
ReplyDeleteThe City is sitting on $7 to $10 million in reserves. That is real money. Residents want to know why we’re being asked to pay more when the City already has millions in the bank.
We’re told reserves are only for emergencies. Well, inflation is real. Rising costs are real. And residents being over-taxed year after year is real. If reserves can’t be used when taxpayers are being squeezed, then what exactly are we saving them for?
Families don’t keep piling up savings while raising their own taxes at home. They use savings strategically while fixing the problem. That’s what responsible management looks like.
What we’re hearing instead is: don’t touch the reserves — just tax the residents again. That’s not fiscal discipline; it’s the easy way out.
Before asking voters for another tax increase, this Council should explain why millions in reserves can’t be used even temporarily, what cuts or efficiencies have actually been tried, and why taxpayers always seem to be the first solution instead of the last.
If the City has money, it should use the money responsibly before coming back to residents and asking for more. - Retired and tired of taxes.
Nice try, Jeff. That explanation doesn’t pass the smell test. Millions in reserves and you’re still asking residents for more, that’s not leadership, that’s avoidance.
ReplyDeleteIf we’ve had millions in reserves for years, why do our roads look worn and our landscaping look terrible? Where did the money go? Or why hasn't the work been done? Should we thank the past city managers, Reina Swartz, and Brett Brebula? NO NEW TAXES! NO NEW TAXES! NO NEW TAXES!
ReplyDeleteBlame them all...including the current officials. They don't spend the money.
DeleteThe only way the city’s reserves can increase is by over taxing the residents in any given year. In my opinion, if the reserves were built on over taxing us, then give it back to us instead of raising taxes.
ReplyDeleteGive me a break city council. With all the proposed tax increases being proposed everywhere in this state you decide to jump on the bandwagon. Get real. I am on a fixed income and I have to live within my means. I can’t tax my neighbors to pay my bills, I have to adjust my spending and you should do the same
ReplyDeleteIncreasing the sales tax to put us in line with other cities is not a good reason to increase it. How about let’s cut spending instead.
ReplyDeleteWhat are you going to cut spending on...salaries? Already very low
DeleteVery low compared to what?
DeleteIt is pretty ironic that Jeff, Diaz, Frank Gavidia, and the like, a few years ago when presented with the need for new taxes to avoid structural deficits they said no because of all money in reserves. And they pointed to the incompetence of Prebula, Schwartz, Cloven, Wolfe, and Tillman. Now they say it is OK. And they will use the excuse that those like Prebula, etc did not understand the budget, did not balance the checkbook. Well what is different now....NOTHING. There is a projected on-going structural deficit and still about $7million in reserve. Jeff is right...the reserves should be used for emergencies. But that was the same some years ago when new taxes were discussed and not pursued. The real question not being addressed is should the city spend down some of its reserves. That would require them to opine on where or not $7 is too much at 100%, or that number is not that much because of the generally low budget.
ReplyDeleteIf you were paying attention, you would know the Council voted to keep a reserve equal to 40%of the budget. There are those in Clayton who are so enamored with the reserve and some who want it be far larger. It makes no sense. We do have quite a bit of "deferred" maintenance. The funds are there to do that maintenance. Bret Prebula along with Cloven and Tillman were in a hurry to pass a sales tax. Go back and review the video of what really happened when they discussed how to raise revenue. It was a 4-1 vote and Tillman abstained after feigning support. Prebula wanted to raise taxes as much as possible. The individuals you mentiorned wanted to review the finances before asking the public for money and also to insure the money is used wisely. Prebula only wanted money to grow government. For too long we elected people based on how much they volunteered at CBCA. Anyone with any kind of financial savvy would want to review the numbers first. All the individuals you mentioned did just that. But if you want Prebula back so he can hire more staff, give your tax dollars to the CBCA, and have Cloven and Tillman talk endlessly about proclamations and other useless topics, by all means go and lobby for that. The grown ups are running Clayton now.
DeleteYes the council agreed to keep reserve at 40%. Why then, under current leadership, is it still $7million
DeleteJeff...why don't you address this during the council meeting instead of off line on your blog? Be a leader!!!!!!!!!
ReplyDeleteNot hard to figure out who this “expert” on leadership is. He is unhappy his preferred politician doesn't have the gavel.
DeleteThe last thing this town needs is the CBCA back in the city government. If I had my way, they would be gone from Clayton
ReplyDeleteJust what this town needs—the CBCA back in city government. We already know how that ends.
DeleteBART wants another .5% sales tax increase, the county wants another .6% sales tax increase, Clayton wants another 1% sales tax increase and the state wants a new 4 to 8 cent milage tax. Have you had enough?
ReplyDeleteDon’t forget Clayton wants to renew the landscape tax to make sure we have heathy weeds.
ReplyDeleteNo new taxes. Spend the money you have! NOW!
ReplyDeleteAgree
DeleteSpend some money, or give it back to the tax payers.
ReplyDeleteThe landscaping looks terrible. I just came from Brentwood and theirs looks fantastic.
ReplyDeleteRegardless of who you support on the council this will be a tough sell to the voters in November.
ReplyDelete