Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Top Story

HOLD THE HORSES, CLAYTON 

Before Any Tax Increase, Show Us the Real Numbers.

For years, residents were told Clayton needed a tax increase, even while the City's books were still being reviewed, corrected, and clarified.

Budget forecasts were often built on questionable baselines, incomplete assumptions, and financial data many residents now believe should have been more carefully verified before being presented publicly as fact.

But were those projections accurate?

Many residents are no longer convinced they were.


Cleanup Is Underway, But the Work Isn't Finished

To their credit, the current Council and staff appear to have spent significant time:

  • Reviewing contracts
  • Examining prior spending
  • Identifying accounting problems
  • Strengthening financial controls

That work matters.

But despite those efforts, residents are still hearing mixed and sometimes conflicting financial messages.


The Numbers Still Keep Moving

Residents are now hearing that revenues may be softening, deficits could reach approximately $778,000, and new taxes may be necessary.

At the same time, many are asking a far more important question:

Is this really the right time to discuss a tax increase?

Or should the City first complete the financial cleanup and clearly establish its true revenue stream, actual expenses, and long-term financial position?


Questions About Property Tax Revenue

In California, most properties typically receive annual assessed-value increases of up to 2%, and when homes sell, reassessments often occur at significantly higher market values.

In a stable community like Clayton, property tax revenue would generally be expected to trend upward over time.

So when residents hear revenue may be down, reasonable questions follow:

  • Is it a timing issue?
  • A county allocation delay?
  • A forecasting error?
  • Misclassified revenue?
  • Appeals or refunds?
  • Or something else not yet explained publicly?

Questions About Sales Tax Revenue

It was reported at the last City Council meeting that online sales tax revenues were increasing.

So residents are asking: Why are we discussing a sales tax increase when revenues may actually be performing better than expected?

Residents are not saying the City has no financial challenges. What they're saying is simple:

Before asking taxpayers for more money, the public deserves accurate, verified, and transparent financial information.


Residents Want Answers

  • What are the true reserve levels?
  • What expenses have already been reduced?
  • What new revenues are coming in?
  • What liabilities remain unresolved?
  • Where do the City's finances actually stand today?

These are not political questions. They are responsible taxpayer questions.


What About Investment Income and Reserves?

  • What investment income is being generated from City reserve accounts?
  • Why do reserve balances remain strong while deficit warnings continue?
  • Which funds are restricted and which are available?
  • What previously budgeted projects were never completed or spent?

Those questions deserve clear public answers.


Timing Matters

Rushing into a tax discussion before the financial picture is fully stabilized may be the wrong approach.

The City reportedly still maintains significant reserve funds that may help bridge short-term uncertainty while staff completes the hard work of correcting past issues.

That is one of the reasons reserves exist — stability during periods of uncertainty.


Before Asking Residents for More

Before any sales tax, parcel tax, or assessment measure moves forward, the City should first provide:

Verified revenue projections
Clean and transparent expense reporting
Clear reserve disclosures
Investment income reporting
A corrected multi-year forecast
A public explanation for why prior projections changed so dramatically.

Bottom Line

Residents are not saying "never."

They are saying:

Not yet.

Get the numbers right first. Finish the cleanup first. Then make the case.

Because until the books are clear, credible, and trusted...

Hold the horses.


— Clayton Watch Team

1 comment:

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