Monday, December 21, 2009
Monday, December 14, 2009
Lino Lakes Poised To Cut City Budget By $500,000
Roughly $300,000 of that half-million dollars in budget cuts will come from a proposed reduction in city staff of 5.0 FTE (full-time equivalent) employee positions, half the reduction initially discussed at an August workshop.
Under that earlier scenario, 10.0 FTEs, or approximately 13% of the city’s 80 staff positions, would have been cut. However, council directed City Finance Director Al Rolek to explore other options such as mandatory two-week employee furloughs and the elimination of wage increases, steps that Reinert has termed “temporary solutions.”
Urging fellow council members at the workshop to deal with budget issues in ways “that can help us longterm,” Reinert requested that the group work together to define an overriding budget goal and implement solutions that can be counted on when the process begins again in 2010. Elimination of city staff positions is “something we only want to do once,” he said.
Referring to the current budget proposal as a “box of Band-Aids,” Reinert continued, “To continue to do things the way we do things with the current outlook and then expect different results is the definition of insanity,” he said. “What a sad situation to know that the problems aren’t solved and that we have to go through this again next year.”
Full Story Here
Deb Barnes, The Citizen
Under that earlier scenario, 10.0 FTEs, or approximately 13% of the city’s 80 staff positions, would have been cut. However, council directed City Finance Director Al Rolek to explore other options such as mandatory two-week employee furloughs and the elimination of wage increases, steps that Reinert has termed “temporary solutions.”
Urging fellow council members at the workshop to deal with budget issues in ways “that can help us longterm,” Reinert requested that the group work together to define an overriding budget goal and implement solutions that can be counted on when the process begins again in 2010. Elimination of city staff positions is “something we only want to do once,” he said.
Referring to the current budget proposal as a “box of Band-Aids,” Reinert continued, “To continue to do things the way we do things with the current outlook and then expect different results is the definition of insanity,” he said. “What a sad situation to know that the problems aren’t solved and that we have to go through this again next year.”
Full Story Here
Deb Barnes, The Citizen
Sunday, December 6, 2009
Outdoor Decorating
Monday, November 30, 2009
Trivia:Outside the home of Centerville Mayor Mary Capra, Sara and Lucie Fehrenbacher, Simon and Julie Berger and Ben Fehrenbacher help put lights and bows on some of the 25 wreaths that will decorate light posts along Main Street. The wreaths were purchased from local boy scouts with private donations.
- Photo by Paul Dols
The Quad Press Link Here
- Photo by Paul Dols
The Quad Press Link Here
How many new light posts have been erected along main street?
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