Thursday, March 31, 2011
 
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City budget straw vote: Final numbers for community partners come in at $57,500

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[March 31, 2011]  At Saturday's budget-building workshop, aldermen were asked to give their input individually on the money that should be given to the city's community partners.

As each alderman took his or her opportunity to voice an opinion, a few things became very clear.

The city is very well pleased with the annual Lincoln Art & Balloon Festival, and they are impressed with improvements of performance they've seen with Main Street Lincoln but wonder why that organization is not self-sustaining as promised.

They understand the Logan County Regional Planning Commission is going through some transitions. They have not been impressed with the past performance of that organization but are willing to give them the benefit of the doubt in the new fiscal year, and the majority of the group is displeased with the performance of the Lincoln & Logan County Development Partnership.

In addition to the aldermen, the city treasurer and mayor also participated in offering their breakdown of who should receive what amounts of money in the coming year.

Treasurer Chuck Conzo

Treasurer Chuck Conzo was asked for his opinion on the numbers. He said he would leave Main Street Lincoln at $10,000 or even raise them to $12,500. He would leave the rest as is with the exception of economic development, which he would drop to $15,000. Conzo's total came to $47,500 when giving Main Street $10,000 or $50,000 if the city were to award them $12,500.

Mayor Keith Snyder

Mayor Keith Snyder said he was in favor of keeping the funding at $60,000.

"I agree with Alderman Anderson's comment about Main Street," he said. "After the reduction that was made last year, they have done some good things, so I would keep them at $10,000.

"The regional planning commission's request came this week at $17,500, and I would ask we keep it there. There are some issues they are sorting through.

"There are some revenues we get each year from the coal mine and Monsanto that total $30,000. That money has to be used for enterprise zone purposes. Those can be spent with the regional planning commission, and the other place that money could be used is in John's (building and safety) office.

"The partnership I would keep at $30,000, with the 25 and 5 ($25,000 and $5,000). I think it is important to remember that is a partnership between the county, the city and the chamber of commerce. It is a three-legged stool. The county's financial input is the same as ours.

"I am hearing what is being said about the results, and I hope there will be opportunities for improvement in the performance there."

Snyder said that he thought the $5,000 to the chamber was money very well spent. "Maybe out of all, that one has the greatest return on our investment," he said.

Snyder also proposed cutting funding to the Railsplitter Festival and Christmas parade to $1,250 each in order to maintain the $60,000 ceiling.

Discussions

Tom O'Donohue asked about if "three-legged stool" meant that the city had one-third of the votes on the partnership board.

Snyder said there are 21 members. The city has five as does the chamber and county. The partnership has three on the board, and there is one representative each from Elkhart, Atlanta and Mount Pulaski.

Kathy Horn also noted there are members on the board who cannot vote.

David Wilmert said the city needed to be cautious with cutting back on economic development because of the other parties involved. He expressed that if the city cuts back, the county may follow suit.

He said he's been in conversations where he's heard: "If Lincoln cuts their funding, we're going to too. Like why should we contribute when you pull back?"

"Any cuts we make could potentially have a multiplicative effect and lead to a cascading de-funding of economic development," he said.

Wilmert also said even though questions posed to the partnership regarding CEDS were not well answered, he hoped everyone would remember that things like these sometimes take quite a while to accomplish.

Snyder said, "In terms of moving everyone forward, it behooves us to work together to try to get more bang for our bucks, and these are a lot of bucks, I don't dispute that.

"But I would hope that however we are to fund it, we have opportunities to make some changes in regards to results and performance."

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Marty Neitzel said in the case of economic development it is still all about communicating.

"It still goes down to communications," she said. "We don't know what is going on or how the economic development works. If we knew more, I think our feelings would be different."

Melody Anderson responded, "I think the mayor has done a great job of encouraging them to get us the information. It just seems the story never changes."

Anderson ran through the numbers for the $57,500 and said that if the group wanted to go to $60,000, the additional money would be added to the regional planning commission.

"The reason I allocated it this way is I think the message we sent Main Street last year was well taken. Maybe the same message to economic development in real dollars instead of lip service might also cause this," Anderson said.

"I think we need regional planning, don't get me wrong," she continued, "but Lincoln is not getting the bang for the buck. Maybe the county is getting some and we're supposed to be getting a trickle effect. I haven't necessarily seen that in our numbers coming through in revenues."

O'Donohue asked how long we are going to be responsible for funding these organizations.

Anderson said that was a conversation that will come up in a workshop in May.

"We have to start weaning some of these organizations off of our support," she said. "The decision to make then is how you want to approach that, and then give the mayor direction in terms of how to communicate that to the organizations. I don't want to pull the rug out from underneath them abruptly. That would not be fair."

O'Donohue said, "I don't disagree with that, but I also don't think we should be paying for these organizations forever that are supposed to be self-sustaining. We're not helping them (doing this)."

Anderson told the group they would take a 10-minute break, and when they came back they would make a decision on this funding.

In a workshop meeting no motions or official votes can be taken, but a consensus can be developed by conducting a straw vote.

When the group reconvened, the straw vote came in on the side of $57,500.

The distribution will be $5,000 to the Lincoln/Logan Chamber of Commerce, $10,000 to Main Street Lincoln, $12,500 to the Logan County Regional Planning Commission, $25,000 inclusive to the Lincoln & Logan County Development Partnership, and $2,500 each to the Railsplitter Festival and the annual Christmas parade.

Follow-up

At the Tuesday night committee-of-the-whole meeting, Snyder said that the Lincoln & Logan County Development partnership had provided each alderman with copies of their Comprehensive Economic Development Plan.

In addition, Vic Martinek was in the gallery for the evening. He told LDN that he was appointed to the partnership board on Monday night and has been asked by the board president, Mark Hughes, to attend city council meetings as an observer.

[By NILA SMITH]

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