At last  night’s City Council meeting, the city manager presented a list of proposed  cuts in programs and services that will move the City to within $2.9  million of a structurally balanced FY 2016-17 budget that must be adopted  before the end of June, leaving only two more City Council meetings to get the  job done.           
             No one was  happy with the proposed cuts, but the City Council gave approval with a  four-vote majority with McLaughlin, Martinez and Beckles dissenting or  abstaining. 
            The city  manager went on to explain that the final $2.9 million would have to come  largely from either additional contributions for OPEB (Other Post-Employment  Benefits, i.e. health insurance) by city employees or from reductions in force  (layoffs). The next two weeks will likely be dominated by potentially  contentious negotiations between the city manager and public employee  bargaining units. If agreements on OPEB reductions cannot be reached, some  layoffs will likely occur. 
            Last night’s  discussion was dominated by advocates, principally Beckles and Martinez, for  retaining the position of fire marshal. The fire marshal has historically been  the manager of Fire Department staff who perform plan reviews and inspections.  Fire Chief Adrian Sheppard has proposed eliminating the fire marshal position  and combining it with his overall management duties while expanding the number  of staff who actually perform reviews and inspections. The authority for  enforcing regulations of the California state fire marshal, largely contained  in the California Fire Code, are already delegated to local fire chiefs. 
            Another  proposal, promoted by SEIU and the City Council members of the Richmond  Progressive Alliance to make up the final $2.9 million by extracting salary  concessions from higher paid employees, has garnered little enthusiasm from  either remaining City Council members or bargaining units other than SEIU. The  proposal would extract no concessions from employees making $90,000 or less but  would reduce salaries on a graduated scale with those at the top dropping as  much as 38 percent.  SEIU would be the least  affected by such a plan while other bargaining units would bear the brunt. SEIU  is an “allied organization” of the Richmond Progressive Alliance and holds a  seat on the 17-member  steering committee.  |