Next week,  the Kids First advocates will be coming to the City Council with their petition  signatures requesting we place it on the ballot. Legally, we have no choice,  and it will be probably June 2018. See: 
            ·         http://richmondstandard.com/2016/07/youth-groups-express-anger-at-richmond-council-for-stalling-initiative/ 
  ·         http://www.tombutt.com/forum/2016/16-7-28a.html 
  ·         http://www.tombutt.com/forum/2016/16-7-26.html 
  ·         http://www.tombutt.com/forum/2016/16-7-27.html 
  ·         http://www.tombutt.com/forum/2016/16-7-26d.html 
  ·         http://www.tombutt.com/forum/2016/16-7-26c.html 
            The Kids  First initiative, if it passes, would require the City of Richmond to spend 3  percent of its General Fund on services to children and youth up to 18 years of  age and transitional (foster care) youth up to age 24. Based on the FY 2016-17  budget, this would be about $4.2 million today, and when it ramps up in five  years, it could be over $5 million. Tis would have to be over and above what  Richmond is spending now. 
            The whole  premise of Kids First is that Richmond is not spending enough on kids. What is  Richmond spending? We now have an accounting, and it adds up to a whopping  total of over $9 million! This does not include money that is spent on programs  and events that impact both youth and adult audiences - such as City  sponsorship of the July 3 fireworks and various festivals, contractual  agreements with youth-serving non-profits (such as the $60,000 allocation to  the East Bay Center for the Performing Arts as part of the Library and Cultural  Services Department Budget), and similar types of expenditures.  
            If  the City has to spend $5 million more on Kids First, it will likely come out of other programs and could  result in fewer cops on the street, closed libraries, unrepaired streets and  layoffs of existing employees.  
              Thought you  might want to know. 
              
             
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