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CITY COUNCIL SPECIAL WORK SESSION August 14, 2017 <br />DRAFT <br /> 2 <br />Mayor Reinert remarked that there is a raise system inherent. However he feels there can 46 <br />be bumping up occurring at cities that then causes other cities to feel they have to follow. 47 <br />Mayor Reinert also remarked that there can’t be a comparison to the private sector 48 <br />because those salaries have dropped. Again the mayor said he’d like a full review. 49 <br /> 50 <br />On the police officer position that will no longer be paid by grant funds, Mayor Reinert 51 <br />said he supports the position. The council concurred. Council Member Kusterman 52 <br />commented that the safety of the city is highly important. 53 <br /> 54 <br />On the utility maintenance position requested in Public Works, Mayor Reinert noted that 55 <br />he understands it is enterprise funded. Ms. Cotton explained that there is no impact to 56 <br />the General Fund but the water and sewer enterprise funds would be impacted and they 57 <br />are driven by rates. Director DeGardner noted that the responsibilities within that 58 <br />division have grown and the utility system has expanded. He has held off on requesting 59 <br />the position for several years but now he feels it is prudent to act. Council Member 60 <br />Rafferty asked how this fits into the future retirement of the Utility Supervisor. Mr. 61 <br />DeGardner said this position is intended for current needs; the retirement will be another 62 <br />strong need in the future. The budget impact is noted on Page 91, with impacts to the 63 <br />water and sewer fund individually. Mayor Reinert said he supports the new position. 64 <br />The council concurred. 65 <br /> 66 <br />On the matter of the 3rd Community Service Officer position for the Police Department 67 <br />that is on hold based on ACE Program participation, Mayor Reinert asked why the 68 <br />vehicle for that positon isn’t a vehicle moved down from within the fleet. Director 69 <br />Swenson explained the individual demands of that position (including animal control) 70 <br />and the need for a truck. Mayor Reinert asked the Public Works Director if there are 71 <br />trucks that could be passed down to the CSO function, and Director DeGardner said all 72 <br />vehicles are being fully used. 73 <br /> 74 <br />The council moved on to review of the tax levy. Finance Director Cotton pointed out that 75 <br />while the city will be seeing a reduction in debt service it will soon be impacted by 76 <br />payments coming on line for the street reconstruction project. The mayor pointed out that 77 <br />there will be unused funds from 2017 that will lower the 2018 figures. Ms. Cotton said 78 <br />there are two buckets of money the council has traditional looked at: utilizing the city’s 79 <br />surplus down to a 50% level; and seeking funding through revenue or expenditure 80 <br />changes. Mayor Reinert asked if staff would like to perform that last exercise and Ms. 81 <br />Cotton said yes, and she added that it’s usually occurred after the council adopts the 82 <br />preliminary levy. Administrator Karlson remarked that the management team has worked 83 <br />very hard this year to bring in numbers that are very close to the bone. Mayor Reinert 84 <br />suggested that would be 2018 numbers though, not 2017; Mr. Karlson said it was a 85 <br />combination of both. 86 <br /> 87 <br />Ms. Cotton explained how close the city’s projections for this year are matching with 88 <br />actual current revenue and expenditures. Mayor Reinert suggested that he believes 89 <br />there’s interest in taking the 54 down to 50, utilizing that 325, and guestimate savings in 90