More Millage Rate Mumbo Jumbo (Language or Ritualistic Activity Intended to Confuse)

This year we again heard more of the annual millage rate talk (alternatively, you may describe it as gibberish, double talk, gobbledygook, jabberwocky) in the annual budget hearing of the City of Coral Gables.  Depending on the direction–up or down–of spending and property values, the Director of Finance always, and I emphasize always, comments on the millage rate as “much lower than many other full-service cities”, “our rate is going done” or  “our rate is just 27 percent of your total taxes,” as if he was saying something substantive.

Why so much talk about the millage rate.

The millage rate is simply the result of dividing the assessed property values by the city budget–nothing more and nothing less.

How do you calculate the millage rate:  (1)  you decide how much money you need in the budget–this is a management and commission decision and it is the only relevant decision;  (2) you divide the amount you need (say, $78 million) by the total assessed property values (say $13 billion) to get the city’s share; and, voila, (3) you get the millage rate (adjust it to a rate per thousand dollars).  Therefore, the millage rate (the tax rate) is determined by the city budget request alone–everything else is out of the control of Coral Gables.

The City of Coral Gables Commissioners and Managers never discuss the budget in great detail during the Budget Hearings.  The commissioners’ questions, directed at management, are usually quite restrained.  There has been no real deep questioning about the number of employees and benefits, present or future capital spending, maintenance costs, vehicle costs, overtime, etc. and different ways of reducing spending and taxes significantly.  The taxpayers is not well represented in the process.

I quote from my last year’s post.

The city fathers do us no favor by having a lower or higher millage rate.  They do us a favor by better managing the city’s budget–that is [what] counts.

Boca has a Long-Range Financial Plan

Why can’t Coral Gables, City Beautiful, with its top-notch city manager, well-educated citizenry, with a world class university in our midst, prepare a long-range financial plan like that of Boca Raton.  I cannot judge the details of the plan, but it seems like a wonderful instrument to incorporate citizen participation and understanding of Coral Gables’ many financial issues.  It would provide a forum for an open and active review of the future of the city, rather than the annual hit-or-miss treatment of taxes, fees and spending.

The Long-Range Financial Plan of the City of Boca Raton is described as follows:

This Plan provides us with an opportunity to evaluate current policies and practices in order to  implement proactive strategies before critical fiscal strains impact the budget. The best informed, fiscally sensitive decisions will be those deliberated with their longer-term implications in mind. To that end, we annually update the Plan for the City Council.

We look forward to the day that the city of Coral Gables is capable of formulating an in depth long-range financial plan for plain view of all citizens.  Read some of the plan and you will be amazed that Boca Raton was sitting on $50 million in reserves at one time and has $10 million in hurricane response reserves!

The Poor Ignored

Are there poor in Coral Gables–since they are not mentioned the presumption is that there are none.  Politics described herenot unlike that observed in South Florida.

Much of America is in a nasty mood, and the language of compassion has more or less been abandoned. Both political parties serve their rich campaign contributors, while proclaiming that they defend the middle class.  Neither party even mentions the poor, who now officially make up 15% of the population but in fact are even more numerous, when we count all those households struggling with health care, housing, jobs, and other needs.

Income inequality is at historic highs, but the rich claim that they have no responsibility to the rest of society. They refuse to come to the aid of the destitute, and defend tax cuts at every opportunity. Almost everybody complains, almost everybody aggressively defends their own narrow and short-term interests, and almost everybody abandons any pretense of looking ahead or addressing the needs of others.

via America’s Deepening Moral Crisis – Project Syndicate.

What’s Next After the 2010-2011 Budget Approval

After the approval of the 2010-2011 City of Coral Gables Budget, we might ask what are major tasks the city manager and the city commissioners should undertake to avoid continuing property tax increases.

I would think the city needs the following:

  • Make further cuts in pensions, health benefits and salaries of all employees during the next year, especially for firefighters and police;
  • Reduce the number of firefighters and police, if they do not accept substantial salary and benefit reductions;
  • In light of the city manager’s recent comments about working for the future, the city should develop, discuss and publish a long-term financial plan, approved by the Commission and discussed by taxpayers in an open forum;
  • Continue evaluating senior and middle management and a process of “rightsizing” city government;  and
  • Delay major capital projects for three to five years, depending on the recuperation of the local economy.

What else do you suggest.