Coral Gables as a Miami-Dade Island?

Public statements by Coral Gables Commissioners at the First Budget Hearing defied critics, taxpayers and citizens by rebutting or ignoring the protests of voters and taxpayers against increased taxes and new fees.

The new city manager, who has now put himself in the corner of Mayor Slesnick, Vice-Mayor Kerdyk and Commissioners Anderson and Withers, has increased city spending back to about $155 million where it was in 2007.

In the extended political theater of the night, the Commissioners shifted the full responsibility for the budget to the new city manager, as they declared full loyalty to the manager. No commissioner questioned the budget details or stood up against manager’s demand for a 14 percent property tax increase (although Mr. Kerdyk briefly hestited.)

The press has reported in the past few days that essentially all of the municipalities (including Miami-Dade County, the City of Miami, South Miami, Homestead, Miami Beach), except for Coral Gables and perhaps two or three others, have rejected increases in property taxes and spending.

On a morning interview on Channel 10, the Mayor of Homestead declared as “disingenuous” any increases in fees.  All municipalities are taking the strong medicine to cut present and future spending and pension liabilities, but Coral Gables government stands along against its citizens by untenable spending and tax and fee increases.

Thus the Coral Gables Government is proceeding as an island unto itself, indifferent to the citizens’ well-being.

Commissioners–Follow the Lead of Miami and Miami-Dade!

Both Miami and Miami-Dade County have held the line on taxes and demand serious elimination of staff and reductions in salaries. There is no turning back. That would leave Coral Gables as one of the most important cities that increase taxes in desperate times.  Coral Gables Commissioners should wake up to the concern of voters. I don’t think that voters will be passive and indifferent to 14%, 10% or even less property tax increases.

Coral Gables Commissioners Should Watch Mayor Diaz

Mr. Diaz reputation has gone up in my estimation. Instead of either acting like this is a transitory problem and delaying hard decisions he seems to be really facing spending, salary and benefits reductions. Coral Gables should take a lesson from Miami’s real austerity.

Urgent Reading for the Commission: Why Postpone the Hard Spending Decisions?

As the Coral Gables City Commission is on the verge of making decisions to significantly increase property tax rates, do they know the city and the taxpayers will certainly confront the same and worse financial prospects for 2010 through 2012. Taxpayers cannot take more years of taxes being increased by 10 percent or more as homes values have plummeted, incomes are down, stock prices and retirement asset values have been destroyed and unemployment persists.

The Secretary of the Treasury was quoted by Bloomberg News, as follows:

Given the extent of damage done to the financial system, the loss of wealth for families and the necessary adjustments after a long period of excessive borrowing around the world, it is realistic to assume that recovery will be gradual, with more than the usual ups and downs.