NTF
Worksheet: douglascounty5.doc. 8-04.
NEBRASKA TAXPAYERS FOR FREEDOM WORKSHEET:
ANALYSIS OF DOUGLAS COUNTY BUDGET: FY
2004-2005.
BACKGROUND.
Nebraska counties are still reeling financially from
the recessive economy. Federal
revenue sources, like grant monies, are dwindling.
State aid is decreasing, as state government faces an ongoing deficit.
Local property taxpayers stand yoked to the hilt with rising property valuations
and taxes. Nebraska county
governments must consider both long-term and short-term trims and
institutionalized budget cuts, instead of raising taxes, in establishing yearly
budgets.
BUDGET
CUT SUGGESTIONS. The following is a list of suggested budget cuts from NTF:
1.
end
funding for 4H and extension programs.
2.
end
support for extraneous services, like the Douglas County law library, or
increase its user fees.
3.
share
services and merge departments with adjacent rural counties.
We realize that you already are doing this, with 5 counties managing
several social services together. Interlocal
agreements prove every time to save taxpayers money.
4.
request
your lobbyist to lobby to lift state mandates, like required interpreters.
5.
make only
1-yr. contracts with county employees, because economic fluctuations make it
undesirable to lock in multi-year contracts.
6.
make
employees pay at least 30% of health insurance premium costs for individuals,
couples, and families.
7.
cut
seasonal employees and reduce park maintenance.
8.
your
corrections costs have risen dramatically.
Make inmates pay a portion of their incarceration costs.*
9.
consolidate
within yourself before you consolidate with the city. Merging the offices of the County Clerk and Register of Deeds
would improve services and save taxpayer dollars. Both offices have staff knowledgeable about real estate
transactions, both maintain official county records, and 77 of 93 NE counties
already have consolidated these 2 offices, etc.
10. obtain
bulk rates on purchasing office supplies by joint purchasing with other local
subdivisions.
11. institute
joint computer and other training of personnel.
12. Dot.Comm
was supposed to consolidate city and county information services.
We question how this system is operating.
The county election commissioner had to work through Dot.Comm to move
office computers. The Omaha Police
Academy had to pay Dot.Comm to install phones at its new academy.
It wanted to charge the City of Omaha Police Division $14,000 to move
computers and phone lines. To save
money, police officers moved the computers themselves.
This company supposedly was going to save taxpayers money, yet it spent
$921,000 on consulting fees. Its FY
2005 increase in your budget is over $868,000. We urge you to cancel its
contract before it runs out.
13.
peg
property/casualty deductibles of $2,500 or $5,000 and on workers compensation.
14. delete
physical damage coverage on old, low-value vehicles.
*Pay
to stay covers security, utility, medical care, food, and transportation costs.
Klamath Falls, OR. County jail has raised $25,000 per year at a cost of
$10,000 to administer. The program
begins after release of an inmate. He
must pay in full or by a payment plan. If
he refuses, the county takes him to small claims court, where a judge can
garnish his wages. The sheriff
there eliminated from the jail menu ketchup, salt, pepper, and coffee, to save
$30,000 per year. He charges
inmates $60 daily. This idea has
spread to about 1/3 of U.S. county jails.1
Missouri county jails gleaned $384,000 from inmates in 2004 as of May,
according to the Missouri Att.-Gen. Most
states allow local jails to impose fees on inmates, for room and board, phone
use, haircuts, or medical care. Savings
from reducing overutilization of services occurs.2
Fairfax Co. Virginia charges inmates $1 per day to cover meals.
The Virginia legislature authorized local governments to charge a daily
fee of up to $1. Fees now apply in
Portsmouth, Norfolk, and Virginia Beach. Montgomery
and Prince George Counties in Maryland charge prisoners for specific services
and provisions. They charge
prisoners on work release more than $1 per day.
The latter county levies medical fees of $4, because some prisoners feign
sickness and waste physician and nurse time. Prisoners who work at jobs or on home detention return 1 day
of pay each week to the county.3
CONCLUSION.
In conclusion, because Douglas County accounts for
about 12% of total property taxes levied on a home, we appreciate your not
raising the property tax levy rate; however, remember that average valuations on
property have risen between 4% and 7+% this year in Douglas County.
We also offer the following recommendations:
·
Place
copies of the proposed budget in libraries in the county at least 2 weeks before
public budget hearings, so that citizens have sufficient time to look at and
analyze annual budgets. Place copies of the proposed budget on the county web
site, so that citizens can study it at home.
·
Set your
public budget hearing at a specific evening hour, so that more working
(taxpaying) people can attend, and at a more centralized location with adequate
parking.
Research, analysis, and documentation for this worksheet done by Doug Kagan and Steve Sfiers. This material copyrighted and notarized by Nebraska Taxpayers for Freedom, with express prior permission for its use by Taxwatchers, Inc., Citizens for Local Control, Cherry County Taxpayers, Dawes County Taxpayers, and other groups in the Tax Freedom Network. 8-04 C