The Ann Arbor Chronicle » emergency services http://annarborchronicle.com it's like being there Wed, 26 Nov 2014 18:59:03 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.5.2 Funds OK’d for Camp Take Notice Residents http://annarborchronicle.com/2012/06/06/funds-okd-for-camp-take-notice/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=funds-okd-for-camp-take-notice http://annarborchronicle.com/2012/06/06/funds-okd-for-camp-take-notice/#comments Thu, 07 Jun 2012 01:50:00 +0000 Chronicle Staff http://annarborchronicle.com/?p=89756 At their June 6, 2012 meeting, Washtenaw County commissioners authorized a grant agreement for up to $60,000 in emergency housing assistance for residents facing eviction from Camp Take Notice, a homeless encampment on state-owned land in Scio Township. The funds will come from the Salvation Army of Michigan, to be provided to the county’s Barrier Busters Unmet Needs Fund. No general fund dollars will be used.

According to a staff memo, residents living in Camp Take Notice have been told by the Michigan Dept. of Transportation – which owns the land off of Wagner Road, where the camp is located – that they’ll need to leave by June 22. Several community groups – including the Washtenaw Housing Alliance, the county’s office of community and economic development, the county sheriff’s office, and local nonprofits serving the homeless – are working with state agencies to help identify housing and support services for these individuals. Staff of the county’s Community Support & Treatment Services Project Outreach Team (PORT) are also involved.

The Michigan State Housing Development Authority (MSHDA) is providing $270,000 in housing subsidies for the 50-70 people who are currently staying at Camp Take Notice. The $60,000 in funds from the Salvation Army will be used for emergency transitional housing in motels, and for security deposits when more permanent housing is found. The MSHDA funds will be managed by Michigan Ability Partners (MAP) and the Shelter Association of Washtenaw County, and those agencies will help find permanent housing for Camp Take Notice residents. The office of community and economic development will manage the $60,000 in funds for Barrier Busters, which helps coordinate efforts of local human services agencies.

This brief was filed from the boardroom of the county administration building, 220 N. Main in Ann Arbor. A more detailed report will follow: [link]

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Report: Better-than-Expected ’12 Tax Revenue http://annarborchronicle.com/2012/04/24/report-better-than-expected-12-tax-revenue/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=report-better-than-expected-12-tax-revenue http://annarborchronicle.com/2012/04/24/report-better-than-expected-12-tax-revenue/#comments Tue, 24 Apr 2012 14:56:07 +0000 Mary Morgan http://annarborchronicle.com/?p=86360 Washtenaw County board of commissioners meeting (April 18, 2012): Most of the recent county board meeting was devoted to what’s become an annual ritual: Delivery of the county equalization report.

Raman Patel, Conan Smith

Raman Patel, left, Washtenaw County's equalization director, shares a laugh with county board chair Conan Smith before the April 18, 2012 meeting. (Photos by the writer.)

The report includes a calculation of taxable value for all jurisdictions in the county, which determines tax revenues for those entities that rely on taxpayer funding, including cities and townships, public schools, libraries and the Ann Arbor Transportation Authority, among others.

It was the 41st report that Raman Patel, the county’s equalization director, has completed – and he delivered some positive news. The county’s general fund budget was approved with a projection of $59.734 million in tax revenues. But actual revenues, based on 2012 taxable value, are now estimated at $62.395 million – for an excess in 2012 general fund revenues of $2.66 million.

Despite reporting better-than-expected taxable value, Patel cautioned that if the potential repeal of the state’s personal property tax is passed – being considered by legislators in a set of bills introduced last week – it could result in a loss of more than $5 million in annual revenues for the county government alone, and more than $40 million for all taxing jurisdictions in Washtenaw County.

Although most of the meeting focused on Patel’s presentation, other business covered a variety of issues. Commissioners discussed the next steps in an effort to deal with mandated animal control services in the county. A work group has met that includes representatives from the county, the Human Society of Huron Valley, and other municipalities that have animal control ordinances, such as the cities of Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti, and Ypsilanti Township. Some commissioners highlighted the need to develop a policy to guide the work group, which will give recommendations about the cost of animal control services.

Related to the March 15 tornado that touched down in the Dexter area, board chair Conan Smith reported that he had declared a state of emergency earlier this month and sent a letter to Gov. Rick Snyder requesting reimbursement to local municipalities for costs incurred as a result of the devastation. Local governments itemized about $1 million in costs, but the total – primarily in damages to residences – is estimated at over $9 million. [.pdf of Smith's letter to Snyder] [.pdf summarizing tornado-related expenses]

During the meeting, the board also passed a proclamation recognizing the National Training Institute, put on by the National Joint Apprenticeship & Training Committee – a partnership of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) and the National Electrical Contractors Association (NECA). The training institute is held in Ann Arbor at the University of Michigan and this year runs from July 25-Aug. 3, bringing more than 3,000 people to town. Commissioner Rob Turner, an electrical contractor, is a member of both the IBEW and NECA.

Among the other action items at the April 18 meeting, commissioners (1) set a public hearing for May 2 to get public input on an annual plan for the Washtenaw Urban County, which gets federal funding for projects in low-income neighborhoods; (2) authorized the issuance of up to $6 million in notes at the request of the Washtenaw County road commission, for work in Ypsilanti Township; and (3) approved the hiring of Nimish Ganatra as assistant prosecuting attorney over the dissent of Wes Prater, who objected to paying a salary above the midpoint range.

Equalization Report and Local Tax Revenue

The state-mandated equalization process runs throughout the year, as both the county and local assessors within each municipality examine the value of land and other property, such as buildings. Local assessors turn their findings over to the county, which then conducts independent assessments based on sales studies and physical appraisals. Next, the county’s equalization staff looks at how their findings compare with the local assessors’ findings. (The county has authority to request that local assessment rates be altered, if it considers them to be too high or too low.)

After this “equalization” occurs, the local municipalities send out notices to each property owner in their jurisdiction, stating each property’s assessed value as well as its taxable value. If property owners disagree, they can appeal that assessment. After appeals are ruled on, the county uses that data for its equalization report. Local decisions can be appealed to the state, so at any given time there are a certain number of parcels with assessments that might change, depending on the outcome of the state-level appeal.

Taxable value is a state-mandated formula, and is the lower of two figures: (1) a parcel’s equalized (assessed) value, or (2) a capped value calculated by taking last year’s taxable value minus any losses (such as a building being torn down), multiplied by 5% or the rate of inflation (whichever is lower – this year inflation is 2.7%), plus the value of any additions or new construction.

If the property changes hands, taxable value is reset at its equalized value.

Taxable value is used when calculating taxes for the county, as well as its various municipalities and other entities that rely on taxpayer dollars, including school districts, libraries and the Ann Arbor Transportation Authority, among others. [.pdf of chart showing 2012 equalized and taxable values for all jurisdictions]

Washtenaw County’s equalization report – along with similar reports from all of Michigan’s 83 counties – will be forwarded to the state. If the state agrees with the county’s report, then the county equalized values become the state equalized values (SEV) that appear on tax bills.

Equalization Report: 2012 Highlights

Raman Patel, director of the county’s equalization department, began his presentation by telling commissioners that this was the county’s 54th equalization report, and the 41st one that he has completed. [.pdf of Washtenaw County equalized values from 1959-2012] He introduced the department’s staff and thanked them for their work. The report requires coordination with all 73 local units of government, assessors and boards of review – he thanked everyone for their support. He also thanked commissioners Barbara Bergman and Leah Gunn, wishing them well as they end their tenure on the board. [Both have decided not to seek reelection this year.]

Patel reported that there are pocket of improvements, as well as some areas of concern. Unique to this year’s report, he presented an update on pending legislation that would phase out the state’s personal property tax, and provided a chart showing the financial impact on local taxing jurisdictions.

Also unique to this year’s report, Patel provided a detailed calendar of the equalization process, including deadlines for steps throughout the year. [.pdf of 2012 equalization calendar] He noted that unlike most other counties, his department prepares data regarding the county’s taxable value about two months ahead of the required deadline for doing that.

Here is a summary of highlights from the 2012 report:

  • For 2012, taxable value in the county has fallen 0.77% to $13.7 billion. That’s an improvement over declines in recent years, when taxable value fell 2.85% in 2011 and 5.33% in 2010. It’s also a smaller decrease than was projected when preparing the 2012 budget. The general fund budget was approved with a projection of $59.734 million in tax revenues. But actual revenues, based on 2012 taxable value, are now estimated at $62.395 million – for an excess in 2012 general fund revenues of $2.66 million.
  • Although the majority of local taxing jurisdictions still saw declines in taxable value compared to 2011, more showed gains than in recent years. The county’s largest local jurisdiction – the city of Ann Arbor – registered a 1.04% increase in taxable value, to $4.683 billion.
  • This year, McKinley – an Ann Arbor-based real estate and property management firm – was the largest taxpayer in the county, with properties totaling $132.177 million in taxable value. Other taxpayers on the top 10 list are Detroit Edison ($133.919 million), Toyota ($115.896 million), DTE/MichCon ($104.726 million), Ford/ACH ($74.177 million), Briarwood Mall ($63.159 million), Domino’s Farms ($62.823 million), International Transmission ($51.296 million), Hyundai ($37.517 million) and THC Ann Arbor ($36.360 million).
  • The Board of Review received 2,968 appeals of assessments, compared to 2,656 in 2011. This year, 1,589 appeals were granted – compared to just 738  last year – for a decrease of about $12.2 million in taxable value. Poverty exemptions increased dramatically, from 49 requested last year to 110 requested in 2012. This year, 74 poverty exemptions were granted, compared to 31 granted in 2011.
  • In 2012, some types of property saw greater declines than others. Commercial property showed a 3.84% drop in equalized value, while equalized value for industrial property dropped 3.99%. Residential property value – the largest classification of property in the county – showed some signs of recovery, dropping only 0.57% compared to a 2.74% drop in 2011. The only category of property that showed an increase was agricultural, which increased in equalized value by 3.54%.
  • The value of taxable new construction over the past six years has dropped sharply, from $578.89 million in 2007 to $246.313 million in 2012. However, this year showed the first increase in several years – up from $239.512 million in 2011.
  • Washtenaw County’s less than 1% drop in taxable value was by far the smallest decrease compared to other counties in southeast Michigan. Both Genesee and Macomb counties saw the greatest declines in taxable values, falling by 6.83% and 6.01% respectively.

Patel noted that the gap between equalized (assessed) and taxable values is narrowing. This is important because when equalized value and taxable value are the same for a property – and if that property’s assessed value continues to fall – then its taxable value falls in tandem with that assessed value. And that means lower revenues for local municipalities. This year, 66.97% of property in the county – 92,547 parcels – had equal taxable and assessed values, compared to 65% in 2011.

There are a total of 138,203 parcels of land in Washtenaw County. Of those, 48.07% increased in taxable value, while 43.51% decreased in taxable value. The rest were unchanged.

Patel also highlighted the fact that many properties in the county are exempt from taxation, for a variety of reasons – as religious institutions, public entities like schools and universities, or businesses that are given tax abatements, for example. Since 2002, a total of 513 parcels have been granted this status with a 2012 taxable value of $230.293 million. It’s worth remembering the impact of that, he said. He also noted that this year, $2.135 million that would have otherwise come to the county government in tax revenues is being “captured” by other entities, such as downtown development authorities, tax increment finance (TIF) authorities, and brownfield authorities.

Patel’s presentation included a discussion of state legislation introduced earlier in the week – a package of eight bills that would phase out the personal property tax (commercial, industrial and utility) over the next 10 years. [.pdf of personal property tax update, including a chart showing the financial impact for all local taxing entities]

If the proposed legislation were to be in effect now, the county government would lose $5.223 million in tax revenues, Patel reported. Countywide, all local taxing jurisdictions would lose $41.679 million. Patel said he hoped lawmakers don’t enact this legislation, but that it might be wise to start looking at how to cover that loss.

Equalization Report: Board Discussion

Commissioners praised Patel and his staff for their work – Yousef Rabhi noted that Patel had been doing this work “since well before I was born.” Barbara Bergman recalled when she was a new commissioner 20 years ago, she met with Patel and he explained the equalization process to her and made her a cup of tea. It took more than a cup of tea for her to understand, she joked, and she thanked him for his kindness.

For this meeting report, the board’s comments and questions are organized thematically.

Equalization Report: Board Discussion – Personal Property Tax

Yousef Rabhi thanked Patel for presenting more detailed information about the impact of eliminating the personal property tax. He said he was glad that the board had passed a resolution opposing it, unless the state found replacement revenues. [The resolution was passed at the board's April 4, 2012 meeting.] Patel’s report should be a warning to Lansing not to follow through with this proposal, Rabhi said, calling it ridiculous and “absolutely devastating” to local communities.

Raman Patel, Felicia Brabec, Leah Gunn

From left: Washtenaw County equalization director Raman Patel with county commissioners Felicia Brabec and Leah Gunn. Patel has worked on 41 annual equalization reports. This will be the last one approved by Gunn, who is not seeking reelection, and the first one by Brabec, who was appointed to the board last year to fill a vacancy in District 7.

Rabhi pointed to a recent poll showing that 70% of voters oppose the PPT repeal. [He was referencing a poll conducted by the Lansing firm EPIC-MRA and commissioned by the advocacy group Replace Don't Erase Michigan's Personal Property Tax.] People recognize that the repeal would jeopardize local services and that it’s the wrong thing to do, he said. Rabhi noted that Saline mayor Gretchen Driskell recently testified against the repeal at a state legislative hearing. He encouraged everyone to call their state legislators to make sure that a repeal doesn’t pass. Local governments can’t keep giving up revenue sources and still provide the same level of services, Rabhi concluded.

Barbara Bergman echoed Rabhi’s remarks. She described property taxes as regressive, and said many of her constituents face increasing property taxes and decreasing pensions. They can’t sell their homes because of a soft market, so they’re forced to make tough choices. Bergman said she supported a progressive income tax in Michigan and hoped that it would happen someday.

Conan Smith asked Patel to comment on the impact of real and personal property tax laws in the county’s urban areas, which will be among the hardest hit by changes to the PPT. Places like Ypsilanti and Ypsilanti Township are also seeing declines in real property values, Smith noted. He asked whether those two communities are seeing sharper decreases in the value of commercial and industrial property, compared to other parts of the county.

Yes, Patel said – the closing of Ford and General Motors plants has affected those communities. [Ypsilanti's taxable value dropped 5.97% to $290.729 million in 2012, while Ypsilanti Township's taxable value dropped 6.09% to $1.14 billion. The only larger percentage decrease was seen in the Washtenaw County portion of the city of Milan, with an 8.16% decline in taxable value to $87.387 million. Part of Milan is located in Monroe County.]

Equalization Report: Board Discussion – Appeals

Wes Prater asked about the appeals process. There were 2,968 appeals and of those, 1,589 were granted – for a decrease of about $12.2 million in taxable value. How many of the appeals that weren’t granted locally will be appealed at the state level? he wondered. Patel pointed out that a property owner has until June to make an appeal to the state, so it’s not possible to know yet how many will be appealed.

Prater asked if there were more appeals this year than last year. Patel replied that he didn’t have the information at hand. [Last year, the local Board of Review received 2,656 appeals of assessments, and granted 738 – for a decrease of about $13 million in taxable value. Forty-nine poverty exemptions were requested, and 31 were granted. This year, 110 poverty exemptions were applied for, and 74 were granted.]

Patel explained that most of the larger appeals relate to industrial or commercial properties. There are a couple of large appeals that are still pending, he said, but in general that process appears to be stabilizing.

Equalization Report: Board Discussion – Trends, Projections

Dan Smith asked about the difference between agricultural valuations, which have increased by 3.54% over last year, and valuations for commercial and industrial properties, which dropped by 3.84% and 3.99%, respectively. Was there any history behind that, and would that trend likely continue?

Chart showing county equalized values

Chart showing 2012 Washtenaw County equalized values. (Links to larger image)

Lori Cash, a management analyst in the equalization department, replied that over the past few years, the amount of land classified as “developmental” has declined. [In 2012, that category decreased by 19.11% to a total value of$49.493 million – the lowest of all property categories in the county.] The total equalized value increased in the agricultural category because local assessors have reclassified some parcels from the developmental category to the agricultural category, Cash said. So there are more properties classified as agricultural now than in the previous year.

Patel described the developmental category as a “parking lot.”  Assessors will use it when they’re uncertain about how the land will be used. D. Smith clarified with Patel that farmland isn’t necessarily becoming more valuable – it’s just that more property is now being classified as agricultural.

Pointing to the 3.99% decline in industrial value, D. Smith asked whether that trend would likely continue. Patel noted that several large manufacturers have closed plants in Washtenaw County – Ypsilanti Township in particular took hits from the closing of Ford and General Motors plants there, he said. [Ypsilanti Township's taxable value dropped 6.09% from last year, to $1.14 billion.]

Even so, Patel said Washtenaw County is remarkably resilient and has absorbed a lot of losses over the past five or six years. In addition to plant closings by large automakers, he pointed to the departure of Pfizer – that alone was a loss of $400 million in taxable value for the county, Patel said. And even more taxable value was lost when Pfizer sold its large research campus to the University of Michigan, he said, because as a public university, UM is a tax-exempt institution. Despite all that, Patel said, the county is stabilizing.

D. Smith then referred to a chart showing the number of parcels in which assessed value is equal to taxable value, as well as the number of properties in which those values are within 5% of each other or greater than 5%. Smith asked whether Patel expected that there will be more parcels in the coming years with equal assessed and taxable value.

Patel replied that it will depend on whether the real estate market moves values up or down – it’s difficult to predict. He noted that working on a two-year budget cycle, as the county does, is difficult. Because of the state-mandated process, the equalization department can’t prepare its report until April. That means the county doesn’t have a solid estimate of tax revenues for the year until more than three months into that year. And for the current budget – approved by the board in late 2011 for the years 2012 and 2013 – tax revenue estimates were made for 2013 even though the market values on which those tax revenues won’t be known until late 2012.

Rob Turner explicitly asked whether Patel and his staff had worked up projections for equalized and taxable values. Patel expressed some frustration, saying that he wanted to be respectful but that he had already indicated that he couldn’t make projections. When the equalization department completes its work each year, then they announce the results, he said. There are laws, rules and regulations governing their work, Patel said, and no one has pulled a projection from his mouth in 41 years. At that, commissioners laughed and Turner apologized for putting Patel on the spot.

Prater said he’s known Patel for most of the 41 years that Patel has been working on equalization reports, ”and I have yet to hear his first projection – and I’ve asked many, many times. So that just ain’t gonna happen.”

Outcome: Later in the meeting, the board voted unanimously to accept the 2012 equalization report.

Animal Control Services

There was no action item related to animal control services at the April 18 meeting. But during the board’s liaison reports, Rob Turner told his fellow commissioners that he had attended the first meeting of the animal control services work group, which included representatives of the county, the Humane Society of Huron Valley, and other municipalities that have animal control ordinances.

By way of background, at its Feb. 15 meeting, commissioners approved a $415,000 contract with the Humane Society of Huron Valley to provide animal control services for the county just through Dec. 31, 2012. The county’s previous contract with HSHV, for $500,000 annually, expired on Dec. 31, 2011. In the interim, the two entities had been operating under a $29,000 month-by-month contract.

Rob Turner, Rolland Sizemore Jr.

From left: County commissioners Rob Turner and Rolland Sizemore Jr.

County officials said the new contract would provide time for ongoing talks to develop a longer-term solution to animal control services in Washtenaw County, including services that are mandated by the state. During the rest of 2012, the county plans to work with HSHV and other stakeholders to determine the cost of an “animal service unit” – that is, the itemized per-animal cost of providing animal control services. The county eventually will issue a request for proposals (RFP) to solicit bids for the next contract.

The budget approved by the county board for 2012 cut funding for animal control services to $250,000. However, during last year’s budget deliberations commissioners also discussed the possibility of paying an additional $180,000 to HSHV – if the nonprofit took over work previously done by the county’s animal control officers. That brought the total amount budgeted for animal control to $430,000 in 2012. HSHV officials have said that even $500,000 wasn’t sufficient to cover costs for all the work they do.

The $415,000 contract approved in February did not include the $180,000 that the county has budgeted for its own animal control officers. Instead, the county allocated an additional $165,000 from its general fund balance, to be added to the previously budgeted $250,000 for animal control services in 2012.

At the Feb. 15 meeting, the board spent considerable time discussing the roles of two entities – a board policy task force, and a broader animal control services work group led by the sheriff’s office – as well as a timeline for completing the work of these two entities. The resolution ultimately passed by commissioners included these resolved clauses that laid out a timeline for the work:

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Washtenaw County Board of Commissioners authorizes the Office of the Sheriff to develop a methodology to determine the cost of an Animal Service Unit (ASU) on behalf of the County. The Sheriff may choose the members of his work group, with the understanding that the Board of Commissioners will appoint Commissioner Rob Turner to act as a liaison. The work group’s report is due no later than September 15, 2012.

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Washtenaw County Board of Commissioners hereby establishes a Task Force on Animal Control Policy. This group will exist solely for the purpose of developing an animal control policy for the county. This policy will be reflected in the RFP for a scope of services that the county will purchase. Meetings will be posted. Membership is open to any Commissioner who wishes to attend, and the preliminary report will be filed May 15, 2012. Once the data from the Sheriff’s work group is published, the RFP will go out forthwith, and the final report of the taskforce will be published by October 15, 2012.

The board’s policy task force has not yet met.

The animal control services work group includes these members: sheriff Jerry Clayton; SiRui Huang and Rick Kaledas of the sheriff’s office; Greg Dill, the county’s infrastructure management director; Catherine Jones of the county finance department; commissioner Rob Turner; county prosecuting attorney Brian Mackie; Ann Arbor city administrator Steve Powers; Ann Arbor interim police chief John Seto; Ypsilanti Township supervisor Brenda Stumbo; Mike Radzik, Ypsilanti Township’s police services administrator; Bill McFarlane, Superior Township supervisor; acting Ypsilanti city manager Frances McMullen; Humane Society of Huron Valley executive director Tanya Hilgendorf; and Jenny Paillon and Matt Schaecher of HSHV.

On April 18, Turner said the work group had discussed the issue of what comes first – policy or specific services? The group is looking to the county board for direction, he said. When the work group met, Turner said he reiterated the need to determine the actual cost of taking care of animals, including the number and kind of animals, as well as the cost per animal that HSHV incurs.

The work group plans to meet every other week, Turner said. The next meeting is set for May 1.

Animal Control Services: Board Discussion

Barbara Bergman stressed the need for commissioners to give input and direction to the work group. She noted that commissioners hold various opinions on the issue, but that they need to come to a consensus so that the work group isn’t operating without guidance.

Turner said he totally agreed, and cited the need for the board’s policy task force to start meeting. Leah Gunn noted that an email had circulated trying to find acceptable dates for a meeting, so that effort is already underway.

Wes Prater said he felt like the board had already reached consensus about the need to figure out the county’s mandated, statutory duties regarding animal control. There’s a shortage of revenues available, he said – that’s a factor too. Prater felt the board shouldn’t get too involved until commissioners get a recommendation from the animal control work group.

Ronnie Peterson said he had raised this concern previously. The board needs to set the direction and scope of work for the work group, he said – that should have already happened. What’s the board’s expectation of an outcome, and how far-reaching should the work group’s recommendations be?

Peterson concluded his remarks by urging the board to make a policy that encompasses all of its nonprofit support, not just the payments that the county makes to animal control services.

Road Commission Debt

At its April 18 meeting, commissioners were asked to authorize the issuance of up to $6 million in notes at the request of the Washtenaw County road commission.

Conan Smith, Ken Schwartz

From left: County board chair Conan Smith talks with county road commissioner Ken Schwartz, who formerly served on the board of commissioners. Road commissioners are appointed by the county board.

The funding would be used by the road commission to pay for road work in Ypsilanti Township, including road repaving and reconstruction, intersection improvements, traffic control devices, drainage upgrades and other related projects.

According to terms of a contract signed between Ypsilanti Township and the road commission, the township would reimburse the road commission for the work. The notes would be issued by the road commission and backed by future tax revenues it will receive from the state. The debt would not be backed by the county’s full faith and credit.

Ken Schwartz, one of three appointed road commissioners and a former member of the county board of commissioners, attended the April 18 meeting along with some road commission staff. They did not formally address the board during the meeting.

Outcome: Without comment, the board authorized the issuance of up to $6 million in notes by the county road commission.

Urban County Plan: Public Hearing Set

A resolution on the agenda set a May 2 public hearing to take commentary on the annual plan for the Washtenaw Urban County.

The annual plan describes how the Urban County expects to spend the federal funding it receives from the Community Development Block Grant (CDBG), HOME Investment Partnerships Program (HOME) and Emergency Shelter Grant (ESG) programs, operated by the U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). [.pdf of 2012-2013 draft annual plan] [.pdf of list of planned projects]

The Washtenaw Urban County is a consortium of local municipalities that receive federal funding for projects in low-income neighborhoods. Current members include the cities of Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti, and the townships of Ypsilanti, Pittsfield, Ann Arbor, Bridgewater, Salem, Superior, York, Scio, and Northfield. An additional seven municipalities will become part of the Urban County as of July 1, 2012: the city of Saline, the village of Manchester, and the townships of Dexter, Lima, Manchester, Saline, and Webster.

“Urban County” is a HUD designation, identifying a county with more than 200,000 people. With that designation, individual governments within the Urban County can become members, making them entitled to an allotment of funding through a variety of HUD programs.

The Washtenaw Urban County executive committee meets monthly and is chaired by county commissioner Yousef Rabhi. The program is administered by the staff of the joint county/city of Ann Arbor office of community and economic development.

Outcome: Without discussion, the board set a May 2 public hearing for the Washtenaw Urban County annual plan.

Assistant Prosecuting Attorney

Commissioners were asked to give final approval to hiring an assistant prosecuting attorney at a salary of $81,690. The vacancy opened in December, following an employee retirement. The hire requires board approval because the salary is above the $69,038 midpoint of an authorized range ($68,074 to $96,565).

The position will be filled by Nimish Ganatra, who most recently has served as assistant prosecutor for Jackson County, and previously was an assistant prosecutor with the Washtenaw County prosecutor’s office from 2001-2009. He is a graduate of Ann Arbor Pioneer High School, the University of Michigan, and Wayne State University Law School.

Because of furlough days negotiated as part of the recent collective bargaining agreements, his salary will be adjusted down by 3.846% to $78,548. Brian Mackie, the county’s prosecuting attorney, had previously told commissioners that because the office is currently under-filling a senior assistant prosecutor post, there is an overall savings of $12,983.

Initial approval had been given at the board’s April 4 meeting, passing on a 9-1 with dissent from Wes Prater, who objected to paying more than a midpoint salary. Rob Turner was absent.

Assistant Prosecuting Attorney: Board Discussion

Wes Prater asked county administrator Verna McDaniel about a new hiring process that he said the county had implemented in February. McDaniel was initially unclear about what Prater was referring to, but then sussed out that he was talking about a name change to an existing policy. She said the process didn’t change, but the administration started calling it the “hiring review process.”

Prater asked if the process had been used to evaluate hiring the new assistant prosecuting attorney. It had, McDaniel said. What about the other vacancy that had been filled in that office? he asked. That vacancy had been triggered in February by Gov. Rick Snyder’s appointment of Joe Burke as judge to the 15th District Court in Ann Arbor. Burke previously served as the county’s chief assistant prosecuting attorney.

On filling that vacancy, McDaniel said her staff had worked with the county prosecuting attorney, Brian Mackie, who made an internal promotion for that position. She noted that Mackie’s restructuring had resulted in an overall savings [of $12,983].

Prater asked to see the paperwork for the review of these positions. He noted that earlier in the year the board had approved a position in the water resources commissioner’s office that was also above the mid-point salary range. He hoped the same evaluation process had been used in that position too.

McDaniel affirmed that it had. In both cases, there had been restructuring that resulted in overall cost savings, she said. Prater replied that it would save even more to consolidate positions. The county’s long-term fiscal stability is what it’s all about, he said. He requested that the board review the overall hiring process at a future working session.

Outcome: On a 10-1 vote with dissent by Wes Prater, the board gave final approval to hiring the assistant prosecuting attorney at an above-midpoint salary.

Weatherization Grants

Two items related to federal funding for Washtenaw County’s weatherization program for low-income residents were on the agenda for final approval at the April 18 meeting. Initial approval had been given at the board’s April 4 meeting.

Commissioners were asked to authorize acceptance of $185,326 in federal funds for the weatherization program. The federal program was cut by 65% compared to 2011, but the state of Michigan is reallocating the previous year’s unspent funds as “carry-forwards” for 2012. In 2011, the county received $241,863 for this program.

The funding is expected to provide air leakage testing, health and safety evaluations, furnace assessments, refrigerator efficiency testing, post-inspection of the completed work, and consumer education services to 25 units. To qualify for the program, residents must have an income at or below 200% of federal poverty, which is about $44,700 for a family of four.

In a separate item, commissioners voted on authorizing acceptance of an additional $103,600 in funds redistributed to the county through the American Recovery & Reinvestment Act (ARRA). According to a staff memo, this grant brings the total of ARRA weatherization funds received by the county to $4,867,138.

At the April 4 meeting, Aaron Kraft, who manages the program, said the applications are handled on a first come, first served basis. There’s a waiting list, and the grants now being approved are already spoken for, he said. In response to another query, Kraft said that less than half of all contractors being used for the weatherization work are based in Washtenaw County.

In response to a follow-up question from a Chronicle reader, Kraft later gave a more detailed breakdown of how the $185,326 will be allocated: Support and administrative costs covering client intake/assessment of need, project management ($63,136); energy audit inspections and quality assurance inspections ($8,820); labor and material costs to complete the recommended weatherization improvements ($106,196); and weatherization specific training funding ($7,174).

Outcome: Both weatherization items were given unanimous final approval by the board, without discussion.

Communications and Public Commentary

There are various opportunities for communications from commissioners as well as general public commentary. These are some highlights.

Communications: Dexter Tornado Aftermath

During his liaison report, commissioner Rob Turner – the board’s point person for cleanup efforts following the March 15 tornado that touched down in the Dexter area – reported that work by the county had curtailed the previous week. He itemized some of the costs that had been incurred: Between $250,000-$300,000 for road commission work; $91,697 from the county for dumpster rental, debris removal, and tree clearing; $23,039 for a county parks and recreation crew, and port-a-johns; and $53,847 in overtime expenses for the sheriff’s office.

Turner – who represents District 1, which includes the area damaged by the tornado – praised all the staff and volunteers who had helped with the cleanup. Some people who thought they’d have to declare bankruptcy were able to stay afloat, because of help from the county, he said. Turner noted that the area at least is cleaned up and people are starting to get back to their normal lives.

Board chair Conan Smith reported that he had declared a state of emergency earlier this month and sent a letter to Gov. Rick Snyder requesting reimbursement to local municipalities for costs incurred as a result of the March 15 tornado. [.pdf of Smith's letter to Snyder] [.pdf summarizing tornado-related expenses]

Specifically, the letter states that local government units “have incurred approximately $1,075,882 in unbudgeted response and recovery expenses including debris removal and disposal, emergency protective measures/ non-federal road and bridge systems, public utilities, and parks and recreation.”

An attached document summarized expenses related to the tornado, including an estimated $7.54 million in damages to residential property and $750,000 in damages to businesses.

Communications: National Training Institute

At the start of the April 18 meeting, board chair Conan Smith and commissioner Rob Turner presented a proclamation recognizing the National Training Institute, put on by the National Joint Apprenticeship & Training Committee – a partnership of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) and the National Electrical Contractors Association (NECA). The training institute is held in Ann Arbor at the University of Michigian and this year runs from July 25-Aug. 3.

Turner, an electrical contractor and member of NECA and IBEW Local 252, recalled that the training institute was formerly held in Knoxville, but moved to Ann Arbor in 2009 after “a little bit of arm twisting and a lot of work” by the Ann Arbor Convention and Visitors Bureau. It helped that UM is 100% union, he said. When members came to Ann Arbor, “it was love at first sight,” Turner said. Between 3,000 and 5,000 people attend from across the country, he said, and it’s a great benefit to local hotels, shops, and restaurants.

Turner also complimented the hospitality of local merchants and residents, saying that midwestern hospitality is as good if not better than the famed southern hospitality.

Public Commentary

Only one person spoke during public commentary. Thomas Partridge spoke at both opportunities for public commentary during the evening. He urged commissioners and U.S. president Barack Obama to give priority to serving the needs of the most vulnerable residents locally, in Michigan and nationwide. Residents should have access to affordable housing, health care, transportation, and education, he said.

Partridge argued that tax reforms are needed. Current restrictions on forms of taxation in Michigan were the result of a constitutional convention led by Mitt Romney’s father in the 1960s, he said, and since then civil rights have been denied to public employees, union employees, and schoolchildren – especially children who are physically and mentally disabled. Commissioners need to work on tax reform, Partridge concluded, as well as the reelection of Obama, and the recall of Gov. Rick Snyder and GOP state legislators.

Present: Barbara Bergman, Felicia Brabec, Leah Gunn, Alicia Ping, Ronnie Peterson, Wes Prater, Yousef Rabhi, Rolland Sizemore Jr., Conan Smith, Dan Smith, Rob Turner.

Next regular board meeting: Wednesday, May 2, 2012 at 6:30 p.m. at the county administration building, 220 N. Main St. in Ann Arbor. The ways & means committee meets first, followed immediately by the regular board meeting. [confirm date] (Though the agenda states that the regular board meeting begins at 6:45 p.m., it usually starts much later – times vary depending on what’s on the agenda.) Public commentary is held at the beginning of each meeting, and no advance sign-up is required.

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Budget Round 3: Where’s Your Emergency? http://annarborchronicle.com/2010/02/26/budget-round-3-wheres-your-emergency/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=budget-round-3-wheres-your-emergency http://annarborchronicle.com/2010/02/26/budget-round-3-wheres-your-emergency/#comments Sat, 27 Feb 2010 01:57:29 +0000 Dave Askins http://annarborchronicle.com/?p=38320 With limited success on Monday night, city administrator Roger Fraser prodded city councilmembers to confront the city’s budget impact statements. Each of the city’s service units had prepared the statements and made them available to the council a few weeks ago.

chief of police Ann Arbor Barnett Jones

Chronicle file photo from August 2009 of Barnett Jones, chief of police for the city of Ann Arbor. Jones was recounting for The Chronicle how the assigned budget exercise for FY 2010 – the current year – had begun with funding cuts that were equivalent to an elimination of 40 sworn officers. It didn't end that way – due to cost savings in other areas and an early-out retirement incentive. For FY 2011, the exercise began with funding cuts equivalent to 19 officers, which Jones says he's now been able to limit to 9-12 officers. (Photos by the writer.)

It was the third council meeting since the beginning of the year held to focus specifically on the budget, after the council’s budget retreat in December 2009.

In ballpark numbers, Ann Arbor faces a $5.2 million budget shortfall for FY 2011, which begins July 1, 2010. And even if every measure listed on the budget impact sheets is enacted, it would amount to $4.8 million in savings, leaving the city still almost $0.4 million short of balancing its budget.

The meeting did not include any discussion of possible other specific revenue sources, either in the form of payments from the Downtown Development Authority, a city income tax or a Headlee override. The Headlee option has been suggested in a recent “budget white paper” circulated by Sabra Briere (Ward 1), but only if certain conditions are met. Briere, along with Christopher Taylor (Ward 3) and Tony Derezinski (Ward 2), did not attend Monday’s meeting.

The meeting began with presentations on possible outsourcing of emergency management and IT functions at the city. Councilmembers as a group reflected the same lack of enthusiasm for outsourcing those functions as Barnett Jones, chief of police, and Dan Rainey, head of IT, had expressed in their respective presentations.

When mayor John Hieftje appeared ready to send everyone home without any discussion of the budget impact statements, Fraser reiterated a point he’d made earlier: His expectation was that council would discuss the budget impact statements – he had city staff on hand to answer any questions. The council indulged Fraser by quizzing Barnett Jones about the possible layoff of 9-12 sworn police officers.

Background: Income Tax, Headlee, and DDA Revenue

At Monday’s meeting, the idea of addressing the budget shortfall from the revenue perspective did not explicitly arise during the council’s deliberations – either in the form of enacting a city income tax in lieu of the current property tax, or by overriding the Headlee Amendment, which would reset property tax levels to their original millage rate.

Either measure would need to be put before voters – the next opportunity being the August 2010 primary. Neither approach would generate additional revenues in time to affect the FY 2011  budget, which starts July 1, 2010. A Headlee override of a specific millage would reset the millage rate to its original value. [The effect of the Headlee Amendment is to limit property tax revenues so that they do not outpace the rate of inflation. Tax revenues might outpace inflation in a market where property values are increasing rapidly. The Headlee mechanism for limiting tax revenues is to discount the millage rate appropriately.]

The recommendation of a Headlee override from Sabra Briere (Ward 1) in her white paper comes with a condition that the city make a clear decision to change its priorities. Among the changes she advocates:

  • Resetting city salaries and benefits, with particular attention to top level managment staff – she suggests exploring a reduction of 10% in salary.
  • Develop public/private partnerships to manage business-type activities that – measured over the course of 5 years – are not breaking even. The idea includes both golf courses, and possibly the airport.
  • Parks used for recreation should be maintained – parks maintenance is a core city service.
  • Natural area parks should have their maintenance restricted during this down economic time to the minimum levels required for public safety.
  • While park maintenance for some parks is being restricted, during this time of financial instability, no new parks should be established that require maintenance. That includes the new parkland that would result from the removal of Argo Dam.
  • Focus of capital improvements should be the replacement of the East Stadium bridges. Specifically, no new debt should be taken on for the Fuller Road Station or for a hotel/conference center development on top of the city-owned Library Lot.
  • Require the district court to cut its budget by 11% for a savings of $462,000.

At the council’s most recent budget committee meeting on Feb. 16, Fraser got a green light from committee members to work towards getting a survey of voter attitudes on the question of replacing the general operating millage with a city income tax. [Committee members are Sabra Briere (Ward 1), Stephen Rapundalo (Ward 2), Christopher Taylor (Ward 3), Marcia Higgins (Ward 4) and Mike Anglin (Ward 5).] Presumably the same survey could be designed to plumb voter attitudes on the Headlee question as well.

Also at the Feb. 16 budget committee meeting, Fraser reminded councilmembers that the $5.2 million shortfall includes $1.7 million that the city hopes to negotiate from the Ann Arbor Downtown Development Authority. That is, if the city is able successfully to renegotiate the agreement under which the DDA manages the city’s downtown parking system, the FY 2011 shortfall would be around $3.5 million, not $5.2 million. That assumes the renegotiation would not have any other impact on revenues, or introduce other costs.

It was over a year ago that the city council passed a resolution calling on the DDA to enter into negotiations on the agreement. For six months, the council delayed voting to appoint a negotiating committee until two members of the DDA’s negotiating team – the so-called “mutually beneficial” committee – were replaced.

The members to which the council objected were Jennifer Hall and Rene Greff. [Chronicle coverage: "DDA Retreat: Who's on the Committee" and "DDA's Board Chair Addresses Dispute with City Council"] The council’s committee was appointed on July 6, 2009, and included councilmembers Leigh Greden, Margie Teall, and Carsten Hohnke. Greden was defeated a month later by Stephen Kunselman in the Democratic primary, but no replacement for Greden has been appointed.

Based on the lack of any public notice of such a meeting – which all city committees are required to give, based on a council resolution dating to the early 1990s – the committees of the council and DDA have not ever met.

Another place some councilmembers are looking at to shore up this year’s budget is the city’s economic development fund, established to fund incentives for Google in the form of 400 parking spaces. At the end of the year, after the parking incentive obligation is met, the fund balance is projected to be $700,000.

Outsourcing: IT and Emergency Management

The council began their Monday meeting focused on the budget, with presentations on the possibility of outsourcing some specific functions – these were remaining from a list of “big ideas” that the council had been working through.  It’s a fair description to say that there was no great enthusiasm for outsourcing IT or emergency management.

Outsourcing IT

IT services includes computer hardware and software support services for  the city. Dan Rainey, the city’s IT director, presented the council with much of the same material they’d had in their budget information packets on outsourcing IT.

The $5.6 million IT budget includes $2.7 million in personnel costs, $1.2 million in software, and $1.7 million in operations. The average rate of pay excluding top management, he said, translated to $50/hour, a rate which Rainey said the city would be hard-pressed to match “on the street.”

Rainey described outsourcing as a useful tool – the IT department used outsourcing on a selective basis. Examples of outsourced functions between 2005-2009 include:

  • Police operations software and services
  • Human resource management and payroll
  • 15th District Court operations software and services
  • Housing Commission operations
  • Parking ticket issuance and payment procedures
  • Retirement system operations software
  • Content management software
  • Parks reservation and class registration
  • Tax and assessment reporting
  • Tax, invoice, and water bill payments
  • Constituent RSS and email notifications

Although outsourcing on a selective basis was used as a tool, Rainey said, one of the themes he stressed was the idea that it was unwise to outsource the relationship with their customers – other city staff. The IT department is funded through an internal service fund, which means that IT charges are assessed to each service unit.

Tom Crawford Dan Rainey city of Ann Arbor

Left: Tom Crawford, chief financial officer of the city of Ann Arbor, at the city council's Feb. 22 budget meeting. Right: Dan Rainey, the city's director of IT.

Picking up on the theme of customers, Stephen Kunselman (Ward 3) asked: If your customers don’t like your services, can they go somewhere else?  Kunselman made the question more precise by asking if service units had the option of opting for a lower level of service in order to reduce their IT costs. Rainey told Kunselman that was something they were looking at eventually doing.

Tom Crawford, the city’s CFO, addressed the general issue of how someon might be able to make a decision that seemed like it would save money compared to the cost that the city provided hardware and support services [e.g., putting a computer on a desk]. Said Crawford, “That works great … until something breaks.” Then, continued Crawford, people come back to the “mother ship.”

Kunselman asked about Trakit, a piece of software used by the city to track development projects through their life. He said he heard various concerns expressed that the software was too expensive, that it was not working as intended, and that it was requiring extra staff time. Kunselman asked Rainey if so much had been already invested in Trakit that the city could not back out of it. Rainey said that was not the case.

Rainey reported that the software had cost $0.5 million plus $70-80,000 of consulting work. He stressed that it was not a permitting system, but rather a work flow management system. Rainey allowed that it would take a few iterations to get it to work the way they wanted it to. Rainey mentioned the integration of Trakit with mapping tools: Google Maps and Live Maps. When a project is added to the Trakit system, the information is immediately and automatically plotted on a publicly accessible map.

Carsten Hohnke (Ward 5) asked if outsourcing servers and storage might eventually be something worth looking at. Rainey said that any alternative to their current arrangement would likely represent an order of magnitude decrease in the speed of their network, which currently is provided through Merit Network.

Asked by Marcia Higgins (Ward 4) what one thing he would change, Rainey said he would like people to be less afraid of technology. Technology offered efficiency gains, he said, so he would like to increase the rate of adoption.

Outsourcing Emergency Management

Emergency management has to do with management of human-made and natural disasters, not police services per se. But it was natural that Barnett Jones, the city’s safety services administrator and police chief, gave the presentation on outsourcing.

The current director of emergency management is a member of Jones’ police force, Sgt. Edward Dreslinki. Dreslinski was appointed to the job in July 2009 by the city council, succeeding Lt. Myron Blackwell. The line of succession for the post consists of assistant emergency managers: Lucy Teets, Lt. Myron Blackwell, Mary Joan Fales, Matthew Naud, Matthew Schroeder and Andrew Box.

Jones began by referencing Act 390, the state statute enabling the appointment of a director of emergency management.

It’s not outsourcing to a private vendor that is being contemplated. As Jones pointed out, Act 390 would allow the city to turn its emergency management over to the county’s coordinator, instead of appointing its own.

(2) A municipality with a population of 25,000 or more shall either appoint a municipal emergency management coordinator or appoint the coordinator of the county as the municipal emergency management coordinator pursuant to subsection (7).

The choice, then, is between appointing an emergency management coordinator for the city or having the county exercise that function.

Jones pointed out that with a city appointment, nominated by the mayor and confirmed by the city council, the city had political control. If responsibility were ceded to the county, he feared, it would be difficult ever getting that function back “under our span of control.” Currently, Jones said, the mayor, the city administrator, or he himself could declare an emergency event.

Chief of Police Barnett Jones

Barnett Jones, Ann Arbor chief of police, gave the city council a presentation on the feasibility of assigning responsibility for emergency management to the county.

Jones also pointed out that over the last 10 years, $2.2 million has come into the community via homeland defense and emergency management grants. If the city were to contract with the county, he said, the city would have to compete with other areas to get that kind of grant money. It would no longer be earmarked for the city, but rather the county.

The grant money, Jones said, could be used to purchase a variety of equipment as well as to fund required training exercises. Stephen Rapundalo (Ward 2) noted that while the funds are dedicated, they have utility in other facets of providing safety services broadly in the community.

On the theme of local control, John Hieftje weighed in, saying that on 9/11 the decision not to declare a state of emergency in Ann Arbor was easier to make because everyone was able to meet face-to-face without having to use the phone.

Jones summarized the reasons that the city’s emergency management system gets activated as mostly relating to either severe weather or hazardous materials.  Carsten Hohnke (Ward 5) querried Jones about how often the emergency management center is activated, and asked for some recent examples.

Jones reported that it had come into play when some power lines were down in the southwest part of the city and several homes were without power. The city responded by deploying the director of emergency management, who made sure that warming stations at public schools would be available, if the power outage would be long-lasting. When it was determined that the outage was not going to be long-lasting, the system was shut down.

Before that, Jones said, it had been a football Saturday. For every University of Michigan home game, he explained, the emergency management command post is staffed up at the “Buffalo Lot” – the city-owned property just north of the Michigan Stadium. Hohnke concluded that it was not a once-in-5-year event when the system was activated, but rather something that was fairly frequent.

Marcia Higgins (Ward 4) wanted to know if the costs were charged back to UM for the staffing of the command post on football Saturdays. Jones clarified that there was a grant that provided for 35% of the salary of the director of emergency management. So that is not charged to the university, Jones said. But everyone else’s time is charged to UM, Jones said. After Jones explained that the practice had been in place at least since he took over as chief, Higgins said this was the first time she’d ever heard of the emergency management system being used for football Saturdays.

Responding to later questions from Stephen Kunselman (Ward 3), Jones described the total cost of emergency management staff as $130,000-$140,000 total, with $45,000 covered by a grant. Total cost to the city’s general fund, said Jones, was around $90,000.

Rapundalo wondered if there were any conditions on the grant that would preclude charging the cost of the director of emergency management back to UM. Jones told Rapundalo that he would check on that. Rapundalo asked that it be reviewed by the city attorney’s office. It was the police department’s preference, said Jones, to staff the command post in that way, with 52-54 officers on site. Hearing that number, Higgins followed up with the observation: “That’s a lot of officers!”

Higgins wondered how many officers where patrolling the city if that was the staffing level for a football Saturday. Jones stated that they had a total complement of officers scheduled to be on duty that day in the city, plus the officers working the football stadium. Higgins stated: “That can’t leave anybody in reserve.” Jones’ reply: “Yes, ma’am.” Jones later clarified for The Chronicle that his response meant that, yes, the city did have appropriate numbers of reserve officers on football Saturdays.

Mike Anglin (Ward 5), looking through the levels of funding over the last 10 years, noted that it seemed inconsistent and uneven. Jones said that after 9/11, a lot of federal money went into homeland security, but that funding had begun to taper off. In addition, Jones said, the funding strategy has changed so that it now goes to “regions” instead of individual municipalities – with municipalities now competing for the funds.

Sandi Smith (Ward 1) asked Jones about projected needs for capital expenses over the next few years. Jones said that there had been a lot of technology acquired – a couple of license plate readers, as well as 13-14 in-car video systems. Jones said he wanted to “slow down” and “reign in” acquisition of new technology so that officers could have time to train on the technology they already had. Jones stressed that any new technology included a training module, which could be more expensive per officer than the hardware itself. They’d be “standing down” on additional technology acquisitions, he said.

Also related to capital expenses, Jones cautioned that investments in their patrol vehicles might need to increase. Ford Motor Co., Jones said, was possibly planning to end production of the Crown Victoria, which is used as by most police departments in America. Although Dodge had gotten into the market with its Charger, Jones said, the few Chargers the AAPD had purchased had received an evaluation of “ehhhh” from officers who’d used them – they had sight-distance issues. Jones said that it was not certain when and if GM would get into the market. If Ford ends production of the Crown Vic, Jones warned, they would have to invest in new equipment for inside the patrol cars. In-car equipment is designed for a particular kind of vehicle.

Budget Impact Statements

There were a few “big ideas” remaining on the list, which mayor John Hieftje read. Those included rethinking SEMCOG (Southeast Michigan Council of Governments) membership and reducing Act 51 allocations to alternative transportation from 5% to the minimum state-mandated level of 1%. Act 51 money is most generally used for street maintenance and snow removal.

There was no great enthusiasm among councilmembers for exploring either of those topics.

Budget Impact: Starting the Safety Services Discussion

But at city administrator Roger Fraser’s urging, the council did take a look at the budget impact statements – for the police department. It was Marcia Higgins (Ward 4) who took the lead by asking when police services would be discussed. Fraser indicated to Higgins that the “big idea” associated with police services had been to look at the possibility of contracting with Washtenaw County for police services.

However, Fraser said he’d understood the council’s direction on that was to take it off the list. At the council’s December budget retreat, chief of police Barnett Jones had told councilmembers they already employed the best policing force in the county – the AAPD.

Budget Impact: Higgins Against Police Cuts

Jones clarified for Higgins that last year, the early retirement incentives had resulted in 24 sworn officers and 2 dispatchers leaving the force – five greater than the number planned, said Jones. That left the total number of sworn police officers at 124, Jones said.

The budget impact statements reflect a further reduction of nine police officer positions, three community standards positions, a community standards supervisor position and a community standards administrative support position, for a total of 14 FTEs. Jones said that the year’s budget exercise to reduce costs by 7.5% had meant a $1.9 million target, and that translated into a reduction of 19 officers. He’d looked at everything in the department, Jones said, and gotten that number down to 9-12.

Higgins said the reduction in numbers was not acceptable to her. She  told Jones that she understood he’d done what he’d been asked to do, but that she was not in favor of cutting police services by 7.5%.  She asked if the overall reduction of community standards positions last year from 10 to 5 positions would allow the department to maintain service. Jones replied that there would be service reductions.

Budget Impact: Revenue Implications of Police Cuts

Sandi Smith (Ward 1), keying on the phrase “service reductions” noted that this meant revenue reductions for the citations that the community standards officers wrote. Where was that in the budget impact statement, she asked. Jones allowed that revenues would be reduced. Queried by Smith, Jones said that annual revenue per community standards officer was $7,700 per officer. Smith was surprised by the low figure, noting that parking violation revenues totaled more than $2 million per year. CFO Tom Crawford clarified that the $7,700 per officer figure reflected ordinance work [e.g., littering, weeds, etc.].

Traffic enforcement officers, continued Jones, generate around $110,000 per officer.

Hieftje offered an historical interlude by reflecting on the payback period for last year’s early retirement incentives – paid for out of general fund reserves – was 2.5 years, and noting that he did not believe that the city of Ann Arbor had ever laid off a police officer.

Commenting on the mayor’s remarks, Jones said that there was nothing more demoralizing to a department than to lay off some of its members, or to take command officers and put them back on patrol. That was a scenario that the early retirement incentives had avoided.

Budget Impact: How Many Police Do We Have?

Higgins returned to a topic she’d introduced during the discussion of emergency management – the staffing of the emergency management post on UM football Saturdays. Given that Jones had assured the council that in addition to the more than 50 officers on duty for the games, the city also had a full complement of police officers on duty, Higgins wanted to know how many officers were a “full complement.”

Jones told Higgins that he was hoping no one would ask that question – there are a lot of people out there, he said, “who don’t have our best interests in mind.” Because of that, he said he was reluctant to talk about how exactly they did things in terms of how many police officers were deployed and where they were assigned within the city. However, he did say that a shift consisted of 20 patrol officers.

Jones also clarified that on UM football Saturdays, there are actually a total of more than 100 officers on duty – the additional officers coming from other jurisdictions like UM’s Department of Public Safety, Washtenaw County Sheriff’s Department, and Pittsfield Township’s Department of Public Safety.

Stephen Kunselman (Ward 3) wanted to now if the reduction in community standards personnel had implications for issues of “blight.” In that connection, he wanted to know specifically if decisions would be made about which ordinances would actually be enforced. City administrator Roger Fraser fielded part of the question by noting that the “quality of the community” would still be important.

Budget Impact: How Many Police Do We Need?

Carsten Hohnke (Ward 5) noted that if safety services were held harmless, it was difficult to see how to get to a balance with the rest of the budget. So he phrased a question for Jones this way: How many police officers do we need?

Hohnke allowed that communities are unique and they each had their special requirements, but he wondered how Jones evaluated appropriate staffing levels. For example, Hohnke said, five police officers would be obviously too few. But how did Jones assess how many they needed?

Jones’ response: “We can’t afford to lose a police officer.” He pointed to the reduction in the force since the year 2000 when there were 216 sworn officers, down to the current levels of 124. But, Jones said, the city is at a point where the reality is that there’s a $5-6 million deficit, and 50% of that budget is safety services.

Jones said he lost sleep at night over “his kids” – which is how he thinks of his officers. He continued by saying that his counterparts in Troy, Sterling Heights, and Oakland County were also losing sleep for the same reason. Jones said that Troy was facing layoffs of 50 police officers if voters did not approve a millage the following day at the polls. [Voters rejected the millage.]

Jones concluded by telling Hohnke: “You asked me, Carsten, I gave you a response: We need everybody we have.”

Hohnke persisted. He allowed that comparing current levels to the year 2000 showed a stark contrast. But in the 1990s, he said, there was an increase in staffing partly attributed to the federal police-hiring grants during the Clinton administration. Further, he said, with the addition of the police component to the UM Department of Public Safety – now with around 50 sworn officers – Hohnke wondered if the reductions were perhaps consistent with an appropriate level of service.

Is it a matter of defensive policing versus an ability to be more proactive, Hohnke wondered. Jones told Hohnke that it was a “little bit of yes and a little bit of no.” In the yes category, Jones described how force reductions could take away from his “crew unit.” Responding to a  later question from Mike Anglin (Ward 5) about what the “crew unit” did, Jones described a range of proactive activity, including patrol, surveillance, backup, and “arresting bad guys.”

In the no category, Jones described how one possibility was that the front desk might be closed during certain times.  Or residents might have to come down to the station to fill out a traffic accident report.

Higgins asked that the council be provided with response times over a 30-day period and information about how the calls got prioritized.

Smith asked if further force reductions would have an effect on the strategy that Jones had adopted for downtown policing. That strategy had been to eliminate downtown beat assignments in favor of encouraging patrol officers to spend their one-hour out-of-car time in the downtown area, walking around. Jones told Smith that the feedback on that strategy had been positive. But the difference, he added, was that downtown merchants didn’t recognize the patrol officers as “their” officers.

Budget Impact: Police Pay

Hohnke asked the city’s director of human resources, Robyn Wilkerson, to comment on compensation issues. He wanted to know how the city of Ann Arbor compared to other communities. She said the city was not the highest in terms of wages, but that in terms of pensions, deductibles, and co-pays, the city was on “the low end.” Hohnke sought clarification of “the low end” – Wilkerson meant that Ann Arbor workers paid less than workers in other communities towards those benefits.

City administrator Roger Fraser confirmed that on wages, the city was “in the middle” but where the city was out of sync was in the amount that the employees contribute.

Hieftje asked Wilkerson about the Act 312 bargaining units. Police are covered under Act 312, which does not allow the units to strike. Instead, there is a prescribed arbitration procedure. [Last year, in a recent arbitration case involving the Ann Arbor Police Officers Association, the arbiter ruled in favor of the union, and the city council needed to appropriate an additional $673,000 to cover the settlement cost.] Hieftje said that there were some “lightweight” changes proposed to Act 312 in the state legislature, but that the Michigan Municipal League wanted more substantive changes.

Budget Impact: “It just doesn’t feel right.”

In wrapping up the meeting, city administrator Roger Fraser referred to Carsten Hohnke’s question about how they knew that police staffing levels were appropriate. “You get to a certain point when it just doesn’t feel right,” Fraser said.  He said there were few things in the budget impact statements that were good for the city. It would be unfair, he continued, to say that any of the items in the impact statements were actions that they advocated. It was a matter of creating a financial plan they could live with.

Fraser allowed that it was a very difficult conversation to have. Still, he asked councilmembers to keep in mind that he was willing to explore all kinds of things. He concluded: “It isn’t fun.”

Next budget meeting: The next meeting of the city council that will focus just on budget issues will be March 8, 2010, starting at 6 p.m. in city council chambers, 100 N. Fifth Ave. [confirm date] The focus will be public services – in particular, solid waste and the possibility of modifying the way the city collects trash, as well as a possible street lighting district.

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County Reorganizes 911 Dispatch http://annarborchronicle.com/2009/11/09/county-reorganizes-911-dispatch/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=county-reorganizes-911-dispatch http://annarborchronicle.com/2009/11/09/county-reorganizes-911-dispatch/#comments Tue, 10 Nov 2009 03:12:15 +0000 Mary Morgan http://annarborchronicle.com/?p=31719 Ken Weber

Ken Weber of Weber's Restaurant & Hotel, foreground, sits next to Kevin Gudejko of Main Street Ventures at the Nov. 4 county board of commissioners meeting. They were among the restaurateurs who spoke at a public hearing and questioned the need for a proposed food safety training program. (Photo by the writer.)

Washtenaw County Board of Commissioners (Nov. 4, 2009): After removing a major item from their agenda – the 2010/2011 budget – county commissioners spent the bulk of their Nov. 4 meeting listening to presentations, reports, and a public hearing. Commissioners also voted and approved a new tax to raise roughly $603,000 annually for economic development. The 0.04 mills will be collected on the December 2009 tax bill.

Sheriff Jerry Clayton spoke about plans to reorganize the county’s central dispatch and emergency services operation. Changes include co-location of the county and the city of Ann Arbor’s central dispatch, which will both be housed in Ann Arbor.

Dick Fleece, director of the county’s Public Health/Environmental Health department, gave an update on the H1N1 outbreak and vaccination clinics in Washtenaw County. [On Monday, Nov. 9, the county announced a new clinic for mass immunization of people in expanded priority categories. That clinic will be held on Saturday, Nov. 14 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Pioneer High School in Ann Arbor.]

Commissioners also heard concerns from local restaurant owners and managers – including Ken Weber of Weber’s Restaurant & Hotel, and Rick Strutz of Zingerman’s Deli – during a public hearing on a proposed new food safety training program.

But First, What About the Budget?

The county administration and commissioners have been working on the 2010 and 2011 budget for about a year, addressing how to deal with a projected $30 million deficit over that two-year period. Bob Guenzel, the county administrator, made his budget recommendations at the board’s Sept. 16 meeting, and the board was expected to make its initial vote at the Ways & Means Committee portion of the Nov. 4 meeting, with a final vote at their regular board meeting on Nov. 18.

However, at the beginning of last Wednesday’s meeting, Conan Smith – who chairs the Ways & Means Committee, on which all commissioners serve – announced that the budget agenda item would be pulled. They needed to address a handful of issues that would result in a more “fulsome” budget resolution, he said, to be brought back at the Nov. 18 meeting.

Later in the meeting, commissioner Kristin Judge asked the board to have a discussion about retirement benefits, noting that earlier in the year it had been mentioned as one of the options to explore in addressing the budget deficit. She wanted to know what other commissioners thought.

Guenzel acknowledged that it had been one of many items mentioned early in the budget process, but that it was a very sensitive area and he had decided not to include it in his budget recommendations. There were some legal issues involved, he said, without elaborating. Also, he said he’d made a commitment to a group representing the county’s retirees, who wanted to be involved in whatever discussions were held. Guenzel said he was hoping to regroup with the board after the beginning of the year to have a discussion about retirement benefits, but didn’t feel they had time to do it before the budget needed to be passed.

Ann Arbor Chamber Weighs In

Since the Nov. 4 meeting, the Ann Arbor Area Chamber of Commerce has issued a position statement on the county budget. While praising the administration’s ability to deal with the deficit and commending employees for making concessions, the chamber’s statement cited several areas of concern going forward:

We remain concerned, however, that all County employees continue to receive defined benefit retirement plans. As experience has shown, future liabilities associated with such plans are unsustainable. The time is ripe to explore alternatives, to shift to defined contribution plans akin to those of the private sector.

We are aware that the Board of Commissioners recently chose to levy a 0.04-mill tax to fund economic development and agricultural activities within the County. We insist that no general fund revenues be used to supplement these monies while this tax remains in effect.

As the County moves forward, we urge it to focus on funding its core, mandated functions and, in order to maximize that funding, to continue to seek efficiencies in service delivery. For instance, the County should continue to pursue successful partnerships and shared/regionalized services with the 28 local units of government within its boundaries. There is needless redundancy and duplication; there are economies of scale yet to be realized. The County and City of Ann Arbor data center merger circa March 2009 is a prime example of the success to be had.

We also urge the County to continue to plan in light of uncertain economic times ahead. For example, in this budget cycle outside agency contributions were restored, to a certain extent, contrary to the County Administrator’s recommendations. Should such contributions need to be revisited in future budget cycles, contingency plans should already be in place.

Reorganizing Emergency Services and Central Dispatch

On the agenda was a resolution to authorize the reorganization of the sheriff’s department central dispatch and emergency services division. The resolution included eliminating four supervisory positions (including one that’s currently vacant) and creating four different positions at lower pay grades. A fifth position would be changed to a grant-funded contract job. [.PDF file of resolution]

Sheriff Jerry Clayton gave a presentation about their plans, reminding the board that they had previously approved shifting the emergency management division to the sheriff’s department. Now, the department was planning to combine that unit with central dispatch – the group that handles 911 calls – to create an emergency services division. The idea was to create a more efficient operation and provide better service, Clayton said.

At the same time, the county’s central dispatch is moving ahead with a project to co-locate its operations with the city of Ann Arbor’s central dispatch. Ann Arbor has sufficient space within its existing facility – on second floor of Fire Station #1, across from city hall – to handle both dispatch operations, though some remodeling is required at their facility, Clayton said. In addition, Ypsilanti has expressed interest in contracting with the sheriff’s department to handle its dispatch service, he said, describing those discussions as preliminary. Long-term, it might make sense to have consolidated services for the entire county, “but you can’t do it all at once,” he said.

To pay for the move, Clayton said they planned to ask the county’s 800MHz project implementation committee for $324,275 in funding. The committee oversees funds from a millage to develop a countywide emergency radio system.

Clayton turned the presentation over to Marc Breckenridge, director of emergency management and homeland security, who told commissioners that the reorganization would resolve short-staffing and workload issues, and build stronger internal partnerships. He described dispatch as a pressure cooker – last year, nine full-time dispatchers handled nearly 121,000 calls. By moving supervisors into dispatcher jobs, the reorganization would result in more people fielding calls, and would “turn down the heat.”

Breckenridge laid out a timeline for the co-location project:

  • Underway: Remodeling of the Ann Arbor dispatch facility
  • Nov. 16: Request funding from the 800 MHz committee
  • Nov. 17: Issue purchase orders for equipment (with a two-month delivery timeline for some equipment)
  • Jan. 2: The IT staff begins installation of computer network connections
  • Jan. 17: Install furniture
  • Jan. 18: Finish installing computer connections, dispatcher workstations, phones and consoles; test all systems
  • Feb. 1: Transfer central dispatch operations to co-location facility

The changes, Breckenridge said, would provide cost savings in several ways. It would reduce the need for two 800 MHz consoles, which would save $290,000. The county would also save $450,000 that it would have otherwise needed to spend on a new microwave data link to the new 800 MHz system, he said, as well as $74,000 for a replacement audio recording system. The county would also not be required to spend $350,000 for a new telephone switch.

Over the years, Breckenridge added, co-location will save in the cost of doing business, because of shared technology expenses. A lot of technology is duplicated among various units of government, he said.

Clayton said the whole project was an example of the county and city of Ann Arbor’s willingness to work together, leveraging resources with the goal of improving public safety.

Questions from Commissioners

Rolland Sizemore Jr. asked why they were using Ann Arbor as the co-location facility, and not the county’s operation on Hogback Road. Clayton responded that Ann Arbor’s space was larger, with room for expansion that the county did not have. How much would the county have to pay Ann Arbor? Sizemore asked. That’s still being negotiated, Clayton said.

Leah Gunn said she was a member of the 800 MHz committee and would do everything she could to make sure that their funding request was seriously considered.

Barbara Bergman noted that in the past, objections from the union had been a barrier to reorganization. How had that been overcome? Clayton said that they worked closely with Diane Heidt, the county’s human resources and labor relations director, who had helped guide them through this process. It was important that nobody lost their jobs, he said. The three supervisors can take voluntary demotions, or apply for a dispatch coordinator job.

Wes Prater asked what kind of backup system they had, if the co-located facility went down. Breckenridge fielded this question, saying they’d keep a small standby system, which could be operated on generator power, at the county’s current Hogback Road dispatch facility, where the emergency services office is located.

Kristin Judge asked how the co-location would actually work. Initially, Clayton said, they’ll start with two separate operations, except for some supervisory work. Over time, he expects to see more sharing of resources.

Clayton clarified for Ken Schwartz that there were nine dispatch locations –  Ann Arbor’s and the county’s are the largest two. Does this move lay the groundwork for others coming into the co-located facility? Schwartz asked. Clayton said he hoped so.

Jeff Irwin noted that they’d been talking about co-location for at least a decade, and that he hoped this was a step toward consolidation.

Later in the meeting, commissioners unanimously passed the resolution authorizing the reorganization of central dispatch and emergency services.

Economic Development Tax

Returning to a resolution they’d tabled at their Oct. 21 meeting, commissioners approved, with no discussion, a millage to raise $603,000 for economic development and agricultural-related purposes. [See previous Chronicle coverage: "Board Tables Economic Development Tax" and "County Board Moves Ahead on Budget"]

The 0.04 mills will levy $4 for every $100,000 of a property’s taxable value, and will be collected in the December 2009 tax bill. [.PDF file of Act 88 resolution]

It was not a unanimous vote, however. Commissioners Kristin Judge and Wes Prater voted against the millage, and Mark Ouimet voted only for the portion of the millage that would be allocated to 4-H, Michigan State University Extension programs, and the Food System Economic Partnership.

Food Handler Education Program

The commission is considering a new food handler education program for restaurant workers and others in the food services industry. It would require workers to go through a training program to obtain a food safety card every two years. [.PDF file outlining program requirements]

Several people spoke during Wednesday’s public hearing on the topic – all but one of them questioning the need for such a program.

Kyle Mazurek: Mazurek, vice president of government affairs for the Ann Arbor Area Chamber of Commerce, said the chamber had several concerns about the proposed program. He wondered whether the program was intended primarily to generate revenues for the county. Fees should be used only to cover the costs of administering the program, he said. Mazurek asked whether there was a documented need for the program, and said he’d heard from many in the industry who don’t believe there is. Finally, he said there was some question about who would pay for the fee, and that conventional wisdom held that it would be the employees who’d bear the cost. The chamber would be looking into this further, he said.

Ken Weber: Weber, president of Weber’s Restaurant & Hotel, began by praising the county health department, saying that the staff worked well with local restaurants. He said he believed in the importance of raising the level of sanitation, but wondered whether the new program would achieve that goal. It was his understanding that there’d be no test for people who took the training, for example, so there’d be no way to know if they’d paid attention and learned anything. Weber also said that the program would create a bad situation for his employees, because he’d have to let them go if they didn’t have a food safety card. Finally, he didn’t think it was fair to require that experienced, long-time employees go through the same program as 17-year-old kids. Ultimately, it didn’t seem like the program would achieve the results they were looking for, Weber said.

Kevin Gudejko: Gudejko is director of operations for Main Street Ventures, which owns several restaurants in Ann Arbor, including Gratzi and the Chop House. He noted that current regulations require one manager at each food establishment to be certified in food safety – it’s a struggle to meet that requirement, he said, and many restaurants in the county haven’t done it. The program could also be a barrier to employment for people having to pay the $15 fee to get the food safety card. It would create a competitive disadvantage for Washtenaw County businesses, he said, since potential employees might choose to seek jobs in neighboring counties, where no such regulations exist. Finally, Gudejko said he was concerned about language barriers – one of their employees is from Jordan and is struggling to complete the certification class.

Patrick McDevitt: McDevitt is general manager of Mancino’s Pizza & Grinders in Saline. He also mentioned the county’s requirement that at least one manager be certified in food safety. Through that process, he noted, managers are taught about foodborne illnesses and other safety issues, so that they in turn can teach their employees. Why require that managers get certified, he said, then essentially say that their training isn’t good enough to teach employees?

Rick Strutz: A managing partner at Zingerman’s Deli, Strutz said he didn’t know of many things more important than food safety. He thanked the public health staff for their work on the H1N1 vaccines – that virus affects the food business in a big way, he noted – and said it was a department that genuinely wanted to make things better. While agreeing with the goal of better food safety, Strutz said this wasn’t the proper path. Zingerman’s already requires that employees take a class on food safety and pass a test – they’re taken off the schedule until they can pass it, he said. Yet with 500 employees, it’s difficult to keep track of who’s taken the test, to schedule times for the class, and to find people to translate the tests, which are frequently updated. About 10,000 people countywide would be required to get the food safety card, and Strutz wondered how the county would be able to regulate that program effectively. He noted that Zingerman’s had spent about $30,000 to send its managers to be certified in food safety, as required by the county. But that certification program – a much smaller one than what’s being proposed – isn’t being regulated, he said. Strutz also suggested that if the county were merely interested in generating revenue, they should consider simply increasing the restaurant licensing fee instead.

Andy Deloney: Deloney is vice president of public affairs for the Michigan Restaurant Association. He came at the urging of several association members in the county, and asked commissioners to consider their concerns. The restaurant industry is one of the largest employers of young people, and he was concerned that this program simply added to the cost of operations while providing little public health benefit. Deloney told commissioners that they were in good hands – of the 54 county health departments in the state, Washtenaw County’s is highly regarded, he said.

Thomas Partridge: The only person to speak in favor of the program, Partridge said that it should not only be a countywide program, but should be implemented throughout the state and nation. Employers, not their workers, should pay the entire fee, he said.

Commissioners’ response

Kristin Judge, the Pittsfield Township commissioner who is championing this program, thanked the food proprietors for coming to the public hearing, but said that she had a different perspective because of her own personal experience. She got training through a similar program when she was a waitress in Arizona years ago, and learned valuable information that helped her at work. This wasn’t about generating revenue, she said. A lot of restaurants in Washtenaw County weren’t doing as good of a job as those represented at the public hearing, she said, and there was still a lot of education needed in the local food industry. As for the $15 fee, it was the equivalent of a tip on a $100 tab, she said, and wouldn’t be a burden. She told the restaurant managers that because it was new, they might not yet understand the value of the program.

Commission Jeff Irwin said he knew that several people who wanted to speak about their concerns at the hearing had to leave before it was held, because of the late hour. [The public hearing occurred toward the end of the board meeting, around 8:30 p.m.] There’s a high failure rate in the restaurant business, he said, and adding one more regulation was something the board should think about carefully. He asked whether this requirement would demonstrably improve food safety in Washtenaw County – was it the right tool? He wasn’t convinced that it was. A better approach would be to work on strict yet consistent enforcement of the county’s current regulations, Irwin said. He hoped the board didn’t want to move forward at breakneck speed – it would affect a lot of people, and many don’t even know it’s being considered.

Commissioner Mark Ouimet said that he consulted with his daughter, who manages several high-end restaurants. She told him that government ordinances don’t affect how they do business or how they set their standards, which are high. He said he wouldn’t be supporting this program.

Rolland Sizemore Jr., the board’s chair, said he’d talked with waitstaff in several small restaurants – they’d told him the proposed program was a good idea, but he wasn’t so sure. He wanted to see more dialogue between the health department and restaurants of all sizes. Sizemore also wasn’t comfortable with the fee, saying that the economy was bad, especially for people who were just entering the workforce. He said there was no need for the board to be in a hurry about this.

Responding to her colleagues’ comments, Judge said that it’s a public health issue. Until all restaurants in the county get perfect inspection scores, they need to do more. She said she’d try to get data about the effectiveness of programs like this, and report back to the board.

H1N1 Update

Dick Fleece, director of the county’s Public Health/Environmental Health department, and Diana Torres-Burgos, the county’s medical director, gave commissioners an update on their H1N1 prevention efforts. It was similar to a report they gave at the Oct. 28 administrative briefing, when commissioners were briefed about the Nov. 4 agenda. [See Chronicle coverage: County Revamps H1N1 Vaccine Strategy]

Several commissioners asked questions about the H1N1 situation. Barbara Bergman asked if there was a hotline that people could call for information. There is: 734-544-6700. Conan Smith jokingly asked if they had brought samples of the vaccine for commissioner. They hadn’t.

Commissioner Ronnie Peterson chastised the department for not communicating more effectively with the general public. Fleece said, “It sure seems like we’re giving out a lot of information,” noting that they field calls from the public and the media every day, as well as post updates on their website. Peterson wasn’t satisfied – a lot of people don’t have computers or health insurance, he said. Every county department needs to be involved in spreading the word about H1N1, Peterson contended. “We don’t sell popcorn. We don’t sell peanuts. We provide services.”

Torres-Burgos wrapped up their presentation by saying that it’s going to be a very long flu season, and very challenging.

Update: On Monday, Nov. 9, the county public health department announced another free vaccination clinic to be held on Saturday, Nov. 14 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Pioneer High School. At the Nov. 5 clinic held at Eastern Michigan University, the county administered about 2,500 vaccines. They are expanding the priority categories of people eligible to receive the vaccine. Those categories are:

  • pregnant women;
  • household and caregiver contacts of infants younger than 6 months;
  • health care and emergency medical services personnel who provide direct patient care;
  • children and young adults 6 months through 24 years of age;
  • individuals 25-64 years old who have medical conditions that put them at a higher risk of influenza-related complications, such as chronic lung disease, weakened immune systems, cancer, diabetes, kidney or liver disorders, cardiovascular disease and other conditions.

[.PDF of press release with additional details.]

Public Commentary: Misc.

In addition to the public commentary described above, Thomas Partridge spoke during three additional times set aside for public comment. Partridge said the county needed to submit more grant applications to raise money for fair and equitable housing, transportation, public health, job training, and education for all residents. He also called on the county to treat the H1N1 situation as the emergency that it was. They needed every health provider and health provider employee to enlist in a voluntary effort to provide vaccinations, not just for H1N1, but also vaccines for the conventional flu and pneumonia. Finally, he questioned why the commissioners failed to provide the necessary leadership to pass the countywide school millage, which was on the Nov. 3 ballot and rejected by voters.

Present: Barbara Levin Bergman, Leah Gunn, Jeff Irwin, Kristin Judge, Mark Ouimet, Ronnie Peterson, Wes Prater, Ken Schwartz, Rolland Sizemore Jr., Conan Smith

Absent: Jessica Ping

Next board meeting: Wednesday, Nov. 18 at 6:30 p.m. at the County Administration Building, 220 N. Main St. The Ways & Means Committee meets first, followed immediately by the regular board meeting. [confirm date] (Though the agenda states that the regular board meeting begins at 6:45 p.m., it usually starts much later – times vary depending on what’s on the agenda.) Public comment sessions are held at the beginning and end of each meeting.

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