Mayor Nickels Announces $13.3 Million in Budget Cuts
A handful of reporters gathered on the seventh floor of City Hall this morning to hear how Mayor Greg Nickels plans to balance the budget now that forecasters are predicting that the city's revenue will drop another $29 million this year.
But the process this morning was a little backwards. The way it worked was that first Nickels held a press conference, then afterwards, reporters were told what the mayor plans to cut from the budget.
But the process this morning was a little backwards. The way it worked was that first Nickels held a press conference, then afterwards, reporters were told what the mayor plans to cut from the budget.
Im not going to get into the real details, Nickels said during the news conference. There will be many different cuts in a lot of different areas.
Indeed.
So when the news conference ended, Nickels staff members herded the press into a meeting room to get the real details. While everyone tried to make sense of the nine pages of line-item cuts and cryptic codes, Dwight Dively, the citys budget director, and Deputy Mayor Tim Ceis answered questions.
The mayors plan goes something like this ... after taking $5 million from the rainy day fund which has about $30 million in it now and by using money left over from the 2008 budget, Nickels still had to cut more than $13 million from the general fund to balance the budget.
The way it shakes out is that the deepest cuts will be felt in transportation, parks and libraries. The Seattle Dept. of Transportation budget takes the biggest hit with a 5.4 percent reduction, or $2.2 million. The parks department says goodbye to $2 million, and libraries lose about $1 million.
A big chuck of the library savings, $650,000, will come from shutting down the entire library system for a week this summer.
And in terms of layoffs, Nickels will eliminate 59 city jobs scattered across several departments, about half of those are currently vacant and will simply remain unfilled. And perhaps since its best to fire people on Friday, as well as release bad news, the 30 or so employees being laid off, were notified today.
Councilmember Jean Godden said the mayors plan was extremely prudent and quite modest.
Deputy Mayor Ceis said that its because of their sound fiscal management that the cuts were not as deep as some other governments are facing. Olympia?
Councilmember Nick Licata not known as a Nickels cheerleader said that by preserving public safety and human services, overall he did a good job.
The library cuts, he said, were larger than expected, and Licata questioned the wisdom of some the transportation reductions that he said are only necessary because Nickels has tied up a bunch of money for the controversial Mercer Street project.
The mayors staff will brief the City Council on Monday about the budget cuts, and theres a meeting scheduled on Wed. at 5:30 p.m. for public comment.
Theres no vote needed to balance this years budget, its up to the mayor. But thats not the case with the 2010 budget, which is expected to be about $40 million short. And so this Fall, Nickels will be presenting the City Council with a proposal on how to balance next year's budget.
This storys been tagged:
City Council
Greg Nickels
Jean Godden
Layoffs
Mayor
Mercer Mess
Nick Licata
Parks
Recession
Transportation
Indeed.
So when the news conference ended, Nickels staff members herded the press into a meeting room to get the real details. While everyone tried to make sense of the nine pages of line-item cuts and cryptic codes, Dwight Dively, the citys budget director, and Deputy Mayor Tim Ceis answered questions.
The mayors plan goes something like this ... after taking $5 million from the rainy day fund which has about $30 million in it now and by using money left over from the 2008 budget, Nickels still had to cut more than $13 million from the general fund to balance the budget.
The way it shakes out is that the deepest cuts will be felt in transportation, parks and libraries. The Seattle Dept. of Transportation budget takes the biggest hit with a 5.4 percent reduction, or $2.2 million. The parks department says goodbye to $2 million, and libraries lose about $1 million.
A big chuck of the library savings, $650,000, will come from shutting down the entire library system for a week this summer.
And in terms of layoffs, Nickels will eliminate 59 city jobs scattered across several departments, about half of those are currently vacant and will simply remain unfilled. And perhaps since its best to fire people on Friday, as well as release bad news, the 30 or so employees being laid off, were notified today.
Councilmember Jean Godden said the mayors plan was extremely prudent and quite modest.
Deputy Mayor Ceis said that its because of their sound fiscal management that the cuts were not as deep as some other governments are facing. Olympia?
Councilmember Nick Licata not known as a Nickels cheerleader said that by preserving public safety and human services, overall he did a good job.
The library cuts, he said, were larger than expected, and Licata questioned the wisdom of some the transportation reductions that he said are only necessary because Nickels has tied up a bunch of money for the controversial Mercer Street project.
The mayors staff will brief the City Council on Monday about the budget cuts, and theres a meeting scheduled on Wed. at 5:30 p.m. for public comment.
Theres no vote needed to balance this years budget, its up to the mayor. But thats not the case with the 2010 budget, which is expected to be about $40 million short. And so this Fall, Nickels will be presenting the City Council with a proposal on how to balance next year's budget.
@NewsSeattleWa: County could become a leader in cranberry production: A Canadian grower has bought up 1,500 acres alo... http://t.co/opBDAnrl1c #seattle

