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September 2010
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Post Archives

  • 29Apr

    According to the Fairmont Sentinel, the City of Blue Earth decided this week to leave a recently vacated police officer position unfilled due to budgetary concerns. An additional police officer position has been left vacant since 2003/2004 budget cuts. Short two officers, council members expressed concern about leaving both positions unfilled, as doing so will place added stress on a force that is already spread thin.

    Cities across the state are making similar difficult choices. With budgets trimmed down to the bone, cutting public safety services and personnel is becoming a reality. Cities need LGA in order to provide essential services, such as public safety, at an affordable price to property taxpayers. Public safety will always be a top priority for cities, but the governor’s proposed cuts to LGA leave few options left for reductions. If public safety is a top priority for you, contact the governor and your legislators, and tell them that LGA is what keeps our communities safe.

  • 27Apr

    Proposed cuts to LGA will have deeply negative impacts on the city of St. Paul, and specifically, on the city’s libraries, according to Lilydale Mayor Tom Swain and former St. Paul Mayor George Latimer who co-authored a guest column in this weekend’s Pioneer Press. As both mayors correctly point out, the proposed cuts to LGA do little to solve the state’s budget deficit, but will have a profound effect on libraries, police officers, firefighters, and other city services across the state. The cuts to libraries will be especially devastating, considering that usership and demand for library services has increased dramatically during the current economic downturn. To read more about the economic and community impacts of library cuts, click here.

  • 24Apr

    The residents of Elko New Market banded together and voiced opposition to recent action taken by the city council to eliminate the city’s police department. As a result, the council voted unanimously to reinstate the force. Click here to read the story from the Star Tribune. Thank LGA congratulates Elko New Market residents for successfully speaking up for the services that make their city strong!

    The case of Elko New Market shows that regular every day citizens can make a difference when it comes to protecting their cities from harmful cuts. Unfortunately, the governor’s proposed cuts to LGA will put many cities in a similar position as that of Elko New Market—critical services such as police, fire protection, libraries, and parks will be cut in cities across the state unless the governor and your legislators hear from you! It’s time to speak up for LGA. If you value the services your city provides and want to keep cities in Minnesota strong, contact the governor and your legislators today!

  • 20Apr

    Last Friday, residents were evacuated from the City of St. Charles after a fire started at a local food processor and threatened to ignite tanks of anhydrous ammonia. City officials called for the evacuation because leaked anhydrous ammonia poses serious health risks, such as chemical burns and possible death.

    Firefighters battled the flames until the early hours of Saturday morning, and successfully prevented significant chemical leakage. Public safety officials also assisted residents with evacuating the city in a safe manner.

    Often it is only in times of crisis that we realize the importance of fully staffing our fire and police departments and adequately funding related costs, such as equipment purchases and vehicle maintenance. In order to provide top quality public safety and fire protection at an affordable price to property taxpayers, cities need LGA. Thank LGA applauds the St. Charles police and fire departments, and others who assisted in this effort, for handling this emergency in a professional manner and for protecting the city’s residents.

  • 14Apr

    What if you had to pay a fee to have a police officer respond to your car accident? Or if your children had to buy admission tickets for the library or for entrance to the playground?

    It sounds crazy, but for the City of Bemidji, increasing fees for services may be the only way to protect jobs, maintain the current level and quality of services residents are accustomed to, and keep property taxes low. According to the Bemidji Pioneer, the city council is currently struggling to find ways to fill a $265,455 hole in its budget, which would result from the governor’s proposed LGA cuts for 2010. Filling this gap may require the city to pair down its fire department “from an all-day, every-day fire and medical response unit to one that responds to fire calls and injury accidents, but does not respond to medical calls.” Implementing an emergency response fee may be the only way to maintain the full fire department services and staffing without raising taxes.

    Under the Pawlenty administration, service fees have jumped due to several factors, but primarily because of repeated cuts to LGA. In 2002, LGA accounted for 4.4% of the state’s general fund; in 2008, LGA accounted for only 2.8%. That may not seem like a significant reduction, but over the years, it has cost cities hundreds of millions of dollars and has forced cities to operate as leanly as possible. However, because the items cities purchase—such as health insurance for employees, concrete for roads, fire engines, fuel for vehicles, etc.—have increased in price significantly since 2002 (so has inflation), revenue increases have been unavoidable. According to the the governor’s own administration, property taxes across the state have risen 60% between 2002 and 2008—the same period in which LGA has seen drastic cuts. Even these property tax increases haven’t been enough to account for lost LGA, which has forced cities to turn to fee increases.

    The problem with fee increases is that they are regressive, meaning that they hit middle-class and lower-income families harder than wealthy families. Fees also impact lower-wealth communities more negatively than higher-wealth communities, whereas LGA ensures that residents in Waseca can receive the same essential services as the residents in Eagan at an affordable price. For a full report on the true impact of increased fees, check out “New Fees in the Era of No New Taxes”, which was prepared by Minnesota 2020.

    Like the governor, cities want to protect jobs, maintain essential services for residents, and keep taxes low. But the simple truth is that Minnesotans can’t have it all ways if LGA is cut. The governor may be okay with forcing cities to make up the difference in increased fees, but this approach will only aggravate the disparities between communities across the state and lead Minnesota down a path many of us don’t want to take.

  • 13Apr

    Faced with state aid cuts, the City of Elko New Market recently voted to disband its police department, reports KARE 11. The police department of two full-time officers and six part-time officers will be replaced by a contract with the Scout County Sheriff, which is currently in negotiations. The Elko New Market city administrator estimates that eliminating the city’s police department will result in a net savings of only $15,000 annually under current service levels.  

    With considerable money already invested in building up the police department to its current levels, it’s disheartening to see the city’s force take the fall for LGA cuts, especially when it is projected that the city will grow in the upcoming years. Reinstating the city’s police department will become increasingly difficult and expensive over the years, and will cost the city in slower response times to emergencies and decreased police presence at community events and in schools. Minnesotans are deserving of equal public safety no matter what part of the state they live in, and that is what LGA ensures.

  • 09Apr

    Click here to download a full-resolution version of this video.

  • 08Apr

    While much attention has been given to the impact LGA cuts will have on public safety, libraries, and other high profile city services, little has been said about the nonprofit and charitable organizations that will lose funding from cities.

    The St. Cloud Times reports today that, because of LGA cuts, the city will have to reduce its funding for the Boys and Girls Club, the St. Cloud Symphony, the Downtown Council and its arts grant program, and the Municipal Band. Also, because the city’s recreation program will take a $400,000 cut—the largest of any program area—the city will be unable to offer as many scholarships to low-income families for participating in summer recreation programs.

    These reductions may sound like “fluff”, but a vibrant, culturally rich city can more successfully attract new residents and retain current residents than a city with little to offer. Thankfully, St. Cloud’s budgeting efforts will prevent layoffs for permanent full-time employees, which should always be a priority. But the fact still remains that LGA cuts are forcing cities to substantially alter the services they provide and weaken the strength of their communities. If you are interested in protecting the programs that make your community strong, contact your legislators and the governor, and tell them to protect LGA.

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