HomeMy WebLinkAboutMinutes - Steering Committee - 01/21/2015STEERING COMMITTEE 21 JANUARY 2015
The South Burlington Steering Committee held a meeting on Wednesday, 21 January 2015, at
6:30 p.m, in the Conference Room, City Hall, 575 Dorset Street.
Members Present: City Council: P. Nowak, Steering Committee Chair; C. Shaw, M. Emery, J.
Simson; K. Dorn, City Manager; School Board: M. Lalonde, J. Beatty, D. Fleming, D. Bugbee;
D. Young, Superintendent of Schools
Also Present: J. Stewart, School District; T. Hubbard, Deputy City Manager; B. Nowak, T.
Chittenden, P. Taylor, A Klugo, J. Wilking, other members of the Master Planning & Visioning
Task Force
1. Agenda Review:
No changes were made.
2. Review and Approve Minutes of 15 September 2014:
Mr. Shaw moved to approve the Minutes of 15 September 2014 as written. Ms. Emery
seconded. Motion passed unanimously.
3. Presentation by representatives of the Master Planning & Visioning Task Force:
Supt. Young reviewed the history of the Task Force and introduced Mr. Klugo and Mr. Wilking.
Mr. Klugo said one of the charges of the committee is to look at, evaluate, and make decisions
regarding education and what will happen to some of the properties in the TIF District of City
Center. It also looks at other elements of City Center, the Airport and city demographics.
The Task Force began its work in a “gathering mode,” with consultant Frank Locker, looking at
how to educate children in the 21st century and what facilities would meet those ends. They
looked at the changing demographics of the city, with the reduction in the membership of
households, the loss of school age residents, aging facilities, the excellent performance of the
schools, the desire for a walkable, livable community, repurposing assets, potential new uses for
school buildings, etc.
The Task Force currently recognizes three options:
A. Leave things as they are
B. A new or consolidated elementary school
C. A new High School
Mr. Wilking added there is a possibility of a K-2 or K-3 school and a 4-5 or 4-6 school, or some
other configuration.
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Mr. Klugo then reviewed some of the considerations the Task Force has enumerated:
Schools: 21st Century learning
How to organize schools
Division of student population between/among schools
Class sizes
A single new elementary school: who goes there? What inequities would that
create? etc.
Facility adaptability
Costs
City: Vision
TIF funding requirements (the earlier the development, the higher the
revenue)
Other opportunities for the Central School property
Mr. Klugo noted that the decision to sell or not to sell Central School will stabilize the revenue
projections for the TIF. Mr. Wilking noted that Saxon Partners has options on certain properties
that may make it hard for anyone else to be a bidder. Mr. Klugo added that $7,000,000 will not
fund a new school, but it would be a “down payment.”
Mr. Klugo then outlined the Task Force’s next steps:
1. Identify criteria to filter the options
2. Go to the community with 4 options
3. See what the community says and evaluate/tweak option
4. Go back to the community one more time
5. Make a preliminary recommendation
6. Make a final recommendation.
The hope is to accomplish this by 19 March 2015. Mr. Wilking added that the meeting tonight
will start to limit options.
Mr. Klugo noted the Task Force is working with COPE to find a way to bring this to the
community in a format that is easy to understand. Mr. Wilking cited the need to realize that the
community may have its own idea of an option.
Supt. Young reminded people that the Task Force meetings are open to the public.
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4. Review of Proposed FY16 City Budget:
Mr. Hubbard noted that the Grand List has been conservatively estimated at $28,855,896. The
total of all funds for FY16 is $35,651,415. The proposed General Fund budget expenditures are
$21,153,145 (a decrease of $93,196 over the current fiscal year)).
The property tax rate needed for the budget is .46, up from .4285 which represents an overall
increase of 7.35%.
In past years, the City Council has utilized contingency funds to keep the budget down; that
source of funding is way down and will now be utilized in FY16. The city will try to build up
that reserve.
Mr. Hubbard said the current budget will enable departments to continue to provide their current
levels of service and will restore some of the things that were cut from the 2013 levels. The
budget supports the creation of a housing trust fund start-up at $50,000. It addresses increased
insurance costs and replaces some contingency and sick-bank funding. It fully funds other
entities (e.g., CCTA) and provides maintenance contracts for all city facilities. The Police
Department will get one additional officer and funding for phase one of a computer upgrade. The
budget also funds some requested social services funding. There is money for the new public
safety tower (the cost for this being split with CWD). There is also a designated reserve in
conjunction with the Burlington International Airport tax appeal which will be going to court
probably in late spring.
Mr. Hubbard said the budget doesn’t provide funds for all capital requests and doesn’t fund
Phase 2 of the facilities analysis. It doesn’t provide additional requested staff positions and
doesn’t fund renovations of Fire Station #2.
Mr. Hubbard then reviewed Enterprise Funds and noted that water rates will increase by 4.93%,
sewer rates by 2% and stormwater rates by 2.4%.
The total increase for an average condominium would be $77.06 for the year (6.42 a month) and
for the average single family home $125.39 for the year (10.45 a month).
Mr. Lalonde asked whether the Police additional officer is the result of opiate problems. Mr.
Shaw and Ms. Nowak explained police issues and the necessity to have 2 full shifts They noted
this still doesn’t bring them all the way back to 2012 levels. Supt. Young praised the work of
the police officers assigned to the schools and said how grateful they are to have them there.
Mr. Simson briefly explained the origin of the Affordable Housing Trust and the work of the
Affordable Housing Committees.
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5. Review of Proposed FY16 School Budget:
Mr. Stewart presented the proposed budget.
The total FY16 budget is $45,747,228 which represents a 3.27% increase. The amount to be
raised from property taxes is $35,226,845 with the balance coming from tuitions, federal and
state funding for special ed, etc.
All of the labor contracts are settled with salaries going up 2.71% and benefits going up 2.53%.
Operating costs are up 6.8%, but debt service is down 4.75%.
The tax on a $300,000 home would increase by $86 a year (7.19 a month) and on a $226,000
condo $59.00 (4.90 a month). The non-resident tax rate is up 2.59%.
The biggest challenge this year is a drainage issue at Orchard School. The work is now 80%
completed, and the rest is expected to be done in early spring. Money was “moved around” to
pay for this.
The projection is that FY15 will end with expenditures $290,000 below the budget. This is due
in part to revenues being projected at $250,000 above what was anticipated. The left over funds
will go into the FY17 budget.
Mr. Stewart briefly updated FY15 activities including the settlement of all contracts with
bargaining units, a new roof at Chamberlin School and the High School, a new elevator at Tuttle
Middle School. The High School window project has been redefined due to the presence of
PCBs in the caulking. There will be new RFPs. The High School elevator project has been
separated into two phases over 2 summers. The High School rest room upgrade for ADA
compliance is in the planning stage.
A new curriculum for Middle School Math was purchased for grades 6-8, and planning for new
science standards has begun. The one-to-one laptop computer initiative was extended to the
planned level of grades 7-12.
Supt. Young said the budget represents the needed staffing levels and resources for students to
achieve goals. The budget represents increases in student/teacher ratio in some core classrooms.
This will allow for resources to be redeployed to help meet federal and state requirements.
There is increased support for ELL and speech/language pathology services. There will be
Math coaching for elementary teachers to improve instruction to meet new standards. There
will also be increased support to continue to integrate technology education into the classroom.
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Facilities projects in the budget include: summer painting, High School ADA access (ramp, etc.),
Roof restoration at Orchard School, fire alarm upgrade and gym locker replacement at Tuttle,
and fire panel replacement at Chamberlin. Supt. Young said there is much more diligence being
paid to facilities than in the past.
Mr. Stewart said they are working to get the income sensitivity piece into the budget book. Ms.
Nowak noted that 80% of people qualified for some reimbursement.
Ms. Emery asked about curriculum changes to the high school from common core. Supt. Young
said they have been diligent about professional development regarding common core. They are
looking at growth plans in the school to be ready for this. The Superintendent stressed there
will be no reduction in programs. He did cite the need for schools to be more collaborative in
the future.
Mr. LaLonde was concerned that this may be a tough budget to pass for the “wrong reasons.”
He felt there might be backlash because of the strike although it had a good result in the end.
There are also issues at the state level which the public attributes to local control. Mr. Simson
said he thought people expected a big hike in salaries and benefits because of the strike, and the
school district needs to stress that didn’t happen.
5. Legislative Update:
Mr. LaLonde said the Education Committee meetings have a high level of interest and are
packed with people. He didn’t know if there will be a solution this session because of the
number of suggestions coming in. There are many problems to solve because schools are run so
differently across the state. He noted specifically the number of small schools which raise
property taxes for others.
Mr. LaLonde noted there is also work being done at the Legislature regarding the water quality
of Lake Champlain. Mr. Shaw said he felt South Burlington should get credit for it Stormwater
Utility.
Ms. Nowak noted how many local officials and administrators came together to talk about
education funding, and the resolution that resulted has been signed by more than 40
communities.
6. Other Items to Come Before the Committee:
Supt. Young noted this is School Board member Diane Bugbee’s last Steering Committee
meeting. He said she has been a strong advocate for the community and schools and thanked
her for her service.
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Mr. Simson noted this is also his last meeting as an interim City Councilor and said he has
enjoyed the experience.
As there was no further business to come before the Committee, Ms. Emery moved to adjourn.
Mr. Shaw seconded. Motion passed unanimously, and the meeting was adjourned at 8:40 p.m.
___________________________________
Clerk