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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2021-10-07 Info Packet City Council I nformation Packet October 7, 2021 IP1.Council Tentative Meeting S chedule Miscellaneous IP2.Memo from P ublic Works Director: S eptember 29, 2021 L etter of Non- Compliance Wastewater L imitations, 567 I A C 64.3(1) IP3.L etter from J ohnson County Board of S upervisors: Formal Objection to current F ringe A rea Agreement renewal IP4.Article from City Manager: L ow census counts rattle college towns IP5.National L eague of Cities: City F iscal Conditions 2021 IP6.2021 B uilding Statistics IP7.Civil S ervice E xamination: Maintenance Worker I I I - Cemetery IP8.Civil S ervice E xamination: Senior Accountant Revenue Draft Minutes IP9.Ad Hoc Truth & Reconciliation Commission: S eptember 30 IP10.Human Rights Commission: September 28 October 7, 2021 City of Iowa City Page 1 Item Number: 1. October 7, 2021 Council Ten tative Meeting Sched u l e AT TAC HM E NT S : Description Council Tentative Meeting S chedule City Council Tentative Meeting Schedule Subject to change October 7, 2021 Date Time Meeting Location Monday, October 18, 2021 4:30 PM Joint Entities Meeting Zoom Meeting Platform Hosted by City of University Heights Tuesday, October 19, 2021 4:00 PM Work Session The Center, Assembly Room 6:00 PM Formal Meeting 28 S. Linn Street Tuesday, November 16, 2021 4:00 PM Work Session The Center, Assembly Room 6:00 PM Formal Meeting 28 S. Linn Street Tuesday, November 30, 2021 4:00 PM Work Session The Center, Assembly Room 6:00 PM Formal Meeting 28 S. Linn Street Tuesday, December 14, 2021 4:00 PM Work Session The Center, Assembly Room 6:00 PM Formal Meeting 28 S. Linn Street Tuesday, January 4, 2022 8:00 AM Special Formal (Organizational Meeting)The Center, Assembly Room 28 S. Linn Street Tuesday, January 4, 2022 4:00 PM Work Session The Center, Assembly Room 6:00 PM Formal Meeting 28 S. Linn Street Saturday, January 8, 2022 8:00 AM Budget Work Session The Center, Assembly Room 28 S. Linn Street Wednesday, January 12, 2022 3:00 PM Budget Work Session (CIP)The Center, Assembly Room 28 S. Linn Street Tuesday, January 18, 2022 4:00 PM Work Session The Center, Assembly Room 6:00 PM Formal Meeting 28 S. Linn Street Tuesday, February 1, 2022 4:00 PM Work Session The Center, Assembly Room 6:00 PM Formal Meeting 28 S. Linn Street Tuesday, February 15, 2022 4:00 PM Work Session The Center, Assembly Room 6:00 PM Formal Meeting 28 S. Linn Street Tuesday, March 1, 2022 4:00 PM Work Session The Center, Assembly Room 6:00 PM Formal Meeting 28 S. Linn Street Tuesday, March 22, 2022 4:00 PM Work Session The Center, Assembly Room 6:00 PM Formal Meeting 28 S. Linn Street Item Number: 2. October 7, 2021 Memo from Public Works Director: Sep temb er 29, 2021 Letter of Non - Compliance Wastewater Limitations, 567 IAC 64.3(1) AT TAC HM E NT S : Description Memo from P ublic Works Director: S eptember 29, 2021 L etter of Non-Compliance Wastewater L imitations, 567 I A C 64.3(1) Item Number: 3. October 7, 2021 Letter from Joh n son County Board of Supervisors: F ormal O b j ection to cu rrent F rin g e Area Agreemen t renewal AT TAC HM E NT S : Description L etter from J ohnson County Board of S upervisors: Formal Objection to current Fringe Area Agreement renewal Item Number: 4. October 7, 2021 Articl e from City Manag er: Low census counts rattl e colleg e towns AT TAC HM E NT S : Description Article from City Manager: L ow census counts rattle college towns 10/7/2021 Low census counts rattle college towns | Higher Ed Dive https://www.highereddive.com/news/low-census-counts-rattle-college-towns/607504/1/10 S DEEP DIVE Low census counts rattle college towns As population tallies roll out, campuses and city halls worry a census interrupted by COVID-19 could choke available public dollars. Published Oct. 4, 2021 By Daniel C. Vock teve Patterson, the mayor of Athens, Ohio, had hoped last year's census would bring the city some good news. Athens, home of Ohio University, was just shy of 25,000 people, and breaking that threshold would make the city eligible for grants and other funding reserved for larger cities. But then the COVID-19 pandemic swept across the country just as the once-a-decade headcount was about to begin. College towns were already hard to count, but now universities were sending away students just weeks before April 1, the day residencies were officially tallied. University administrators, census counters and local government leaders like Patterson would spend the next several months trying to pin down where college students had lived in Athens before the coronavirus scattered them. But in Athens and many other places, local officials fear the counts came up short. New data released by the U.S. Census Bureau last month showed that, in the decade between 2010 and 2020, Athens gained just 17 people. That would be only 23,849 people — far short of the 24,984 that the Census Bureau had estimated lived in Athens as recently as 10/7/2021 Low census counts rattle college towns | Higher Ed Dive https://www.highereddive.com/news/low-census-counts-rattle-college-towns/607504/2/10 2019. If the new census numbers are mistaken, they could be costly for the city. The difference between the 2019 estimates and the 2020 final numbers could result in the loss of $16 million over the next decade in federal Community Development Block Grant money, Patterson said. "That's a significant amount of money that could be going to city infrastructure, to school districts, to social services," said Patterson, who is the president-elect of the International Town & Gown Association. Many other college towns find themselves in similar situations. While some big university towns boomed over the last decade, others have unexpectedly low counts or even reported declines in their populations. The disappointing census numbers are particularly worrying in cities where colleges and universities dominate the local economy. They're concerning for higher ed, too, because university operations are closely intertwined with their local governments. "Every great university has a great town that surrounds it, and every great town has a great university in it," said Stephen Gavazzi, an Ohio State University professor who studies town-gown relationships. "Once you start to see the deteriorating effect on one side or the other, it drags the other down." Long-Held Fears College and local officials have been bracing for low census counts ever since COVID-19 started spreading in the U.S. "There has been great concern for as long as people knew that there was a pandemic that was going to be getting in the way of the 10/7/2021 Low census counts rattle college towns | Higher Ed Dive https://www.highereddive.com/news/low-census-counts-rattle-college-towns/607504/3/10 census," Gavazzi said. "The actual census numbers just simply confirmed what everyone feared was going to happen." Once the problem became clear, though, institutions of higher education and local officials tried to mitigate it as much as possible. At Penn State University, the university attempted to promote filling out census forms through social media and email messages from student leaders. It reached out to parents to explain that their children should be registered at their campus addresses if the students normally lived there during the school year. "There has been great concern for as long as people knew that there was a pandemic that was going to be getting in the way of the census." Stephen Gavazzi Professor at Ohio State University Like many universities, Penn State provided the Census Bureau with its full directory of students living on campus. It also forwarded residential information about students living off campus. But the cascading crises of 2020 made it hard to get the message out to students, as they scattered far from campus. Many students spent the rest of the semester and summer at their family residences, said Charima Young, Penn State's director of local government and community relations. "As a result, interest waned during the pandemic as they were bombarded with messaging and guidance about the pandemic 10/7/2021 Low census counts rattle college towns | Higher Ed Dive https://www.highereddive.com/news/low-census-counts-rattle-college-towns/607504/4/10 locally and nationally," Young said. "The focus became safety, stability and survival for many individuals and families." The university pushed students to participate in the census in part because of the impact it would have on federal funding for local municipalities, she said. It could make more money available for housing, education, transportation and healthcare initiatives in the greater community. But getting students counted could directly impact their lives, as well, because the numbers could affect federal support for services such as hospitals, emergency response teams, police, public transportation and Pell Grants, Young said. "These are benefits they use and which really resonated with them, particularly Pell Grant funding," she said. Despite those efforts, the census found that the population for the borough of State College, where Penn State's flagship campus is located, dropped in the last decade by 1,533 people. Last year's count of 40,051 residents was also lower than the Census Bureau's projections from the year before. That's left borough officials weighing their options for how to respond, including a potential challenge to the official count. That process cannot begin until December, and it could stretch on for years. The adjusted numbers could be used for population-based funding formulas, but they would not affect the population numbers used for political redistricting. For now, the main concern among borough officials is getting ahold of as much data as they can to see where any discrepancies occurred. They plan to look at hard-to-count Census tracts and see what their vacancy rates in apartments were, whether there were any issues with postal delivery of census forms to those areas, and 10/7/2021 Low census counts rattle college towns | Higher Ed Dive https://www.highereddive.com/news/low-census-counts-rattle-college-towns/607504/5/10 other relevant information, said Douglas Shontz, the assistant to the borough manager there. The borough is also asking for help from federal officials to see if they can get more information about how the Census Bureau handled the different challenges that affected college towns. And it would like financial help if it pursues a recount, because the Census Bureau currently requires municipalities to pay for those challenges, Shontz said. Those costs could be as high as $200,000. Justin Sullivan via Getty Images Officials in East Lansing, the home of Michigan State University, had hoped that their city would finally break the 50,000-person threshold. The city was at 48,579 people after the 2010 census and, like many college towns, had seen plenty of new student housing being built in the years since. The 50,000-person mark was significant, because it would make the city eligible for more kinds of federal grants. Instead, East Lansing's population dropped to 47,741 last year. 10/7/2021 Low census counts rattle college towns | Higher Ed Dive https://www.highereddive.com/news/low-census-counts-rattle-college-towns/607504/6/10 Michigan State had tried to help with the census counts by sharing student data with the bureau. It not only uploaded information on students living on campus, it also submitted the records of 17,000 students living off campus, said Janet Lillie, Michigan State's assistant vice president for community relations. Now, though, Michigan State and East Lansing officials will have to investigate whether the census's low numbers resulted from an undercount or just a shift in student living patterns. The neighboring city of Lansing, Michigan's capital, also saw a drop in population. But nearby suburban areas recorded growth. Figuring that out could be complicated, though, Lillie said, because the Census Bureau won't say whether it used the data that Michigan State shared to come up with its estimates for off- campus housing. Read More in Policy & Legal Still a hazy picture Beyond a few prominent examples, it's hard to tell for certain right now how common undercounts were in college towns during the 2020 Census. FTC threatens hey penalties against for-profit colleges for false claims, warning 70 schools Oct 06, 2021 Student-athletes can now earn big off their celebrity. A new bill would tax their scholarships. Oct 01, 2021 Nearly all through cl program w who went colleges Sep 30, 202 10/7/2021 Low census counts rattle college towns | Higher Ed Dive https://www.highereddive.com/news/low-census-counts-rattle-college-towns/607504/7/10 "Overall, we found that the 2020 Census results from the redistricting data are comparable to the population benchmarks we've examined," Census Bureau researchers said when the agency released its initial 2020 counts. The analyses did not include any specific tests for college towns. But the agency compared the results of its hand count to projections of what various populations were expected to be. For example, it looked at how county populations compared with projections, as well as demographic groups such as people over 18 years old, people of Hispanic origin and various racial groups. The bureau also plans to take a closer look at the accuracy of its 2020 count, a step it takes after every decennial tally. Part of that process this time will look at how to improve the accuracy of counts in privately owned student housing for universities. What's more, the Census Bureau has not yet released the full findings from the 2020 count. Its initial batch of data contained the information most helpful for state legislatures, city councils and other government bodies that need to draw new electoral district lines to reflect the changing populations. But the Census Bureau still has to release more granular data that would make it possible to see how many 18- to 24-year-olds lived in a neighborhood. That's important, because neighborhoods that have traditionally been college housing don't necessarily stay that way. In Ann Arbor, Michigan, for example, it appears that the tracts where students tend to live at least maintained their population, said Lisa Neidert, a sociology lecturer at the University of Michigan who teaches courses on federal data and statistics. But available information doesn't show whether all of the students were counted correctly, she said. 10/7/2021 Low census counts rattle college towns | Higher Ed Dive https://www.highereddive.com/news/low-census-counts-rattle-college-towns/607504/8/10 "They've added a lot of housing downtown, and it could be that 65- year-olds find it appealing as well. The kids are gone, and they're done with their big lawns. They want to walk or take a cab somewhere," Neidert said. "So they live in what would be an attractive student neighborhood." Michael Cline, North Carolina's state demographer, is also waiting for more information. "It is too early to come to any conclusions about the 2020 census counts — whether it be in college towns or anywhere else," he said in an email. "I don't yet see any glaring issues with the counts." He said the census counts for dormitories, for example, were in line with what universities reported their populations to be. Cline also said the federal population numbers for North Carolina cities seemed similar to the state's projections. "Even when the census does count students, it seems to be messing up their race data quite a bit." Hamilton Lombard Demographer for the University of Virginia Weldon Cooper Center for Public Service In neighboring Virginia, though, some demographers are concerned about college town counts. Hamilton Lombard, a demographer for the University of Virginia Weldon Cooper Center for Public Service, said he found several instances of population counts that didn't match with what's going on in college towns. 10/7/2021 Low census counts rattle college towns | Higher Ed Dive https://www.highereddive.com/news/low-census-counts-rattle-college-towns/607504/9/10 In the city of Radford in southwestern Virginia, for example, students who attend Radford University make up more than half the population. There has been a "fairly significant increase" in the number of students living in dorms over the last decade, Lombard said, but the census figures showed a population decline for the city. Lombard is part of the Demographics Research Group, which releases its own population estimates. The biggest differences between what the group projected and what the Census Bureau released, Lombard said, were in localities with colleges or jails. "Even when the census does count students, it seems to be messing up their race data quite a bit," Lombard said. At the University of Virginia, the Census Bureau's count showed three times as many Asian students as were at the university, he said. Finding the reason for those discrepancies is time consuming, and it requires researchers to look at individual census blocks for issues. In Charlottesville, which is home to the University of Virginia, Lombard's group found one large apartment complex that had a population of about 750 students. But the census figures showed a population for that area that was half that total, Lombard said. That sort of granular analysis will be harder with 2020 census figures than with previous headcounts, though, because the Census Bureau has intentionally added "noise" in its data to protect the residents' privacy. That means the bureau swaps data about respondents from one area to a nearby area so that the public won't be able to single out individual people. That won't have much of an impact on the results at the citywide level, but it could skew results for very small geographic areas. 10/7/2021 Low census counts rattle college towns | Higher Ed Dive https://www.highereddive.com/news/low-census-counts-rattle-college-towns/607504/10/10 Lombard said he thinks the problems he's encountered with college towns and other places with lots of group quarters are not unique to Virginia. But he doesn't expect an outcry, either. "One reason why demographers are probably a little reluctant to start criticizing 2020 census data is because they don't want to undermine people's trust in the data," he said. "But I think they're going to start bumping into it and realizing there's just problems with the 2020 Census." Item Number: 5. October 7, 2021 Nation al Leag u e of Cities: City F iscal Con d ition s 2021 AT TAC HM E NT S : Description National L eague of Cities: City F iscal Conditions 2021 City Fiscal Conditions 2021 About the National League of Cities (NLC) The National League of Cities (NLC) is the voice of America’s cities, towns and villages, representing more than 200 million people. NLC works to strengthen local leadership, influence federal policy and drive innovative solutions. NLC’s Center for City Solutions provides research and analysis on key topics and trends important to cities, creative solutions to improve the quality of life in communities, inspiration and ideas for local officials to use in tackling tough issues, and opportunities for city leaders to connect with peers, share experiences and learn about innovative approaches in cities. About the Authors Christiana K. McFarland, PhD is the National League of Cities research director in the Center for City Solutions. Michael A. Pagano, PhD is the former dean of the College of Urban Planning and Public Affairs and former director of the Government Finance Research Center at the University of Illinois at Chicago. Acknowledgements Many thanks to the hard work of Dr. Farhad Kaab Omeyr, Program Director, Research and Data and Jacob Gottlieb, Research Specialist in the Center for City Solutions who collected general fund data on nearly 300 of the nation’s largest cities and supported this year’s analysis and report. The authors also gratefully acknowledge the respondents to this year’s fiscal survey. The commitment of finance officers to the project is critical to its continued success. NATIONAL LEAGUE OF CITIES Photo credits: All photos credited to Gettyimages, 2021. ©2021 National League of Cities. All Rights Reserved. Contents 5  Foreword 12  Revenue and Spending Trends 14  Tax Sources 16  Ability to Meet Needs 18  American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) 21  Beyond 2021 22  Appendices 27  Endnotes 54 Foreword ONE YEAR AGO, CITIES WERE FACING ECONOMIC UNCERTAINTY AS THE COVID-19 pandemic decimated local budgets and forced cuts to critical municipal programs, jobs, and rollbacks of capital projects. Unemployment was up, revenues were down, and Americans across the country desperately needed help. If you had asked me a year ago what economic shape our cities would be in, I would have expressed extreme concern – without federal support, communities were facing revenue shortfalls that would have taken decades to recover from on their own. A lot has changed in the last year. Vaccines are now giving our communities hope and a path forward to bringing the pandemic to an end. As cities rebuild, we’re finding opportunities to address longstanding health, social and economic inequities. We have found alternate ways of working and adapting to the new normal. And critically, the National League of Cities, in working with our state municipal leagues and local leaders from cities, towns and villages across the country, delivered unprecedented federal relief to respond to a once-in-a-generation crisis, distributing $65.1 billion dollars directly to local governments to fuel America’s recovery through the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA). Federal assistance is transformative when applied in close partnership with local governments. ARPA and other federal recovery programs delivered resources directly to communities of all sizes, replacing revenue and allowing city leaders to protect residents through rental and utility assistance programs, small business grants, vaccination clinics, and countless other initiatives that help keep residents safe and businesses open. What this year’s City Fiscal Conditions survey shows us is that the partnership between federal and local governments is working, preventing much more severe economic challenges and empowering communities to focus on programs that best support their needs. We aren’t out of the woods yet; there is much more work to do to get our communities back to normal. But thankfully, the foundation has been laid to rebuild our national economy, one Main Street at a time. CLARENCE E. ANTHONY CEO AND EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR National League of Cities 76NLC CITY FISCAL CONDITIONS 2021NATIONAL LEAGUE OF CITIES Introduction As demonstrated by a strong start to the fiscal year, 2020 was set to be the first opportunity for city revenue expansion beyond pre-Great Recession levels. After nearly a decade of slow recovery, city general fund revenues finally regained their losses in 2019. However, City Fiscal Conditions 2021 reveals that in just the first few months of the COVID-19 pandemic, all revenue gains cities had made for the year were wiped out. This year’s analysis of survey and fiscal data from 444 cities finds that on balance, cities ended FY 2020 with a revenue loss, the first since the Great Recession, and budgeted further decline as they close the books on FY 2021. Although significant, these losses pale in comparison to what could have been without federal intervention and other key factors. To start, cities’ general tax receipts depend on their authority to collect taxes from real estate (which all cities can do), retail sales (which is authorized by more than half of the nation’s municipalities), income or wages (a tax authorized by slightly more than 10% of all cities located in just a few states), utilities, and other sources. Each of those was affected differently by the pandemic. Property tax receipts in 2020 were not expected to change significantly in response to the pandemic because of the lag between assessments and billing practices. Substantial changes in real estate prices in 2020 would not normally be registered for one to three years later. In fact, as expected, real estate tax receipts increased in 2020 and even slightly in 2021. Yet, the real estate market in much of the nation surged in the spring and summer of 2021, several months after cities approved their FY 2021 budgets. Consequently, the property tax projections for FY 2021 may be conservative. As discussed below, real estate remained generally stable to strong during the pandemic. Retail sales tax receipts registered a decline in FY 2020 as well as FY 2021 (budgeted), which is not unexpected given the decline in household spending. Nevertheless, most cities in the U.S. were allowed to collect online retail sales taxes, which they were prohibited from doing during the Great Recession. The U.S. Supreme Court’s South Dakota v. Wayfair decision (138 S.Ct. 2080 (2018)) helped blunt what could have been a disastrous fiscal situation for sales-tax dependent cities. Even with the legal authority to collect online sales taxes (in June, Missouri became the last state to allow online sales taxes to be collected for cities), city sales tax receipts declined in FY 2020 and were expected to decline again, although less so, in FY 2021. The third major general tax on income and wages was affected as unemployment soared in the second quarter of 2020, reducing collections. Of course, a major factor that tempered losses by the municipal sector this year was proactive federal policy. In addition to federal support COVID-19 & FISCAL CONDITIONS: A TIMELINE (JULY 2019-JULY 2021) COVID-19 declared national emergency CARES Act signed Paycheck Protection Flexibility Act signed Start of FY2021 for most cities Student loan payment relief extended COVID vaccine distribution begins Homeowner protections extended American Rescue Plan Act signed Home prices surge Delta variant detected in all U.S. states Emergency Aid for returning Americans signed Start of FY2020 for most cities Start of FY2022 for most cities FY2021 REVENUE DECLINE REVENUE DECLINE (BUDGETED) FY2020 PRE-PANDEMIC REVENUE GROWTH AUG SEP OCT OCT NOV NOV DEC DEC DEC JAN JANFEB FEB MAR MAR APR MAY MAY JUN JUN JUL JUL AUG SEP APR JUL 98NLC CITY FISCAL CONDITIONS 2021NATIONAL LEAGUE OF CITIES for households and businesses (cash, grants, loans, eviction moratorium, insurance benefits) throughout 2020 and 2021 that impeded an economic freefall and created more stable local tax bases, large local governments were provided direct relief through the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act in March 2020, and all cities, towns and villages across the U.S. were provided relief as part of the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) that passed in March 2021. For most of the cities in the study, their fiscal years end June 30, which means that the funds from the federal CARES act arrived at least in part to support their FY 2020 budgets while for cities with fiscal years ending December 31, all of the CARES Act funding would have been included in their FY 2020 budgets. If we assess cities’ fiscal positions over a two-year period to smooth out these differences, rather than just one as is the norm, the data would indicate that cities recovered much of their FY 2020 losses by FY 2021 such that FY 2021 budgets are only slightly smaller than FY 2019 budgets. This suggests that CARES act provided support for cities in the second and third quarters of 2020 that, in the absence of federal funding, could have been catastrophic. Additionally, at the time of FY 2021 budgeting (for many June 2020), direct relief via ARPA was not in sight, indicating that the FY 2021 budgeted revenues will likely prove conservative. The combination of a strong real estate market, a landmark court decision allowing cities to collect online sales taxes and federal support, offset by other changes in the economic base of cities, led to decline in revenues in FY 2020 and a projected decline in FY 2021, but by less than they would have experienced had the pandemic taken place just a decade ago. ...a major factor that tempered losses by the municipal sector this year was proactive federal policy. “ Fiscal Structure and the Economy Fiscal Year Start Month and Budget Response Cities in the U.S. generate the majority of their revenue by designing their own tax and fee structures within limits imposed by their states. As a consequence, cities’ fiscal structures vary across the country, with some relying heavily on property taxes and others primarily on sales taxes. Only a few cities—approximately one in 10—rely mostly on income or wage taxes. Each source of revenue responds to economic changes differently. Local property tax revenues are driven by the value of residential and commercial property, with property tax bills determined by local governments’ assessment of property values. Because of assessment practices, property tax revenues typically reflect the value of a property anywhere from 18 months to several years prior, so they are less immediately responsive to economic changes than other types of taxes. While property tax revenues are considered a lagged indicator of economic changes, sales taxes are elastic – or more responsive to economic changes – and often better reflect economic shifts. This is because people tend to spend more on goods and services when consumer confidence is high, and vice versa. Like sales taxes, income taxes are also a more elastic source of revenue. At the city level, income tax revenues are driven primarily by income and wages, rather than by capital gains (New York City is a notable exception). Although the federal government’s fiscal year begins October 1 and 46 state fiscal years begin July 1, city fiscal years vary, many beginning January 1, July 1 or October 1, with some during other months. Because fiscal years start at different times, some cities’ 2020 fiscal years were just beginning as the coronavirus spread, meaning their budgets were facing the full brunt of the economic downturn throughout 2020, while others, which started their fiscal years in 2019, reaped the benefits of a stronger economy and only felt the downturn in the tail end of their fiscal year. Consequently, measuring the severity and impact of the coronavirus on cities’ FY 2020 and FY 2021 budgets will be influenced by when the fiscal year begins. When considering these variations in fiscal years on the overall trends experienced by cities nationwide, the aggregate impact will appear muted in the short term, with the true depth of impact more evident in subsequent years as budgets absorb the economic hit. Given that most cities’ FY 2020 budget only captures a couple of months of the pandemic recession, fiscal year 2020 more closely represents a pre- recession baseline of city fiscal conditions. Additionally, many cities’ FY 2021 budget processes were taking place in Spring and early Summer of 2020, a time of immense uncertainty and prior to the passage of the American Rescue Plan Act. Therefore, it is likely that FY 2021 revenue estimates are conservative. 11NLC CITY FISCAL CONDITIONS 202110NATIONAL LEAGUE OF CITIES OtherOctoberJulyJanuary 26%51%19%4% SHARE OF CITIES WITH FISCAL YEAR START MONTH (THOSE IN THE 2021 SAMPLE) 1312NLC CITY FISCAL CONDITIONS 2021NATIONAL LEAGUE OF CITIES Revenue and Spending Trends T HIS ANALYSIS EXAMINES YEAR-OVER- year growth of general fund expenditures and revenues, adjusts for inflation (constant dollars) and includes fiscal data over several years.1 Specifically, FY 2020 is the fiscal year for which finance officers have closed the books (and therefore have verified the final numbers) and FY 2021 is the fiscal year that ended by June 30 for most cities and will end by December 31 for others, but for which it may be too soon for figures to be finalized. Therefore, this analysis includes final data for cities’ FY 2020 revenues and expenditures and budgeted FY 2021 revenues and expenditures. Constant-dollar general fund revenues declined about one percent in FY 2020, with cities anticipating further year-over-year decline of two percent for FY 2021. Constant-dollar general fund expenditures outpaced revenues with 1.34% growth over 2019, with nearly no growth expected for FY 2021 over 2020. Cities slowed their pace of spending to ensure balanced budgets, often resulting in delayed and canceled capital projects, hiring freezes and layoffs, reforms to public safety and cuts to services, such as parks and recreation. Bridgeport, CT, for instance, budgeted for a sharp 21.36% decline in FY 2021 general fund expenditures compared to FY 2020, largely due to an $85 million decrease in public safety expenditures. Chula Vista, CA, as another example, budgeted FY 2021 general fund expenditures at $158.6 million, a 26.61% decline compared to $216 million in FY 2020. This significant decline in spending is mainly due to $38 million, $13 million, and $8 million declines FIGURE 1. YEAR OVER YEAR CHANGE IN GENERAL FUND REVENUES AND EXPENDITURES Figure 1: Year-Over-Year Change in General Fund Revenues and Expenditures -6% -4% -2% 0% 2% 4% 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 2020 Expenditures Revenues 2021 (budgeted) RECESSION TROUGH 11 / 2001 RECESSION TROUGH 06 / 2009 RECESSION TROUGH 04 / 2020 in capital outlays, public safety, and public works expenditures, respectively, over the last fiscal year. Even though the data indicate that on average, general fund revenues decreased in FY 2020 and are projected to decline further in FY 2021, the variation among cities is noteworthy. This variation is evident both in terms of the year- over-year revenue swings within particular cities as well as the number of cities outside of the typical range. In prior years, most cities’ revenue changes were within +/- two percentage points of the average. From FY 2019 to FY 2020, however, 65% of cities fell outside of this range; with 26% experiencing greater than five percent growth and seven percent experiencing greater than five percent decline. Some cities lost 15% or more of their revenue in FY 2020, while others increased their revenue by 10%. Interestingly, when assessing changes between FY 2020 (actual) and FY 2021 (budgeted), 81% of cities fall outside of the +/- two percentage points of the average range. However, only 18% budgeted for greater than five percent growth while 29% budgeted for more than five percent decline. Although the more widespread and deeper decline in budgeted FY 2021 revenues may be a conservative approach to account for continued health and economic uncertainties associated with COVID-19, the impacts on city services and operations remain. Figure 2 displays the FY 2020 – FY 2021 change in general fund revenues for 373 cities for which we have multiple years of data. In the map, the darker shades indicate more severe declines or greater growth, and the size of the bubble indicates the size of the city’s general fund. Murrieta, CA and Columbus, GA, for example, are among the cities that expect to experience a sharp decline in 2021 general fund revenues (33.39% and 24.95% declines, respectively). FIGURE 2. TOTAL CHANGE IN GENERAL FUND REVENUE FY 2020 – FY 2021 Anaheim CA Cincinnati OH Detroit MI Las Vegas NVOakland CA Portland OR Warwick RI Cranston RI Portland ME Stockton CA Ann Arbor MI Columbus GA Gilbert AZ Goodyear AZ North Las Vegas NV Sioux Falls SD Arvada CO Blue Springs MO Bowling Green KY Caldwell ID Davenport IA Fargo ND Grand Forks NDGreat Falls MT Iowa City IA Lawrence KS Murrieta CA © 2021 Microsoft Corporation Mountain View CA Santa Monica CA Daly City CA Los Angeles CA Oxnard CA Source: NLC analysis of data from the City Fiscal Conditions survey and annual financial reports. (-) change No change (+) change Under $100,000 $100,000 to $200,000 $200,000 to $300,000 Over $300,000 FY 2021 General Fund Revenue (budgeted, in thousands USD) Source: NLC analysis of data from the City Fiscal Conditions survey and annual financial reports. 1514NLC CITY FISCAL CONDITIONS 2021NATIONAL LEAGUE OF CITIES Tax Sources T HREE PRINCIPAL GENERAL FUND revenue sources have been tracked for the annual City Fiscal Conditions report for over 25 years. As Figure 3 demonstrates, the year-to-year changes in each of the three major revenues—property, sales, income— reflect the changing elements of the underlying economic bases of the cities. The two revenue sources that respond immediately to changes in the underlying economy, sales tax and income tax, generally follow the business cycle and are considered elastic. As the economy slows, retail sales tax receipts and income tax revenue decline at the same time; as the economy grows, sales and income taxes tend to increase. Property tax receipts, however, lag the underlying economy’s changes due to assessment practices as well as to the fact that property does not change hands frequently requiring assessors to estimate the value of real estate property. Consequently, property tax receipts today tend to reflect the value of property from one, two or three years in the past. Consequently, the sharp and sudden closing of the economy in March 2020 may have reduced real estate values but not real estate tax collection because property tax bills in March 2020 reflected the property’s value a year or two prior to the shutdown. Both sales and income tax receipts in FY 2020 did indeed decline while the economy shut down due to COVID-19. But it’s also noteworthy that the decline in sales tax receipts was not as precipitous in FY 2020 as it was at the start of the Great Recession in FY 2009 and FY 2010. Federal intervention in the form of the CARES Act, extension of unemployment and other intergovernmental programs helped to soften the decline in the overall economy’s impact on municipal sales taxes. Property tax estimates...were made prior to the substantial increases in residential housing prices in May and June 2021...” Figure 3: Year-Over-Year Change in Sales, Income and Property Tax Receipts -10% -5% 0% 5% 2000 2005 2010 2015 2020 Sales Tax Property Tax Income Tax 2021 RECESSION TROUGH 11 / 2001 RECESSION TROUGH 06 / 2009 (budgeted) RECESSION TROUGH 04 / 2020 FIGURE 3. YEAR OVER YEAR CHANGE IN GENERAL FUND TAX SOURCES Property tax receipts grew during FY 2020 and FY 2021, but at a slower rate than in the previous six years. Property tax estimates that were used by cities to prepare their FY 2021 budgets were made in late 2019 (for cities whose fiscal years begin on January 1) and in mid-spring for cities whose budget years begin on July 1. In both cases, the estimates were made prior to the substantial increases in residential housing prices in May and June of 2021, suggesting that the FY 2021 estimates of property tax receipts may be quite conservative.2 “ Source: NLC analysis of data from the City Fiscal Conditions survey and annual financial reports. 1716NLC CITY FISCAL CONDITIONS 2021NATIONAL LEAGUE OF CITIES Infrastructure is reported by the largest share of finance officers as a top factor negatively impacting FY 2021 budgets. That infrastructure needs registered as a negative effect on cities’ fiscal position indicates the continued and mounting challenges cities face with infrastructure maintenance and development. Infrastructure projects usually require significant funding throughout the life of the project. Many cities were forced to pause infrastructure projects during the COVID-19 pandemic because of budgetary constraints. In College Station, TX water and sewer infrastructure projects that have been on pause since March 2020 will be able to restart because of an infusion of ARPA funding.3 Warrensville, OH plans to leverage recent federal funding to help the city complete infrastructure projects that were put on pause due to the pandemic.4 Figure 4: Share of Cities Better/Less Able to Meet Fiscal Needs -100% -50% 0% 50% 100% 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 2020 33% 65% 82% 12% 75% 19% 70% 22%21% 76%69% 58%57%56%63% 34% 68% 43% 80% 36% 81% 73%73% 45% 37% 65% 22% 54% 65%69% 13% 72% -67% -35% -18% -88% -25% -81% -30% -78%-79% -24%-31% -42%-43%-44%-37% -66% -32% -57% -20% -64% -19% -27%-27% -55% -63% -35% -78% -46% -35%-31% -87% -28% Better Able (%)Less Able (%) Ability to Meet Needs A LTHOUGH FY 2021 BUDGETS WERE expected to be more challenged than FY 2020, at the time of this survey, most finance officers (65%) report being better able to meet their financial needs in FY 2021 than 2020. This is a significant reversal from last year when nearly eight in 10 city finance officers indicated that their city was less able to meet financial needs in FY 2020 compared with 2019. These sentiments of finance officers are indicative of the overall fiscal response to the COVID-19 pandemic. While FY 2020 started out strong for most cities, the end of the fiscal year and start of FY 2021 coincided with the start of the pandemic, resulting in significant and immediate revenue losses and vast uncertainty about the months and years ahead. While health, economic and fiscal conditions are still precarious, ARPA, which provided funding to all cities, towns and villages, signaled an opportunity for greater fiscal stability and economic rebuilding, contributing to a more positive outlook by city finance officers. Indeed, when asked about those factors having the most significant positive impact on their cities’ ability to balance their budgets in FY 2021, more than eight in 10 finance officers indicated federal aid. The next highest response, with seven in 10 reporting, is the value of the city tax base. Despite continued economic challenges, the value of the city tax base as a positive factor again demonstrates the contours of the pandemic and its impact on city fiscal conditions. While immediate and deep losses were evident early on, conditions improved resulting in still depleted but more stable conditions relative to earlier losses. FIGURE 5. FEDERAL AID TOPS THE LIST AS THE MOST WIDELY CITED FACTOR POSITIVELY IMPACTING CITY BUDGETS (SHARE OF CITIES REPORTING ITEM AS ONE OF THREE FACTORS MOST ENABLING THEIR ABILITY TO BALANCE THE FY 2021 BUDGET)Figure 5: Federal Aid Tops the List as the Most Widely Cited Factor Positively Impacting City Budgets Amount of federal aid to city Value of city tax base Health of local economy Amount of state aid to city Population (number of people in the city) Employee wages and salaries Cost of employee/retiree health benefits Prices, inflation, costs Cost of employee/retiree pensions Oil prices Human/social service needs Infrastructure needs Public safety needs State mandates/requirements Federal mandates/requirements 81% 70% 39% 33% 16% 9% 5% 5% 4% 3% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% Figure 6: Infrastructure Needs Top the List as the Most Widely Cited Factor Negatively Impacting City Budgets Infrastructure needs Public safety needs Prices, inflation, costs Health of local economy Employee wages and salaries Cost of employee/retiree pensions Human/social service needs Cost of employee/retiree health benefits Value of city tax base Federal mandates/requirements State mandates/requirements Amount of state aid to city Oil prices Population (number of people in the city) Amount of federal aid to city 39% 38% 35% 32% 24% 22% 18% 9% 8% 4% 4% 3% 2% 1% 49% FIGURE 6. INFRASTRUCTURE NEEDS TOP THE LIST AS THE MOST WIDELY CITED FACTOR NEGATIVELY IMPACTING CITY BUDGETS (SHARE OF CITIES REPORTING ITEM AS ONE OF THREE FACTORS MOST HINDERING THEIR ABILITY TO BALANCE THE FY 2021 BUDGET) FIGURE 4. SHARE OF CITIES BETTER ABLE/LESS ABLE TO MEET FISCAL NEEDS Source: City Fiscal Conditions Survey (1986-2021) Source: City Fiscal Conditions 2021 Survey Source: City Fiscal Conditions 2021 Survey 1918NLC CITY FISCAL CONDITIONS 2021NATIONAL LEAGUE OF CITIES Figure 7: What are your city's top three spending priorities for the ARPA Local Relief Fund? Lost revenue Negative economic impacts (aid to households, small businesses, non-profits, impacted industries) Sewer Water Other Public health COVID-19 hard hit communities Essential worker pay (municipal) Broadband Essential worker pay (private sector) 67% 54% 27% 26% 24% 22% 17% 16% 12% 1% will dedicate less than 20% of their funds, with one in four cities allocating more than 60% of their funds to revenue replacement. The City of San Diego, for example, will dedicate 100% of its ARPA funds to revenue replacement. “With ARPA we have been able to expand general fund support for programs ranging from nonprofit and small business relief, workforce development, street infrastructure, homelessness services, youth services, climate change resiliency and equity,” noted Director of Finance, Rolando Charvel. Applying funding to replace revenue lost during the pandemic allows the city to address serious challenges that have been exacerbated by the pandemic. Recognizing the growing encampments of homeless people on the sidewalks of Downtown San Diego and the difficulty placing unsheltered people suffering from addiction into existing programs, Mayor Todd Gloria in partnership with the County detailed a new strategy to address the immediate and long-term challenges facing these vulnerable individuals.5 The city of Boulder, on the other hand, will allocate 20% of their federal award to support immediate community needs, including assistance on utility bills, rental assistance and economic recovery for small businesses, build a reserve for public health- related needs and restore services cut during the pandemic, including recreation services and public arts programming6. The city is setting aside the bulk of funding for longer-term projects. American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) A RPA WAS PASSED IN MARCH 2021, months after most cities had passed their FY 2021 budgets. To gauge how ARPA might affect final FY 2021 budgets and overall city operations, services and major investments, we asked finance officers about their city’s ARPA spending priorities. With ARPA planning ongoing, cities have until 2024 to fully commit their funds and until 2026 to spend them. Two in three cities are prioritizing replacing lost revenue (67%) with more than one in two (54%) also addressing negative economic impacts to households, small businesses, nonprofits and impacted industries. Lost revenues are those revenues that cities were expecting but were reduced or eliminated because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Cities have broad latitude to use funds for replacing lost revenue to provide government services that were affected by revenue reductions. These priorities indicate that in the immediate term, cities are focused on restoring fiscal stability and government operations and ensuring economic recovery to those in the community. Given that replacing lost revenue is a more immediate action that cities are taking with their ARPA funds, we asked finance officers what share of their federal award that they anticipate will ultimately be used to replace lost revenue. Of those using ARPA to replace any lost revenue, which represents most cities, the largest share FIGURE 7. WHAT ARE YOUR CITY’S TOP THREE SPENDING PRIORITIES FOR THE ARPA LOCAL RELIEF FUND?FIGURE 8. WHAT SHARE OF TOTAL ARPA FUNDS DOES YOUR CITY ANTICIPATE WILL GO TO REPLACE LOST REVENUE? (SHARE OF CITIES) Source: City Fiscal Conditions 2021 Survey Source: City Fiscal Conditions 2021 Survey Figure 8: What share of total ARPA funds does your city anticipate will go to replace lost revenue? 1-20% of Funds 21-40% of Funds 41-60% of Funds 61-80% of Funds 81-100% of Funds 32% 25% 18% 7% 18% 2120NLC CITY FISCAL CONDITIONS 2021NATIONAL LEAGUE OF CITIES Beyond 2021 T HE PAST YEAR HAS BEEN A turbulent one for city finances, with significant disparities and swings, a great deal of uncertainty and looming infrastructure needs. However, city finances did not fall off the cliff as initially forecasted. There are several reasons why this is the case, which provide lessons for creating greater fiscal resilience in the future: ‹Align fiscal structure with the economy: The Wayfair decision that allowed localities to collect sales tax revenue from online purchases was one of the few recent examples of efforts to align how cities collect revenues with the current realities of the economy. In 2018 when the Wayfair decision was made, the court could not have predicted the magnitude of impact that their decision would make on city finances just a few short years later. Other elements of city revenue structures, including property taxes, income taxes, and fines and fees, should similarly be assessed, realigned with current economic realities, and crafted in ways that ensure an equitable system. ‹ State intervention and flexibility that provides locals with fiscal policy tools to respond to changing economic conditions: States set the fiscal authorities and limitations of municipalities in their states. States can consider flexibilities or interventions during recessions, like suspending balanced budger requirements. During the pandemic, the state of Ohio permitted municipalities to continue to collect taxes on nonresidents’ income despite the fact that the work was performed outside the City (remote work), a decision that staved off fiscal calamity and a revenue loss of over $300 million in the state’s six largest cities alone.7 Unfortunately, the state later reversed this policy, requiring cities to return funds to non-resident remote workers for the 2021 tax year, a change that will impact Ohio cities significantly in 2022. ‹ Provide bold countercyclical federal support: Prompt and massive direct support to local governments, via the CARES Act and ARPA, support to households and businesses, as well as actions by the Federal Reserve stabilized local budgets. As noted by economist Richard McGahey, “Only the federal government has this capacity, and it used it correctly to stave off significant damage and a possible depression.”8 Until March 2020, cities did not experience unusual surges or declines in revenues. Most were on track for stable general fund revenue expansion. With the onset of COVID-19 in March 2020, revenues—especially the ‘elastic’ revenues, such as sales and income taxes—contracted substantially and quickly, resulting in general fund revenue decline on balance for the year. A strong real estate market, greater alignment of fiscal structure with the economy, state intervention and massive federal intervention stabilized what could have been a catastrophic impact on city fiscal positions. By and large, cooperative and collaborative intergovernmental policies placed cities in a better position to address their current and future needs. 2322NLC CITY FISCAL CONDITIONS 2021NATIONAL LEAGUE OF CITIES Appendix II: About the Survey T he NLC City Fiscal Conditions survey is a national survey of finance officers in U.S. cities conducted this year in June and July. Surveys were emailed to city finance officers from cities with populations greater than 10,000. Officers were asked to give their assessments of their cities’ fiscal conditions. The survey also requested budget and finance data from all but nearly 300 of the nation’s large cities; data for those cities were collected directly from online city budget documents. In total, the 2021 data were drawn from 443 cities out of the sample of 1,005 cities (48.3%). The data allow for generalizations about the fiscal conditions in cities. Much of the statistical data presented here must also be understood within the context of cross-state variations in tax authority, functional responsibilities and accounting systems. The number and scope of governmental functions influence both revenues and expenditures. For example, many Northeastern cities are responsible for funding not only general government functions but also public education. Additionally, some cities are required by their states to assume more social welfare responsibilities or traditional county functions. Cities also vary according to their revenue- generating authority. Certain states—notably Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio and Pennsylvania— allow their cities to tax earnings and wages. Meanwhile, several cities—such as those in Colorado, Louisiana, New Mexico and Oklahoma—depend heavily on sales tax revenues. Moreover, state laws vary in how they require cities to account for funds. When we report on fiscal data such as general fund revenues and expenditures, we are referring to all responding cities’ aggregated fiscal data. Therefore, the data are influenced by relatively larger cities that have more substantial budgets and that deliver services to a preponderance of the nation’s residents. When we report on non-fiscal data—such as finance officers’ assessments of their cities’ ability to meet fiscal needs, or factors they perceive as affecting their budgets—we refer to the percentage of officers responding in a particular way. Each city’s response to these questions is weighted equally, regardless of population size. Appendix I: The Lag Between Economic and City Fiscal Conditions In economic terms, the “lag” refers to the amount of time between economic conditions changing and those conditions having an impact on city revenue collections. In general, cities seem to feel the impacts of changing economic conditions quite early. However, because most fiscal reporting occurs on an annual basis, those impacts tend not to become evident until some point after they have started to occur. HOW LONG IS THE LAG? The lag can last anywhere from 18 months to several years and is largely related to the timing of property tax collections. Because property tax bills are calculated based on property assessments from a previous year, dips in real estate prices rarely occur simultaneously with economic downturns. Sales and income tax collections also exhibit lags due to various collection and administrative issues, but such lags typically do not last for more than a few months. Figure 4 shows year-to-year changes in city general fund revenues and expenditures. It includes markers for the official U.S. recessions from 1991, 2001 and 2007, with low points, or “troughs,” occurring in March 1991, November 2001 and June 2009.9 When we overlay data from NLC’s annual surveys, we find that the low points for city revenues and expenditures lag about two years behind the onset of recessions. For instance, the low point for the 1991 recession occurred in 1993, approximately two years after the trough (the recession took place between March 1991 and March 1993). Additionally, during the 2001 recession, the low point occurred in 2003, approximately 18 months after the trough (that recession lasted from November 2001 to April 2003). It should be noted, however, that because the annual NLC City Fiscal Conditions survey is conducted at slightly different times each year, there is some degree of error in the lengths of these lags. For instance, had the survey been conducted in November 1992 rather than in April 1993, we might have seen the effects of changing economic conditions earlier. Nevertheless, the evidence suggests that it takes 18-24 months for the effects of changing economic conditions to become evident in city budgets. Appendices POPULATION RESPONSES % 300,000+62 13% 100,000-299,999 155 32% 50,000-99,999 197 41% 10,000-49,999 71 15% Total 485 100% REGION RESPONSES % Northeast 37 8% Midwest 98 20% South 162 33% West 188 39% Total 485 100% 2524NLC CITY FISCAL CONDITIONS 2021NATIONAL LEAGUE OF CITIES YEAR REVENUES EXPENDITURES 1986 4.2%3.8% 1987 0.3%-0.1% 1988 3.6%2.0% 1989 0.7%-0.3% 1990 -0.4%1.9% 1991 -0.7%0.6% 1992 0.1%-0.5% 1993 0.6%-0.7% 1994 1.0%0.6% 1995 1.3%1.6% 1996 2.9%3.9% 1997 1.5%1.4% 1998 2.2%1.4% 1999 0.2%1.1% 2000 1.0%0.8% 2001 -0.5%2.0% 2002 0.0%3.1% 2003 -0.7%-1.1% 2004 -1.0%-0.4% 2005 1.6%0.1% 2006 1.9%1.9% 2007 -0.4%2.4% 2008 -1.1%0.4% 2009 -2.4%0.8% 2010 -4.7%-5.3% 2011 -1.9%-3.6% 2012 -2.0%-1.3% 2013 0.4%-0.2% 2014 0.8%1.1% 2015 3.9%3.8% 2016 3.5%3.0% 2017 1.3%2.2% 2018 0.6%1.9% 2019 3.5%0.6% 2020 -0.97%1.34% Appendix III: Data Tables FIGURE 1: YEAR OVER YEAR CHANGE IN GENERAL FUND REVENUES AND EXPENDITURES CITY SUM OF GF REV 21 SUM OF CHANGE IN GF REV 20-21 Los Angeles CA $6,687,342. 16% Detroit MI $1,153,300. 20% Portland OR $712,973. -16% Oakland CA $670,711. -19% Las Vegas NV $558,294. -18% Cincinnati OH $370,433. -17% Warwick RI $320,662. 19% Santa Monica CA $320,349. -15% Anaheim CA $314,974. -17% Cranston RI $298,816. 29% Stockton CA $223,450. -17% Portland ME $202,807. -32% Sioux Falls SD $185,600. -17% Gilbert AZ $178,868. -26% Columbus GA $155,382. -25% Mountain View CA $144,162. -19% Oxnard CA $131,600. -15% North Las Vegas NV $124,305. -19% Goodyear AZ $119,351. -22% Ann Arbor MI $113,847. 23% Lawrence KS $96,501. 37% Arvada CO $88,554. -19% Fargo ND $85,231. -19% Bowling Green KY $66,391. -16% Iowa City IA $59,441. 21% Davenport IA $53,243. -34% Murrieta CA $48,211. -33% Watsonville CA $38,621. -18% Grand Forks ND $38,054. -19% Great Falls MT $34,134. -21% Caldwell ID $26,439. -22% Blue Springs MO $24,030. -15% Daly City CA FIGURE 2: CHANGE IN GF REV 20-21 IS LESS THAN OR EQUAL TO -15% OR IS GREATER THAN OR EQUAL TO 15% 2726NLC CITY FISCAL CONDITIONS 2021NATIONAL LEAGUE OF CITIES Endnotes 1 Revenues and expenditures are adjusted for inflation by subtracting the year-over-year change in the Implicit Price Deflator for State & Local Government Purchases (S&L IPD) as defined by the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis. The change from 2019-2020 is 2.09%, based on the first two quarters of 2021 is 2.46%. 2 Olick, D. (2021, July 26). Housing boom is over as new home sales fall to pandemic low. CNBC. https://www.cnbc.com/2021/07/26/housing-boom-is-over-as-new-home-sales-fall-to- pandemic-low.html 3 M.E. Leonard (City Fiscal Conditions 2021 Survey, August 2021) 4 K. Howse (City Fiscal Conditions 2021 Survey, August 2021) 5 San Diego Community Newspaper Group. (2021, June 20). San Diego Mayor Gloria, County Chair Fletcher detail strategies to address chronic homelessness. http://www.sdnews.com/ view/full_story/27807021/article-San-Diego-Mayor-Gloria--County-Chair-Fletcher-detail- strategies-to-address-chronic-homelessness?instance=pb 6 Swearingen, D. (2021, September 9). Boulder City Council agrees to 2021 budget supplement. Daily Camera. https://www.dailycamera.com/2021/09/09/boulder-city-council- agrees-to-2021-budget-supplement/ 7 paid Patras, E. (2020, September 9). A Mortal Threat to Ohio’s Economic Competitiveness: SB352, HB754, and the Buckeye Institute Lawsuit. Greater Ohio Policy Center. https://www. greaterohio.org/publications/income-tax-rebuttal 8 McGahey, R. (2021, September 1). Why Didn’t Covid-19 Wreck State And City Budgets? Federal Spending. Forbes. https://www.forbes.com/sites/richardmcgahey/2021/09/01/why- didnt-covid-19-wreck-state-and-city-budgets-federal-spending/?sh=17e404ce7108 9 National Bureau of Economic Research. US Business Cycle Expansions and Contractions, http://www.nber.org/cycles.html FIGURE 3: YEAR OVER YEAR CHANGE IN SALES, INCOME AND PROPERTY TAX RECEIPTS YEAR SALES TAX INCOME TAX PROPERTY TAX 1996 3.5%-0.2%1.2% 1997 3.1%0.9%1.7% 1998 5.7%3.8%1.2% 1999 1.2%-0.3%0.3% 2000 2.5%-0.4%0.6% 2001 -6.0%-0.9%1.3% 2002 -3.1%-4.9%4.7% 2003 -2.1%-3.6%1.6% 2004 0.5%-2.8%2.8% 2005 1.2%-0.5%2.9% 2006 3.7%3.0%4.7% 2007 -0.9%-3.1%5.7% 2008 -2.2%-2.2%1.7% 2009 -6.5%1.4%4.3% 2010 -9.3%-1.9%-2.9% 2011 2.0%-2.1%-3.5% 2012 5.2%3.4%-1.5% 2013 2.3%1.9%-2.8% 2014 2.7%-2.1%2.0% 2015 5.7%6.0%4.0% 2016 3.3%4.6%5.1% 2017 1.8%1.3%2.6% 2018 0.2%0.8%1.8% 2019 5.0%2.7%3.3% 2020 -5.94%-2.67%1.96% 2021 (bud- geted) -5.74%-2.69%0.40% YEAR BETTER ABLE (%)LESS ABLE (%) 2021 65%-35% 2020 22%-78% 2019 76%-24% 2018 73%-27% 2017 69%-31% 2016 81%-19% 2015 82%-18% 2014 80%-20% 2013 72%-28% 2012 57%-43% 2011 43%-57% 2010 13%-87% 2009 12%-88% 2008 36%-64% 2007 70%-30% 2006 65%-35% 2005 63%-37% 2004 37%-63% 2003 19%-81% 2002 45%-55% 2001 56%-44% 2000 73%-27% 1999 75%-25% 1998 69%-31% 1997 68%-32% 1996 65%-35% 1995 58%-42% 1994 54%-46% 1993 34%-66% 1992 22%-78% 1991 21%-79% 1990 33%-67% FIGURE 4: SHARE OF CITIES BETTER/LESS ABLE TO MEET FISCAL NEEDS Item Number: 6. October 7, 2021 2021 Bu ildin g Statistics AT TAC HM E NT S : Description 2021 B uilding Statistics Item Number: 7. October 7, 2021 Civil Service Examin ation : Main ten ance Worker III - Cemetery AT TAC HM E NT S : Description Civil S ervice E xamination: Maintenance Worker I I I - Cemetery Item Number: 8. October 7, 2021 Civil Service Examin ation : Sen ior Accountant Reven u e AT TAC HM E NT S : Description Civil S ervice E xamination: Senior Accountant Revenue Item Number: 9. October 7, 2021 Ad Hoc Truth & Recon ciliation Commission: September 30 AT TAC HM E NT S : Description Ad Hoc Truth & Reconciliation Commission: S eptember 30 This meeting can be viewed at https://citychannel4.com/cgi-bin/vdb/ytp.pl?id=F21764 September 30, 2021 Draft Ad Hoc Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) Minutes Emma J. Harvat Hall City Hall Commissioners present: Amel Ali, Daphney Daniel (via Zoom), Chastity Dillard, Wangui Gathua, Eric Harris, Clifton Johnson, Sikowiss (Christine Nobiss via Zoom) Kevin Rivera, Mohamed Traore (via Zoom). Staff present: Stefanie Bowers, Redmond Jones, Geoff Fruin. Others present who spoke: Annie Tucker, Ninoska Campos. Recommendations to City Council: No. Meeting called to order: 7:03. Reading of Land Acknowledgement: Ali read the Land Acknowledgement. Vote to approve the meeting minutes from September 2, 2021 and September 16, 2021: Motion by Ali, seconded by Rivera. Motion passes 8-0. (Nobiss not present for the vote). Consider a Motion to hold meetings the 1st and 3rd Thursday of each month: Motion by Ali, seconded by Johnson. Motion passes 9-0. Discussion on City Council Vote on facilitator agreement and next steps: The discussion started on whether to ask the Council for clarification on the timeline prior to considering next steps for a facilitator. It then moved to a conversation on the TRC having the right to select the facilitator of their choice and one that has expertise in working with Truth and Reconciliation Commissions. Even though the facilitator was not local you don’t have to live in Iowa City for 30 years to get or understand the community. The current TRC must continue to exist because of people in the community who are not able to speak out and the TRC should exist indefinitely. If the TRC wishes to do a community survey the cost to operate the survey can be funded through the Human Rights Office’s budget. This survey can then be online and also brought to area organizations. The survey can be used as part of the fact-finding process that may assist in creating a framework to move forward on. The conversation also involved what could be done to heal the divide with the older African American community and the members of the TRC. At the next TRC meeting the TRC will consider a motion to request an extension of time from the Council for their existence. The TRC would like for someone to give a presentation on strategic planning possibly as soon as the next meeting. Community Comment on the TRC’s charges including fact-finding and truth-telling: Ninoska Campos relayed that the Excluded Workers Fund supports the TRC. Campos reports it has been hard to work here in Iowa City and that it is amazing that people are making it through this second waive of Covid. Her and other Excluded Workers are asking for economic relief and hazard pay. This meeting can be viewed at https://citychannel4.com/cgi-bin/vdb/ytp.pl?id=F21764 Community Circles are a way to help people deal with trauma. More people could be trained on using circles to heal trauma. Annie Tucker said that she is currently working on ways that more community members can be trained on circles. Announcements of Commissioners: Rivera thanked the persons on Zoom who believe in the work of the TRC. Dillard encourages commissioners and attendees to bring friends and families to the meetings so the TRC can hear from them. Harris thanked the City Manager and City Council members for attending this evening’s meeting. Daniel mentioned an upcoming expungement clinic that is being sponsored by the City of Iowa City and Iowa Legal Aid on Thursday, October 7 from 4-7 PM. Nobiss provided the history of Orange Shirt Day. A day of remembrance to commemorate the genocide of over 1,000 Indigenous children in unmarked graves. Gathua thanked the public for their support, mentioned a Kenya delegation that is visiting Iowa City and being hosted by the University of Iowa Center for Human Rights, and noted that October is Domestic Violence Awareness month. Adjourn: 8:53 PM AD HOC TRUTH & RECONCILIATION COMMISSION ATTENDANCE RECORD YEAR 2021 (Meeting Date) NAME TERM EXP. 4/15 4/29 5/13 5/27 6/10 6/24 7/8 7/22 8/5 8/19 9/2 9/16 9/30 10/7 Ali 6/22 X X X X X X X X X X X X X Daniel 6/22 X X X X X X O X O X X X X Dillard 6/22 X X X X O X X X X X X X X Gathua 6/22 X X X X X X X X X X X X X Johnson 6/22 X X X X X X X X X X X X X Harris 6/22 O X X X X X X X X X O X X Nobiss 6/22 X O X X X X X O X X X O X Rivera 6/22 X X X X X X X X X O X X X Traore 6/22 X X X X X X X X X X X X X KEY: X = Present O = Absent Item Number: 10. October 7, 2021 Hu man Rights Commission: September 28 AT TAC HM E NT S : Description Human Rights Commission: September 28