Posts Tagged ‘RPPS’

Rohnert Park Public Safety in Disarray

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

originally published at http://www.pressdemocrat.com

Rohnert Park fire commander says agency is in disarray

By JEREMY HAY
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT

Published: Monday, July 26, 2010 at 6:01 p.m.

The Rohnert Park Public Safety Department is in disarray, its fire division commander said Monday.

The division lacks support from managers and the City Council, it is hampered by senior officers resistant to change, and it is beset by low morale, Fire Commander Jack Rosevear said.

“The department’s in crisis,” said Rosevear, who took over the fire division in June 2008 and plans to run for City Council this year. “I’m not exaggerating. It’s not a matter of perspective, it’s the truth.”

Rosevear, who has said he will retire in August partly to save the jobs of younger firefighters facing potential layoffs, made his concerns known in an unusually public manner, delivering a statement to The Press Democrat and the weekly Community Voice newspaper.

He said his motive is to shed light on problems within the department — which provides both police and fire services — and lay the groundwork for necessary improvements.

“I’m not after payback, retribution, vengeance, anything like that. I’m after success,” he said.

City officials unanimously rejected the substance of Rosevear’s concerns, but were varied in their reactions, expressing responses ranging from irritation to bewilderment to praise of his performance.

“This is all a personnel issue that he’s putting in public,” said Mayor Pam Stafford. “This council doesn’t deal with disgruntled employees, that’s not our purview.”

Public Safety Director Brian Masterson, Rosevear’s boss, said, “Jack did a good job for us…he made some positive changes and I would say he was supported by all the members of public safety.”

He added: “I’m a big believer that people have the right to express their opinions however they want to do it and certainly Jack has voiced his.”

Vice-Mayor Gina Belforte said, “I can honestly say I don’t know what he’s talking about…I haven’t had any reason to believe there’s been a problem with fire.”

In his statement, Rosevear said the city’s firefighters and police officers are “the finest and most courageous” he’s ever worked with, then laid out a blistering catalogue of charges. They include:

– “A small group of senior police officers” have tried to undermine him through a steady whispering campaign because they resent changes he made that reduced their overtime;

– City leaders and Masterson prioritize police services over fire services;

– Budget-related decisions or proposals — particularly related to layoffs — made by city leaders and supported by Masterson have contributed to low morale within the division.

Rosevear said younger firefighters have left or are planning to leave the department because they fear being laid off. And he said he was told twice since June 2009 that he would be laid off, which firefighters opposed because they thought it would hurt the division.

He said Masterson supported that proposal by then-City Manager Dan Schwarz, illustrating how police services are favored over fire services.

“At Rohnert Park, law enforcement is the dominant arm. Everything comes secondary to that, including fire,” Rosevear said. “So if there are decisions to be made, law enforcement staffing would be weighed first before fire.”

Masterson disputed that on several counts.

“I didn’t support laying off anybody,” he stated, while also saying that layoffs were an understandable recourse for a city teetering on bankruptcy.

Masterson said he transferred police officers to the fire division in early 2009, a plan implemented with Rosevear’s support. Since then, more police officers have been laid off than firefighters, he said.

“We’re not in a crisis,” Masterson said. “We were in a state of flux last year because we weren’t sure what was going to happen. It was stressful for everyone.”

Asked whether Rosevear’s statements surprised her, Stafford suggested the fire commander was playing politics.

“You know, he’s running for City Council, of course,” said Stafford, who is running for re-election.

“If there was not a council seat open I would be speaking out in this same manner,” Rosevear said. “I’m only running because I see a pending disaster, and I have been personally caught up in the disaster as an employee and as a resident.”

Stafford said Rosevear is alone in his concerns.

“Personally, I don’t think his position reflects the department, I think it reflects him,” she said.

Convicted Rohnert Park Cop Sex Offender Resentenced

Friday, April 30th, 2010

Rohnert Park firefighter, police officer resentenced

By JULIE JOHNSON
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT

Published: Thursday, April 29, 2010 at 8:29 p.m.

A high-ranking volunteer firefighter and police officer on parole after serving 18 months for taping minors having sex was resentenced Monday to probation.

Officials describe it as a reclassification that could send him to Sonoma County jail if he reoffends rather than to state prison.

Matthew Phillips, 35, pleaded no contest in October 2008 to six felony charges that included child endangerment, photographing a minor engaged in sexual acts and showing sexual films to a minor. Some were classified as lesser crimes.

Phillips served about 18 months of his two-year, eight-month prison sentence and was released on parole in early April. He was sent to prison for the lesser crimes and received parole for the greater crimes.

The state appellate court ruled that the original sentence was not consistent with state laws, which require that prison time be given for the greater sentence. As a result, Phillips also was placed on probation.

Assistant District Attorney Diana Gomez said Monday’s decision was not appropriate for this kind of crime.

“When there are allegations of sexual exploitation of a minor from someone in a position of power and trust, probation isn’t a serious enough consequence for that kind of behavior,” Gomez said.

Phillips had risen to captain as a volunteer firefighter with the Bennett Valley Fire Department when teen members of the Fire Service Explorers Program reported that he had engaged them in lewd sexual activities.

The boys later testified that Phillips gave them alcohol, showed them porn and convinced them that it was normal to masturbate together.

They also testified that Phillips, who also was an officer on the Rohnert Park police force, filmed them having sex with girls without the girls’ consent.

Rohnert Park Cops Support Regressive Tax

Friday, April 23rd, 2010

originally published at pressdemocrat.com

Public safety officers endorse Rohnert Park sales tax hike

By JEREMY HAY
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT

Published: Friday, April 23, 2010 at 4:03 a.m.

Rohnert Park’s influential Public Safety Officers Association has endorsed the city’s half-cent sales tax measure, giving it a potential boost with about six weeks to go before the June 8 election.

Members unanimously endorsed Measure E, POA president Dale Utecht said.

Absentee ballots are being sent out in early May, interim city manager Dan Schwarz said. Before then, Utecht said, “We’ll be street walking; we’ll be putting up signs, looking for other people that are endorsing it.”

Vice Mayor Gina Belforte said the association’s backing is “huge.”

“It means a lot to us. We really need this measure to pass,” she said.

The City Council — confronting a budget deficit of about $6 million — had lobbied the POA for weeks to formally support the measure. Schwarz said cuts the public safety department already has absorbed will be a key element in the campaign for Measure E.

“The POA has a great story to tell and they have to tell it,” Schwarz said. “They have to talk about the concessions they’ve made and the impacts.”

The department’s budget has been cut by $3.5 million this year, and officers agreed to reduce their salaries by 9 percent.

Measure E proponents also received a somewhat unusual endorsement this week: the backing of the city’s Chamber of Commerce.

The chamber — not known as a tax-friendly group — decided “it’s something that’s needed to keep our community moving forward,” said Amy Ahanotu, the chamber chairwoman.

Like Cotati’s Chamber of Commerce, which got behind that city’s successful half-cent tax measure, the Rohnert Park business advocacy group decided it was in its own interest to support the tax, Ahanotu said.

“We know the city’s facing severe financial difficulty at this time,” Ahanotu said. “The city’s inability to provide services will severely impact the business community.”

You can reach Staff Writer Jeremy Hay at 521-5212 or jeremy.hay@pressdemocrat.com.

Rohnert Park Cop Sentanced For Child Sex Abuse

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

Prison for former Rohnert Park officer who taped teens having sex

By LORI A. CARTER
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT

Published: Thursday, February 19, 2009 at 1:05 p.m.

A former volunteer fire captain and Rohnert Park public safety officer was sentenced to 2 years and 8 months in prison Thursday for secretly taping teens having sex and other inappropriate sexual activities involving minors.

Matthew David Phillips, 34, faced a potential of 12 years in prison for six felony counts that he pleaded no contest to last year.

Given credit for time served and good behavior, Phillips could be out within a year. He will have to register as a sex offender for the rest of his life.

Phillips was a volunteer Bennett Valley Fire Department captain and Rohnert Park public safety officer when he was arrested on charges that could have meant more than two decades in prison if convicted. He was fired from Bennett Valley and quit Rohnert Park when the investigations began in 2005.

After a preliminary hearing, Phillips was held over for trial on nine of the 19 charges. But as his trial approached, negotiations commenced between attorneys and Phillips admitted six charges, including one count of child endangerment that was reduced from child molestation.

Phillips was the coordinator of the Explorers, a training program for teens ages 14 to 18 who may pursue firefighting careers, when he committed the criminal acts.

Several teenage witnesses testified that Phillips gave them alcohol, showed them porn and offered them the use of his home as a sort of fraternity house atmosphere for teenage boys. They said over time, Phillips, who became a father-figure or big brother substitute for them, convinced them it was normal to masturbate together, compare penis sizes and tape couples having sex. He also asked to sniff the crotches of boys after they’d had sex with girls, according to testimony.

Witnesses also testified that Phillips arranged the taping of sex acts between two teenage Explorers and their unwitting female partners, once at the fire station and twice at Phillips’ home. In one of those incidents, a young man said Phillips was wearing his Rohnert Park police uniform while he was taping them.

Judge Elliot Daum said Thursday that Phillips’ most “shameful” acts were secretly taping the females having sex with their boyfriends. The boyfriends knew of the taping but the girls did not, and one incident included an 18-year-old losing her virginity.

After serving his prison sentence, Phillips will be on probation for five years, during which time he is prohibited from being around minors, including any job or volunteer work that involves young people.

originally published at: pressdemocrat.com

Police Pensions Break RP Bank

Sunday, March 28th, 2010

Pension benefits burden Rohnert Park
As specter of bankruptcy looms over city, generous pension plan for public safety officers stands out as major strain on budget

By JEREMY HAY
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT

Published: Saturday, March 27, 2010 at 3:00 a.m.

The shadow of Vallejo — which declared bankruptcy in 2008 under the weight of police and fire pay and pension benefits — looms uncomfortably near Rohnert Park these days.

Falling sales- and property-tax revenues, and the state’s decision to take back more than $4million in redevelopment funds, have left “The Friendly City” at the edge of a fiscal cliff. It projects it will run out of cash in 14 months.

Against that backdrop, and after a year of service cuts and employee layoffs and buyouts, Rohnert Park’s expensive employee retirement plans stand out as a major strain on the city’s finances.

While three of the city’s unions agreed this year to concessions that will roll back their pensions to 2006 levels, the powerful Rohnert Park Public Safety Officers Association did not.

“It’s the 500-pound elephant in the room,” Councilman Jake Mackenzie said of the city’s pension plan costs.

In the 2003-’04 fiscal year, the city’s payments into the California Public Employees’ Retirement System were $1.8 million. In the 2008-’09 fiscal year, CalPERS costs to Rohnert Park were $5.4million, a 196 percent increase over five years. Part of that jump was because the number of people the city employed rose over that period. However, since July, the city has laid off or bought out 27 employees.

The public safety union argues that because of the demanding nature of public safety work, its benefits — which allow officers to retire with up to 90 percent of their salary — are needed to recruit good officers to a city now in dire straits, and where they must be able to perform both police and fire duties.

“Who’s going to come and work here if you cut their benefits,” said Dale Utecht, president of the union. “What kind of officers are you going to get in the future?”

Also, union members note, government employees retiring with public pensions do not get the Social Security benefits that people who retire from private industry have earned.

Fiscal emergency

How dire is Rohnert Park’s fiscal crisis? Even after $4.8 million was cut from this year’s $26.5 million budget, it faces a projected deficit of about $6million for the next budget year, which begins in July.

City leaders have declared a fiscal emergency and are now seeking voter approval in June of a half-cent sales tax measure, even as they acknowledge it would only cut the deficit by $2.8 million at most.

The “plan,” such as it is, said finance director Sandy Lipitz, “is to buy enough time so that the economy will improve.”

Vice Mayor Gina Belforte said: “If the tax measure doesn’t pass, and the economy doesn’t improve, then we are in some serious, serious trouble, close to Vallejo, very close — and I’m not trying to do fear-mongering.”

The cost of public employee pensions has emerged in increasingly stark terms as budget crises have deepened for cities around the state. In Rohnert Park — which projects it will spend $3.8 million of its $8.9 million in reserves this year — the impact of the plans on city coffers is particularly clear.

“They’re definitely a problem,” said John Neiman, a senior fellow and expert in local government at the San Francisco-based Public Policy Institute of California.

“The main reason is the downturn in the economy. What’s happened, of course, is that over the years we have local officials who are very shortsighted,” Neiman said. They committed “to pension benefits that are overly generous, but didn’t seem to be at the time because the economy (was) humming along.”

Unforeseen circumstances

Rohnert Park’s current pension plans were approved in 2004. Two of the five councilmembers that signed off on them remain on the dais, Mackenzie and Amie Breeze.

Mackenzie was the sole “no” vote back then; Breeze says she believes she voted correctly, believing that development — including a proposed casino — would have happened by now and would have been producing revenue.

“It was something we needed to do at the time in order to continue the solvency of a good department,” she said. “And unfortunately some of those things we had planned on haven’t come to fruition, and we didn’t have a crystal ball to be able to see that.”

Representatives of the public safety officers association, or POA, say that the pension improvements were earned in lieu of raises.

“The membership has always felt — with justification — that all PERS enhancements were bought with raises they didn’t get,” said Dave Stubblebine, a retired officer who now consults with the POA and took part in the latest contract negotiations.

The increase took effect in 2007, making Rohnert Park the last city in the county to adopt the increased benefit levels. It was following the lead of cities and counties around the state, which were in turn following in the steps of the state, which approved the increases in 1999.

Remaining competitive was a key at the time, said former Councilwoman Vickie Vidak-Martinez, who supported the benefit increase.

“We were struggling to recruit for our public safety department, and that was during the time that we just began to have a lot of retirements of veteran officers, and we had to fill those positions,” she said.

She said she received assurances from then-City Manager Carl Leivo that the city could afford the increase, based on projected growth and tax revenue.

“It’s a vote I’ve always regretted,” she said last week.

Leivo was out of town and could not be reached for comment, his wife said Thursday. He also did not return an earlier call seeking comment.

The 2004 contract with public safety employees allows sworn personnel to retire at age 50 with up to 90 percent of their salary. Other city employees got increases allowing them to retire at 55 with up to 81 percent of their salary depending on the number of years they worked. The contracts were similar to those being handed out around the state.

The benefits were retroactive, too, which means the city has had to pay more into the system to cover the cost of increased benefits for people employed for years under a lower-cost retiree plan.

City pays officers’ entire share

To pay retiree benefits, and to prepare for future retirements, the state’s Public Employees’ Retirement System collects premiums that are a percentage of each employee’s salary from the city and invests them.

While the employee’s share of the premium remains the same from year to year, the employer’s share changes based on factors including the number and age of employees and the rate of return of CalPERS’ investments. Those investments, many of them based on real estate, have tanked since the economy slid into recession.

Under Rohnert Park’s contract with its 61 sworn public safety employees, the city pays the officers’ entire 9 percent employee share.

Santa Rosa, for example, does the same — but the practice isn’t uniform. In Petaluma, public safety personnel pay their own share.

Schwarz said he applauds the POA for the concessions they’ve made to date — furloughs that amounted to 9 percent pay cuts this year and about 6 percent next year, for a total savings of $592,000.

But, he said, “were our employees to pay for more of their pensions, there’s an immediate relief to the city in terms of our budget challenge.”

Rohnert Park’s 99 other non-sworn employees pay a percentage of their employees’ share; in most cases, 7 percent of a required 8 percent. Twenty-six public works employees, who negotiated a raise in their last contract, pay 7 percent of their 8 percent premium.

Schwarz and Public Safety Director Brian Masterson voluntarily agreed to pay their own share of pension premiums.

A political bind

The difference between how premiums are paid puts the council, and perhaps the POA, in a political bind.

“I think what people struggle with is that the city pays both employer and employee shares” for POA members, said Belforte. “There’s a disparity between some of the union groups, that’s what people struggle with.”

Utecht said the nature of public safety officers’ work outweighs the pension issue in the public eye.

“I would say that when the majority of the public has an emergency and calls for a police officer, firefighter or emergency medical services, they do not care what our pension benefits are,” he said. “They want someone to run toward the gunshots, into the burning home or to stop the bleeding, and they want that done as quickly as possible.”

In the case of police officers, the difference in contracts means the city has to annually pay CalPERS an amount equal to 43 percent of each officer’s salary. That makes the average salary and benefit package for an officer $145,492, said Sandy Lipitz, the city’s finance director.

That amount doesn’t include overtime pay, which the department has cut dramatically this year, Lipitz said.

In contrast, for other city employees, the city pays an pension premium amount equal to 25 percent of their annual salary. The average non-sworn employee’s wages and benefits cost the city $83,627, Lipitz said.

Here’s what the pensions costs have meant to Rohnert Park in dollar terms:

The enhanced plans cost the city an additional $1.5 million a year starting in 2007.

Since 2007, the city’s public safety-related pension costs have risen by 57 percent. Pensions costs for non-sworn, or miscellaneous, employees have jumped 51 percent.

As of July 2008, Rohnert Park’s unfunded liability — the difference between what it’s paid into the system and what it will owe based on current actuarial figures — was $45.5 million, up from $30.6 million the year before. The latest figures aren’t yet available.

Something has to give

Without exception, city officials acknowledge that the benefits weigh heavily on the city’s tattered finances.

“They are a burden, no doubt about it,” Councilman Joe Callinan said, speaking specifically about the public safety employees’ pension benefits.

Asked whether the city will press to reopen contract negotiations to try to get benefit concessions, Belforte said: “If the sales tax measure doesn’t pass and the economy doesn’t improve, everything is on the table.”

In that event, pressure likely will be focused on the more expensive public safety department benefits, in part because the other unions’ plans already have been rolled back.

Had the officers association agreed to the same rollback, “That would have been a solution that would have eliminated a lot of other things that we’ve had to deal with in terms of budget problems,” said Mayor Pam Stafford.

Two-year contracts for all the unions were signed only months ago. And any negotiations can only be reopened with the union’s consent. That’s something the POA may be reluctant to do.

“I don’t know how the officers will feel about that,” Utecht said. “Our membership would have to vote on that and agree to it.”

“I don’t know how we’re going to wrestle with it,” said Councilwoman Amie Breeze, who added she is unlikely to support unilateral efforts to enter into negotiations again.

The public safety officers contract “has to be reopened and it has to be looked at,” Mackenzie said.

That’s easier said than done.

“You’re obliged under the contract to serve them out, and unfortunately those aren’t always timed to meet the needs” of a city in a budget crisis,” said Neiman, of the public policy institute.

“You just have fewer options in how you manage those things in the short run,” he said.

You can reach Staff Writer Jeremy Hay at 521-5212 or jeremy.hay@pressdemocrat.com

originally published at: pressdemocrat.com

Rohnert Park Going Broke

Sunday, March 28th, 2010

Rohnert Park officers union has grown into political powerhouse

By JEREMY HAY
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT

Published: Saturday, March 27, 2010 at 3:00 a.m.

No one will discuss what went on in the negotiation room.

But when Rohnert Park officials announced the contract agreements they’d reached with their employee associations in November, one thing stood out. The only one of the city’s four unions not to roll back its pension benefits was the Rohnert Park Public Safety Officers Association.

“They didn’t agree to that,” was all Dan Schwarz, the interim city manager, would say.

The negotiations were the latest instance of muscle displayed by the association, which over the years — while supporting numerous local charity causes — has evolved into the city’s most reckoned-with political player.

“If the council’s trying to balance competing interests in the budget, you need the help of the POA to make it work,” Schwarz said.

Today, while its toy drives, fundraisers and Explorer youth programs continue, the POA, as the association is usually called, is far more known as a political heavyweight willing to spend big to win elections in this city of 43,000.

The POA has helped topple a city manager and a police chief. It has spent tens of thousands of dollars on political campaigns since 2002 and its willingness to spend, combined with active precinct-walking efforts, has helped elect candidates to the council in every election.

Three of the five current council members were supported by the POA: Vice Mayor Gina Belforte and council members Amie Breeze and Joe Callinan.

From Rohnert Park’s beginings in 1962, the public safety department has combined both police and fire protection services, an arrangement originally meant to save costs and make services more efficient.

Its community activities were “more conspicuous in the early days, because the relationship with the city was much less adversarial than it is now” said Dave Stubblebine, a retired officer who now consults with the POA and took part in the latest contract negotiations.

“As the political winds began to shift, the POA had to shift too,” Stubblebine said.

The association gravited to politics in the mid-1990s when the city’s fast-growing economic heyday was slowing.

Joe Netter, a city manager with whom the POA often clashed, was at the city’s helm. A council majority formed that supported Netter’s cost-cutting approach and, echoing statewide movements, advocated slower growth policies.

“They were people less interested in bragging about how good the community was than in bragging about how much money they were saving,” said Stubblebine. “And that became a point of high interest to every employee group in the city.”

In 1994, for only the second time, the POA endorsed council candidates — including Armando Flores, who would serve for 18 years — emphasizing economic development as a way to support more city services.

In 1996, the POA raised $32,000 to fight a 1996 ballot measure to cap growth in the city. In an early defeat for the association, the measure won.

The union has remained deeply involved in city elections, putting its mark on issues from the fight over urban growth boundaries to economic development.

In 2000, the association turned on the city’s public safety director, Jeff Miller, publicly expressing a lack of confidence in his ability to lead the department.

Miller resigned after months of turmoil, with POA-backed council members supporting the action. Now police chief in Hollister, Miller declined to comment for this article.

In 2003, Netter was pushed out by a council majority elected with POA support — including Flores and current Councilwoman Amie Breeze. Netter said in a recent interview that “I was a tough negotiator” and that his approach alienated the “small group” of POA leaders.

In 2004, Carl Leivo, Netter’s successor, negotiated a new contract with the POA that included a benefits increase bringing the agency in line with others in the county. New pension benefits allowed sworn officers to retire at 50 with as much as 90 percent of their pay.

It was those benefits that survived the latest negotiations, while all other non-sworn employees agreed to roll back pension benefits to earlier levels, allowing them to retire at age 55 with 70 percent of their top year’s pay. That change will take effect in 2011.

The contrast in concessions produced a rare fissure in the city’s union politics, with leaders of the Rohnert Park Employees Association, which represents 31 office staffers, publicly criticizing the POA at a budget review meeting for not rolling back its benefits.

“The miscellaneous employees saw the financial crisis the city was facing and rolled back the PERS retirement,” employees association President Angie Smith said.

It wasn’t easy to speak against the POA, Smith said.

“We’ve never done that,” she said, but “the cuts are happening everywhere and no one is immune, and we felt it was our obligation as representatives of our membership to step back and say, these are the facts. It was very difficult to do.”

The POA’s strength comes partly through numbers: Rohnert Park has 161 employees; the association has 73 members (61 of them sworn officers), many of whom are willing to walk precincts for votes.

“Having a police officer that has protected the community knock on your door for a candidate speaks volumes to a voter,” said Rob Muelrath, a longtime Sonoma County political consultant who has run campaigns for several POA-endorsed candidates.

The association is one of the biggest spenders in the city’s biennial elections — its political action committee has spent more than $100,000 on city elections since 2002.

“They’re the only major funders (of campaigns or candidates) located in the city and they tend to support candidates that will support them. They’re very clear about that,” said Vickie Vidak-Martinez.

A 12-year councilwoman and a former mayor, Vidak- Martinez enjoyed the POA’s support until 2004, losing it after she supported replacing Leivo.

She won that election, despite POA opposition. But in 2008, she, along with another council member who had supported Leivo’s ouster, Tim Smith, lost re-election bids.

It is “hugely” important for (council) candidates to get the association’s endorsement, said Muelrath. “It gives them a major advantage.”

And when the city addresses its budget — particularly in tough times — the POA is a key element in the mix.

“In terms of running this operation, they represent the most significant part of the budget in terms of payroll,” said Schwarz, who represents the city in its contract negotiations.

“Whenever the city is trying to deal with a general fund situation, the POA has to be part of that discussion, and we need to work with them to solve the problem, there’s no getting around the math,” he said.

In 2008, the association sat on the sidelines as a ballot measure to roll back sewer rates went to city voters. The measure won with 53 percent of the vote — costing the city $3.4 million a year — and some say that the POA’s failure to oppose the measure helped it to victory.

“I believe their failure to take a position on it and actively campaign against it may have tipped the balance,” said Smith.

Now, the city is pressing the union to endorse the half-cent sales tax hike, Measure E, that the council has placed on the June ballot.

So far, the union is holding out. POA president Dale Utecht said the association wants to know whether the money will help the public safety department.

“It’s important for our members to know that if they support it, the funds that are going to come out of it are going to be used to offset some of the cuts that were made,” Utecht said.

The department made $3.5 million in cuts this fiscal year, including buyouts and layoffs of eight officers. Now the public safety budget is $16.5 million, or about 60 percent of the city budget.

Mayor Pam Stafford — who was not endorsed by the association during her 2006 campaign — said when she asked the association for its support for the June tax measure, the answer was, “Well, we’ll see.”

Vice Mayor Gina Belforte, endorsed by the POA in her 2008 campaign, said she too has spoken to the association about supporting Measure E, but hasn’t got a firm answer yet.

“My understanding is that they want a guarantee of X percentage of the dollars, but the way the tax measure is written, we just can’t do that,” she said.

Measure E is a general sales tax measure to raise money for the city and is not dedicated to any one purpose.

“It’s a mathematical equation,” Belforte said. “If that tax measure doesn’t pass and the economy does not improve, then we are in a serious world of a hurt and there’s going to have to be drastic changes for us to survive.”

You can reach Staff Writer Jeremy Hay at 521-5212 or jeremy.hay@pressdemocrat.com

originally published at: pressdemocrat.com