Posted: 5:05 p.m.
Tuesday, March 24, 2015
Cities struggle to fund street repairs
By http://www.journal-news.com/staff/lawrence-budd/" rel="nofollow - Staff Writer
Drivers are stuck between a pothole and a
hard place as communities wrestle with a growing problem of how to pay for
street repairs.
Local
cities have made a patchwork of different decisions over how to pay for basic
road upkeep and one Warren
County city is among
those unable to settle on a stable source of money.
Lebanon City Council recently restarted
discussions of how to fill in an annual estimated $1.5 million deficit between
street repair needs and funds on hand.
Some council members blame the depth of the
problem on inaction dating back more than a decade.
“Council
has not been willing in the majority to do anything,” said Jim Norris, in his
fourth four-year term on Lebanon City Council.“It’s as bad as I’ve ever seen
them.”
National problem
Finding money for repaving is a national
problem, according to the National League of Cities.
For the first time since 2008, cities
responding to the organization’s 2014 survey indicated they were rebounding
from the recession and rebuilding their work forces as property and income
taxes grew. Still local leaders remained concerned about their inability to pay
for basic road repairs.
“We’re seeing this economic recovery, but
they all cited infrastructure needs as having a negative impact on their city
budgets,” said Nicole Dupuis, a senior associate for city solutions and applied
research with the National League of Cities. “That’s one of things that is
holding back local budgets from full recovery.”
The National Highway Trust Fund’s solvency
is in question, leaving state and local policy makers to find money for the
repairs, although they are less high-profile than new roads or economic
development, Dupuis said.
“Projects like that don’t generate a lot of
excitement, but are really important,” she said.
Cities have turned to user fees, tolls and
public-private partnerships to offset road repair costs.
“Ballot measures have increased year by
year,” she added.
Madison Twp. voters passed its road levy by
2 votes in November 2014, and it is believed to be the first roads-specific
levy in Butler County. Some of the past levies around Butler County
allotted for only some of those tax dollars to be spent on road and street
repairs and maintenance.
Franklin
voters increased to 2 percent the income tax paid by people working in the
city, in part to help keep up on street repairs.
City officials note that the danger of
getting behind on basic road upkeep is that problems just mount with every
winter and it can take years to catch up
Local money for roads typically comes from
either income taxes, property levies or a combination of the two.
But since 2002 Lebanon voters have rejected four
different proposals to raise money for road work: two income-tax plans, and two
proposed street levies.
Meanwhile, a $1.5 million annual deficit
has developed between needs and funds available, according to an analysis by
City Manager Pat Clements presented to the council last May.
For several months, the council discussed
seeking a road levy or income tax increase, or reducing the local income-tax
credit, but has not mustered enough votes for action.
Lebanon has budgeted $680,0000 for
road repairs this year. Its council recently again discussed how to get more
money for road work, analyzing the budget for potential cuts, and weighing
options ranging from seeking an additional tax levy to reducing the credit on
earnings by residents who work outside the city.
Repaving plans
Monroe
is among cities that draw on different general fund sources to pay for repaving
and other street maintenance.
Monroe
budgeted $1.1 million this and last year for local repaving, according to City
Manager Bill Brock.
This funding was allocated after years when
road repairs were put off while the city dealt with fiscal emergency and the
economic downturn, according to Brock.
“We deferred some maintenance, but overall,
we have kept up with our needs,” he said.
Most of Monroe’s road-repair money comes from the
general fund, which is supported from a city 1.5 percent income tax.
Several towns raise money by reducing the
‘credit’ they give residents who pay income taxes to other communities where
they work.
Those credits are often full, so that a
resident of one town who works in another pays only the higher of the two local
income tax rates. Reducing a credit means that a worker pays a full local
income tax to the town where they work, then a little more to the town where
they live.
Other communities use annual shares of the
state taxes on gasoline and motor vehicle licenses to pay for road repairs.
The city of Hamilton budgets $2.25 million to repave
about 3 miles of its 250 centerline miles each year, and according to Public
Works Director Richard Engle, it would cost about $100 million to bring every
road in the city up to a “fair” condition this year.
Just more than $1 million of that funding
comes from state grant sources, including the Ohio Public Works Commission and
Community Development Block Grant funds. About $700,000 is budgeted in the
city’s infrastructure renewal fund — whose funds stem from customer utility
fees and taxes from special license plates and electric usage — $200,000 comes
from the stormwater fund, which is used solely to repair and replace curbs
associated with catch basins, and about $300,00 is assessed to the property
owner whose street is being repaired for sidewalk and curb replacement.
In Middletown, “one mil of city property
tax goes for capital improvements,” city manager Doug Adkins told the
Journal-News in December. This equaled about $620,000 for 2014.
The city’s charter was amended by voters in
1986 that required half of the 1.5 percent earned income tax revenues be
allocated for streets and infrastructure to avoid a budget deficit in 1987 and
in 1988. Some think this might be something to revisit as a way to raise more
revenue. In his presentation during his job interview last summer, Adkins
suggested by 2018 that council consider the charter amendment to require
capital expenditures annually.
The city also receives federal Community
Development Block Grant through Butler County as well as General Fund revenues
from the generation of city income tax. The city also has outside funding
sources for road improvements include Ohio Public Works Commission grants,
federal infrastructure grants through the Ohio-Kentucky-Indiana Regional
Council of Governments, and the Ohio Department of Transportation’s Urban Paving
Program for state routes.
In 2014, the city received about $2.2
million in auto and gas tax funds are used street maintenance, which includes
labor, material, and equipment costs for the street maintenance crew, he said.
Add in the outside and grant funding that total grows to about $4.2 million for
road improvements in 2014.
This article contains previous reporting by staff writers Vivienne
Machi and Ed Richter.
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