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To make ends meet, county looking at tax increase, hiring freeze

By Howard B. Owens

County Jay Gsell has laid it out there -- in order to meet Genesee County's budgetary needs, residents will need to pay an additional 8 cents per $1,000 of assessed value.

Gsell expects $24.7 million of the county's revenue to come from property tax. That's up 2.7 percent from the previous year.

The 8-cent increase works out to about $7 per year in higher taxes for a home owner with an $80,000 piece of property.

Gsell:

This 2010 recommendation is at best a hedge against continued fiscal pressures delivered at Genesee County’s doorstep with regard to increasing human services clients, criminal justice activity, poor economic indicator performance in the regional and state economies and the current mandated service delivery programs that harken back to the 1970’s origins with the unrealistic New York State spin of hooking county governments into not only delivering and administering what are typically state and federal partnerships in the rest of the U.S., but also having counties directly funding actual benefits – the so called “local shares.” 

There will also be no new county jobs created in county government, Gsell said.

Overall, the county budget is going up .01 percent to $140,666,000.

Gsell is also freezing pay at current levels -- no pay increases -- for top county management staff.

Mandated costs -- Medicaid, Early Intervention/Preschool, Handicapped Children’s, Mental Health LGU, Probation, County Jail and Public Defender/Assigned Counsel -- consume 84 percent of the county's property tax levy.

Mary E DelPlato

always look to the struggling tax payers, dont make cuts from within
the whole system is backwards
instead of taxpayers having to work into thier late 60s to 70s to pay to all govt entities
these govt employees should work til theyre into that age and make less than the average tax payer
and i dont understand we pay school taxes yes the taxes we pay to the state also are granted towards schools and also the taxes we pay to the federal govt go to schools in forms of grants. Does this mean theyre doing business beyond thier means? If they cant get enough from local tax payers then theyre not budgeting their money very well

Oct 21, 2009, 7:30pm Permalink
Barbara Hendershott

Well Jay thanks for not taking a pay increase for 2010>
How about you give back YOUR PAY RAISE for 2009. You had no problem giving yourself and your top management a pay raise for 2009 and settling with some unions with a decent pay increase, but one UNIT you refuse to negotiate with.
Could you please give the Unit an answer as to why?

Oct 23, 2009, 6:48am Permalink

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