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Senior meals, law-justice, library — on EDC hit list


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By Kathryn Reed

If the $5.5 million in budget cuts El Dorado County plans to make before the new year are approved as presented Tuesday by CAO Gayle Erbe-Hamlin, say goodbye to the senior nutrition program throughout the county, look for library hours to be reduced, roads to not be repaired, and $1 million eliminated from the sheriff’s department budget.

edcThe Board of Supervisors on Oct. 19 was given the grim news. Erbe-Hamlin called it “ugly.”

It’s been well documented the county is facing an $11 million deficit for fiscal year 2011-12, which begins July 1.

Click on proposal to see what was presented Tuesday in Placerville.

If the $400,000 for the senior nutrition program were cut, that would wipeout the five centers the county operates. This includes the food program at the South Lake Tahoe Senior Center and meals-on-wheels. These programs can be the only meals seniors receive.

Daniel Nielson, who runs the Department of Social Services, was not available to talk about the food program late Tuesday.

At the South Lake Tahoe branch library, the half position that has not been filled is scheduled to be cut. Expect hours to be slashed, too. A Sept. 20 PowerPoint presentation to the board outlines ways to trim the library budget.

The goal of the supervisors is to tackle half the deficit in the coming weeks. A special board meeting is scheduled for Nov. 3 to solely talk about the budget. Next week county staff will be in South Lake Tahoe to brief basin residents about the financial woes.

If the board doesn’t resolve the issue the day after Election Day, it has regular meetings Dec. 7 and Dec. 14, but is dark the previous two weeks and last two weeks of December. Another special meeting could be called.

The remaining $5.5 million is likely to be dealt with right after the first of the year.

“We’ll have a more clear picture for the 2011-12 year once the first $5.5 million is addressed. Then we have to do it again. This is a difficult conversation now and in February it will be harder, I think,” said Jim Mitrisin, assistant to Chief Administrative Officer Erbe-Hamlin.

Mitrisin cautioned the proposed cuts are “very preliminary.”

Still, with the time line the supes want to follow combined with the cuts in services and staff that have been made in recent years, the low hanging fruit was plucked long ago.

Some say the financial abyss the county finds itself in is a result of the state trying to balance its budget on the back of local jurisdictions.

El Dorado County can also point to a significant drop in property valuations decreasing the amount of property tax it collects, along with sales tax dropping during the recession.

There was a time when construction was robust on the West Slope. Now it’s practically at a standstill.

Although supervisors have said law and justice were sacred, that’s not entirely so with Erbe-Hamlin’s proposal on Tuesday. Her idea is to find more than $1.6 million in savings by mandating a 2.7 percent cut each for sheriff, probation, district attorney, and public defender.

Sheriff Fred Kollar did not return a call Tuesday.

Perhaps the diminishing flow of cash is why the CAO has said the economic coordinator position can be scrapped. However, the nearly half million dollars in promotional funds – which is discretionary income from the hotel tax – is not slated to be touched.

Follow what the county is doing via the Board of Supervisors’ webpage.

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Comments

Comments (7)
  1. Steve says - Posted: October 20, 2010

    This is what happens when government makes spending commitments based on the giddy good years and fails to anticipate that such economic bursts run in cycles.

  2. Julie Threewit says - Posted: October 20, 2010

    This news is sad and the budget cuts are wrong. “These programs can be the only meals seniors receive” is accurate. When society abandons those who need us most, our failure is beyond description. Use some money from the promotional fund to help people. What is more important? An ad for tourism or feeding the hungry?

  3. cheepseets says - Posted: October 20, 2010

    Agreed, Julie. Having been a Meals on Wheels volunteer before, I can say that most (not all) of the folks on our daily route were very much in need of a meal. In fact, it was the only time they ate for the entire day, because they were housebound, or for some other reason were unable to obtain food. We would stay an extra few minutes with each person who wanted it, just to chat or help with basic things … things most of us take for granted because we don’t know any better. Something to think about as you sip your Fourbucks coffee this morning …

  4. Carl Ribaudo says - Posted: October 20, 2010

    Unfortunately this is just the beginning of the budget reckoning and the process of “right sizing” local government. The elephant in the room which will have to be dealt with is pay and benefits of the public sector. The current levels are unfortunately not sustainable and very difficult choices and changes will have to be made.

  5. LynneBajuk says - Posted: October 20, 2010

    Senior meals MUST not be eliminated! There is no other agency in the Basin to assist these elders, many who cannot shop, cook, enjoy a meal.. some whose only visitor is the Meals On Wheels volunteers! This is not the big city where other groups might pitch in!!

  6. dogwoman says - Posted: October 20, 2010

    You’d think they’d be able to find a way to cut a few chiefs instead always the Indians. But it never seems to work that way. They always cut what will hurt the citizens the worst while maintaining the fat at the top.

  7. foible says - Posted: November 8, 2010

    60 billion mistake…people don’t want hand outs they want jobs!

    Bernanke printing more trillions of fiat money which is more taxpayer debt.

    Bernanke lending BILLIONS to his Wall Street banker pals at 0.25% to manipulate the market .

    Unemployed college graduates paying 7 to 8% on college loans.

    Bernanke lending BILLIONS to his Wall Street banker pals at 0.25% to manipulate the market .

    Millions forced to pay big banks 15 to 20% on credit cards while they are unemployed.

    Bernanke lending BILLIONS to his Wall Street banker pals at 0.25% to manipulate the market .

    Senior citizens go two years without a Social Security pay raise

    Bernanke lending BILLIONS to his Wall Street banker pals at 0.25% to manipulate the market

    90,000 foreclosures per month on people who are unemployed

    Bernanke lending BILLIONS to his Wall Street banker pals at 0.25% to manipulate the market .

    Senior citizens earning a paltry 1% interest income on their life savings

    Bernanke lending BILLIONS to his Wall Street banker pals at 0.25% to manipulate the market .

    Nothing to see here folks…. Just move along…Reply.