John Brown |
Tax rate remains the same
It proposes a tax rate of 11.8 mills. The median value of a Northampton County home is $220,800. If assessed properly at $110,400, that means a 2018 county bill of $1,302.72.
"This is the fourth budget I'm introducing in which I am not asking, and do not intend to ask for, a tax increase," he noted.
A 10% tax hike was imposed in Brown's first budget, which he approved without a veto.
Brown stated that when he first took office in 2014, the fund balance had dropped from $60.4 million in 2011 to $11.1 million at the end of 2013. For the previous four years, Northampton County had been deficit spending to the tune of over $15.7 million a year. Health care costs had been between $1.5 and $1.7 million per year for the previous seven years. Gracedale had cost the county $20 million over the previous four years. But he claims that the general fund now is now stabilized at over $30 million as a result of "cash flow management" and a "systematic approach to expenditure reduction."
Spending cuts
This "expenditure reduction" means he's cut spending by $7.3 million. And mostly in personnel costs, which he has slashed by $3.3 million. Though he has cut personnel costs, he notes that his spending plan calls for a salary increase of $1.5 million, along with a two percent cost of living adjustment for nonunion workers.
So how has he saved on personnel costs? Brown stated that when he first came into office, health care costs were rising at a rate of $1.5 to $1.7 million per year. By reducing the benefits, he has saved $7.6 million,
In addition to health care savings, Brown said that workers's compensation claims have been reduced drastically. He pointed to $4.4 million in savings over the past two years, a reduction in worker comp claims and a safer work environment.
Gracedale self-supporting
Brown called Gracedale a "remarkable story." He noted that in 2016, Gracedale returned a profit of about $1.6 million for the first time in eight years. He said he expected that to continue, and is proposing no county contribution to the nursing home. he said that the "team" at Gracedale is doing a "fantastic job," and that should continue for the "foreseeable future." He said the nursing home employs 800 people.
He pointed to a four-star rating at the nursing home by Medicare that lasted for two years,although it is currently at two stars and had dropped to just one.
He said he sees "far more upsides than downsides" to Gracedale, but long-term, "we don't know." He said changes are coming to the way nursing homes are viewed in the health care industry. "That's a future conversation," he remarked.
Brown conceded that Gracedale is relying on a $2.2 million grant from the federal government this year, and has budgeted for its receipt. Without it, Gracedale will be in the red, and the County will have a deficit.
P3 Bridge Project
He also touted his P3 program to repair or replace 33 bridges, and said work started in March. He said the model used by Northampton County has attracted "state and federal interest." He said the project will create 1,000 family-sustaining jobs and save taxpayers $17 million over what would be spent otherwise.
He also said that the training being done in Human Resources should continue, despite some of the abuses noted in recent audits.
Capital projects under consideration include more bridge repairs, Gracedale improvements, a regional forensic center (morgue), the purchase of the new Human Services building. And yes, a new jail. As he did last year, Brown wants to set aside one mill ($8 million) of tax revenue for the county's short-term and long-term capital needs.
New Jail
Brown acknowledged that he has viewed a dozen sites for a new jail, but that relocating the jail to the Gracedale campus would require approval from Upper Nazareth's Zoning Hearing Board. He said that architectural firm DSL is basically acting as a consultant. he acknowledge he has yet to discuss a new jail with the courts or District Attorney.
DaVinci Science Center
In presentations throughout the County, DaVinci Science Center has pitched a $130 million aquarium attraction in downtown Easton. Easton has committed $5 million to this project, and according to former Lehigh County Executive Jane Ervin, DaVinci wants Northampton County to front $15 million.
Though DaVinci is listed in the budget as a possible hotel tax recipient, no amount has been set aside. next year, as much s $633,000 in hotel tax revenue is available.
Farmland Preservation
For the second year in a row, Brown is budgeting about $500,000 for farmland preservation, about half the amount assigned by former Executive John Stoffa. Brown stated the amount budgeted is sufficient to cover demand.
What's Next?
Now that the budget is in their hands, County Council will review it, program-by-program, through a series of budget hearings. Though they are barred from interfering with the Executive's revenue estimates, they may approve amendments that alter his spending plan.
They have until December 15 to adopt or amend the budget and adopt it as amended. If they fail to take action, Brown's budget will be deemed adopted. Even if they reject his budget, it will be considered adopted. This failsafe exits in most home rule charters to prevent what happens on the state and federal level.
Lamont McClure's Reaction
Lamont McClure is the Democratic nominee for county Executive in November. He had this reaction to Brown's budget:
We were hoping today that John Brown would address the essential problem with his term of office. Specifically, Northampton County Taxpayers had their taxes raised 10%, so he and his unqualified cronies could unlawfully make claims for mileage and lunch expenses. Or, that while we pay more in taxes, his loyal lieutenants are being sent on lavish trips at taxpayer expense. He handed out secret pay raises without Council approval and none of this was addressed in his budget message. One might say that these unlawful acts are a thing of the past, but a recent audit, regarding the misuse of gift cards, just demonstrated that the corrupt and callous crony-fueled methods are still being employed. This is the main reason John Brown did not propose a tax cut today. If he did, he and his cronies might have to give up the taxpayer funded perks.
He and his cohorts ion county council are true bullshit artists. Yet they will all no doubt be reelected.
ReplyDeleteHe is right that Stoffa not only drained the county of cash but he really screwed over Gracedale.
ReplyDeleteThe taxes in Northampton county look very high to me, looks like twice as high as lehigh county. While it looks like they are holding the line on tax increases, there must be a lot of fat somewhere. Looks like a lot of cutting needs to be done. Ive never seen Democrats cut anything, so brown is still the lesser of 2 evils.
ReplyDelete5:28. You have also never seen a Democrat raise your taxes in NORCO, that took 5 republicans to pull that one off, so your lesser of two evils argument is bogus
ReplyDeleteBrown saved money so Trapp could spend more! Tell me that is fiscally responsible. She took the majority of her HR department, including an Executive Secretary, to a two day meeting, leaving no one that would be able to answer HR related questions. That is fiscally responsible????
ReplyDeleteHow do you know? Did you go try and get a question answered or are you just an angry person...
DeleteYou and Lamont are bad at math. The tax increase wasn't 10%, and continued use of double digits is deceptive. 1/10.8 = .0926 That rounds to 9%.
ReplyDeleteHow can anyone approve a 1000% increase in training and the fiscal abuses that enshrine HR spending be alright with it. This man is 2nd in denial, only to Boss Hog Pawlowski.
ReplyDelete@801, Her spending {Amy Trapp] has been well documented by this blog and the controller. Her penchant to spend public money, whether it be popcorn machines, P-cards, trips to Vegas and New Orleans, are well noticed by us voting public. John "Jack Ass" Brown has now officially condoned this with his budget speech and acceptance of her behavior as an asset to NC. I guess "Mr. Moron thinks this is a proper and professional use of public funds.
ReplyDeleteWhile Amy Trapp has done a ton to be an anchor around John Brown's waste during this election I think McClure's team putting up this website:
ReplyDeleteBrown Corrupt, Callous and Crony-Filled
Is nothing short of a great way to get people to understand this guys true record!
"You and Lamont are bad at math. The tax increase wasn't 10%, and continued use of double digits is deceptive. 1/10.8 = .0926 That rounds to 9%"
ReplyDeleteOh. OK.
We only gave you a 9% tax increase not a 10% tax increase. LOL!!
ReplyDeleteThe funny thing is the party faithful will just vote straight "R" even though they oppose outrageous tax increases. Even though their are democrat running who never voted for a tax increase. The typical republican response is, the d's will vote for higher taxes, even though that is not the case. It is unfortunate folks cannot think for themselves. The teapartee effect.
ReplyDeleteIt's appropriate to present the budget in a chapel because God help us all if John Brown is re-elected. This is a frightening possibility.
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ReplyDeleteVote vote vote vote vote get rid of this guy and all the people that are with them
ReplyDeleteBernie...I cannot remember but what was the vote differential between Brown and Callahan? I'm just curious to know how much ground will have to be made up in order to defeat this less than honest (to put it mildly) incumbent.
ReplyDeleteI'm writing now and don't have time to look it up. Check the county election results for 2013. I will check later.
ReplyDeleteWill do...thank you.
ReplyDelete