
City tells committee PSVS money increasingly dedicated to personnel
On Thursday, city staff presented a recommended $114.9 million budget to the Public Safety Vital Services Measure Oversight Committee, noting that amount of dollars in the budget was allocated to pre-dedicated costs.
"We've seen increases in insurance, we've seen increases in workers' compensation. We've seen increases in vehicle equipment, other equipment and technology," City Manager Christian Clegg told the committee.
"We've seen dramatic increases that are actually many instances greater than the typical (Consumer Price Index) percentage that is driving costs in a way that's becoming a challenge for us."
Personnel expenses make up 54% of the budget at $62.2 million. Other expenses include $9.6 million in non-discretionary costs, $22.9 in discretionary expenses, $1.2 million for capital projects and $11.9 in transfers to the General Fund to cover operational needs.
At the meeting, several committee members expressed concern about the use of the PSVS money, saying the city should be more conservative with the tax dollars.
Members said PSVS dollars weren't being used as advertised in the ballot language and expressed particular concern about the amount of non-public-safety staff the city had hired.
"Then you're talking about new parks and all this. It just seems like the concern about tightening up, it's got to be broad-based," said member for Ward 6, Cathy Abernathy. "I'm concerned that there's a whole lot of staff; that's staff, that's health care, that's pensions."
Clegg told the committee hiring freezes were implemented in several departments and the city was investing in better data analytics tools to identify efficiencies.
Staff did reduce discretionary spending by 14%, mainly from economic and community development.
The proposed budget also includes an additional $7.8 million reserved for capital projects to be approved by the Bakersfield City Council.
The total discretionary allotment for the PSVS money, including the amount for capital projects, represents just 26.7% of the PSVS budget.
Ward 3 member Clayton Campbell said that because Measure N's ballot language stated the purpose of the tax was to raise $50 million, particularly for public safety, any additional PSVS tax collected by the city should be moved to savings.
Meeting materials said 374 staff positions were funded by PSVS dollars, the majority of which were in public safety. When asked by committee members at the meeting, staff estimated about 175 of those positions, only 46%, were in public safety.
"We've consistently spent almost all of that money every year, transferred some to the general fund because the general fund couldn't be balanced otherwise, hired a huge number of people," Campbell said to Clegg. "So, the majority of the $62 million that is, as you term, non-discretionary, using the PSVS money, that's money that we're hiring other people that are not public safety."
The city later provided staffing information to the Californian which said 216 positions funded by PSVS were in either the police or fire departments.
According to the city, staffing positions covered with PSVS dollars include 189 positions in the police department; 27 in the fire department; 46 in development services, including code enforcement and homeless encampment clean up; 40 in parks, including 21 park rangers; 22 in technology services; 16 in economic and community development; 13 in public works; 12 in the City Manager's office; five in human resources and two in finance.
Committee members repeatedly expressed concern that PSVS dollars were not being used as advertised to voters.
The text of the 2018 Measure N ballot measure read: "To prevent cuts/improve 911 emergency response, police/fire protection, anti-gang/drug units, neighborhood police patrols; rapid response to assaults, robberies, gang violence, home burglaries; crime prevention; address homelessness; retain, attract jobs/businesses; unrestricted general revenue purposes; shall the measure be adopted approving an ordinance establishing a one-cent sales tax providing $50,000,000 until ended by voters, requiring independent audits, citizens oversight, all funds for Bakersfield?"
Major capital projects on staff's recommended budget include $4 million for street improvements along 18th and 19th streets and $3 million for improvements on H Street. Several other smaller projects are recommended at several city parks and fire stations.
This year's recommended budget is a 1% increase from last year, even as the actual share of sales and use tax money going to the fund went down. The increase in the budget is due to a $17 million savings rollover from prior years being allocated for budget expenditures, Finance Director Randy McKeegan said.
Revenues from sales tax have either remained flat or declined across several industries, McKeegan said, and the city was looking at a roughly $6.5 million decrease in tax revenues as a result of county residents incorrectly paying taxes to the city for the past two years.
The budget will ultimately be approved by the city council, but the oversight committee will have the opportunity to give its own recommendations at its next meeting Thursday.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNN
29 minutes ago
- CNN
US wholesale inflation was unchanged last month despite tariff rollout
US wholesale inflation was muted in June, despite expectations for an increase amid the rollout of tariffs. The Producer Price Index, which measures the average change in prices paid to producers, was unchanged from May, keeping the annual rate of wholesale-level inflation at 2.3%. Economists had expected that prices would rise 0.2% on a monthly basis and 2.5% annually, according to FactSet. PPI serves as a potential bellwether for price changes consumers may see in the months ahead. On Tuesday, the closely watched Consumer Price Index showed that prices moved steadily higher in June, lifted in part by more expensive goods in tariff-sensitive industries. This is a developing story and will be updated.


CNN
an hour ago
- CNN
US wholesale inflation was unchanged last month despite tariff rollout
US wholesale inflation was muted in June, despite expectations for an increase amid the rollout of tariffs. The Producer Price Index, which measures the average change in prices paid to producers, was unchanged from May, keeping the annual rate of wholesale-level inflation at 2.3%. Economists had expected that prices would rise 0.2% on a monthly basis and 2.5% annually, according to FactSet. PPI serves as a potential bellwether for price changes consumers may see in the months ahead. On Tuesday, the closely watched Consumer Price Index showed that prices moved steadily higher in June, lifted in part by more expensive goods in tariff-sensitive industries. This is a developing story and will be updated.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Dollar hits 15-week high against yen as consumer prices gain
By Karen Brettell NEW YORK (Reuters) -The dollar reached a 15-week high against the Japanese yen on Tuesday as U.S. consumer prices increased by the most in five months in June, while traders also pared expectations on how many times the Federal Reserve is likely to cut interest rates this year. U.S. President Donald Trump's tariff policies are seen as increasing price pressures and keeping the Fed on hold as policymakers wait to see their impact. Fed Chair Jerome Powell has said he anticipated prices will rise this summer. Despite the pick-up in the Consumer Price Index, underlying inflation remained moderate last month. "Tariffs are in the data, but it's not as devastating as many feared,' said Brian Jacobsen, chief economist at Annex Wealth Management in Menomonee Falls in Wisconsin. Fed funds traders are pricing in 44 basis points of cuts by year-end, down from around 48 basis points before the data, with the first rate reduction still expected in September. "A slightly softer-than-expected June core inflation reading keeps alive the chances of a September Federal Reserve interest rate cut, but the risk is that we get less benign prints for July and August," James Knightley, chief international economist, US at ING said in a note. "That means we will need to see clear evidence of softer jobs figures to trigger Fed action before December." The dollar gained broadly in what was also a seen as a technical move as the greenback consolidated from a selloff that has sent the index down by around 9% this year. Brad Bechtel, global head of FX at Jefferies, noted that the dollar index is approaching technical targets including the 50-day moving average and the 100 price level. "I think some of this is just your normal run-of-the-mill technical consolidation," he said. Nvidia was also set to resume artificial intelligence chip sales to China, in a sign of improving trade relations. "Some of that softening of China trade rhetoric is helping things at the margin," Bechtel said. The euro was last down 0.51% on the day at $1.1603, the lowest since June 25. Against the Japanese yen, the dollar strengthened 0.77% to 148.84, the highest since April 3. Sterling weakened 0.28% to $1.3389, the lowest since June 23. The dollar weakened after Trump in April announced larger than expected tariffs, but then delayed many of the levies pending negotiations with trading partners. Trump last week announced higher tariffs would come into effect on August 1 for imports from a range of countries, including Mexico, Japan, Canada and Brazil, and the European Union, though market reaction this time was relatively muted. 'The market is ignoring the tariffs until it becomes clear whether there's going to be sort of a major escalation like there was with China in April or if this is just yet another step on the way to some sort of deal,' said Steve Englander, head of global G10 FX research and North America macro strategy at Standard Chartered Bank's NY Branch. In addition to tariffs and inflation, markets are also focused on the U.S. fiscal and debt outlook, and the pressure the Trump administration is placing on Powell as he keeps rates on hold. Trump said on Tuesday that consumer prices were low and the Fed should bring down interest rates now. Powell has also asked the U.S. central bank's inspector general to review the costs involved in the renovation of its historic headquarters in Washington, as Trump administration officials intensify their criticism of how the Fed is being run. U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Tuesday that a "formal process" is already starting to identify a potential successor to Powell, whose term will end in May. Bitcoin fell 3.04% to $116,571. It hit a record $123,153 on Monday as investors bet on long-sought policy wins for the industry this week, which has been dubbed "crypto week" by U.S. Republicans.