|
Alliance Asks for Creative Solutions To County Budget
by Karen Royster
In August, the county leaders
announced that there could be
severe cuts in parks, swimming
pools, bus service, programs for
the poor, and transportation for
people with disabilities as well
as elimination of cleaning and
maintenance in many county
buildings. Shortly after this
announcement, 32 organizations
and religious groups came
together to establish the Alliance
to Protect the Public Good
because they care deeply about
the public structures that make
Milwaukee a good place to live.
For generations, we have invested
in building a strong county system
with good parks, an efficient bus
system, courts, sheriffs, services
for abused children, programs for
senior citizens and help for those
in need. Now, we are watching our
investment be taken apart.
The Alliance is fighting for
adequate funding to keep these
public structures strong and
ensure honest oversight to make
them effective. The Alliance is
working to prevent cuts in county
programs this year and to enact
long term tax reforms to protect
public structures for the future.
The partners include park
and environmental groups who
believe that the parks, lakes, river
ways and gardens are treasures
built over time that allows all
residents access to health, beauty,
enjoyment and activity. The
park system is a major resource
attractive to business investors,
young professionals, retiring
seniors and family homebuyers
but the parks have suffered
funding cuts for over 10 years and
staffing is at an all time low which
leaves weedy fields, garbage on the
playgrounds, broken equipment
and dirty waterways.
Bus riders are another
stakeholder group. Currently, bus
fares are the highest in the whole
United States but we don’t have
as many routes, we can’t get to
places we need to and we have to
wait too long to catch a bus. The
County Executive wants to raise
these fares significantly.
There is a lot at stake this year
as the County Board decides
on a budget plan for 2007. The
Alliance has a plan that could
prevent many cuts. This plan
would:
a) Reduce the amount of money
put into the pension plan from
$59 million to $40 million. This
$40 million is still almost twice as
much as was put in last year.
b) Use the $5 million surplus
discovered in July for 2007
expenses.
c) Raise property taxes slightly.
If the average homeowner pays an
extra $35 a year, we would raise
$10 million that could be used for
parks, buses, and programs for
those in need.
The Alliance will be distributing
information on the County budget
plan and organizing residents to
contact their County Supervisors
to protest the cuts.
Concerned? Contact County
Supervisors Willie Johnson, Jr.
(Riverwest & Harambee) or Gerry
Broderick (East Side) or County
Executive Scott Walker. ~Ed.
Riverwest Currents online edition - October, 2006
|