Archive for category Uncategorized

Last Council Meeting Before the Election: Another Unfunded Liability

Tonight was the final Council meeting before the election.

I’ve attended every Council meeting this Fall except the special Friday morning one. I go to quite a few Council meetings in general, so attending this Fall’s during my run for office was not much of a stretch. Penny Rich and Augustus Cho usually show up to catch what’s going on directly (Augustus was there this evening, Penny was participating in UNC Healthcare’s Tickled Pink event to benefit cancer research). Watching the meeting on TV or via the Web is just not quite the same.

Over the last eight years it has been interesting to see which candidates do show up – it seems like you would want to make sure you really want the job given the time commitment, to get up to speed on the relevant issues so you can hit the ground running, to learn a bit more of the nuts-n-bolts of how the Council operates so you can fit into the process fairly quickly – yet cycle after cycle it’s only a few that show.

While the media will probably focus on the Kidzu presentation, the approval moving Glen Lennox’s neighborhood conservation district (NCD) forward, Jim – on election eve – asking the Town to enforce Northside’s NCD (which I talk about in my recent brochure) or Council letting their next incarnation decide on Strom’s replacement, probably the most consequential issue on tonight’s agenda will not get word one.

Ken Pennoyer, the Town’s director of business management, was proposing a change in the structure of staff benefits. All new employees hired after June 30th, 2010 would get a defined benefit plan covering retirement health coverage. Existing employees would retain their Town guaranteed benefit, the payout based on term of service and retirement age.

What’s the big deal?

The existing plan, which is a “pay as you go” approach paid out of general revenues, has increased from $400K to $891k in 5 years – more than doubling our current obligation. To fully fund our commitment to our retired workforce would take $32M to $56M, roughly $3+ M or more per year, for a couple decades!

While the Town has set aside $400K in designated funds over the last two years, the forward obligation makes those contributions pale in comparison. $3-4M per year is equivalent to $0.05 to $0.07 of Chapel Hill’s tax rate – an additional $150 to $210 per year on a $300K home tax bill. This unfunded liability is just one of a number of other obligations – like the $3M affordable housing maintenance fund – which has been allowed to grow and grow over the last 6 years.

Tonight is the first attempt to truly grapple with that overhanging debt to our valued retirees. There are risks inherent in moving new employees to a defined benefit plan but the alternative, scrambling to find funds each fiscal cycle to adequately maintain that obligation, is not sustainable.
Read the rest of this entry »

Chapel Hill’s Chamber of Commerce Commentary

The Chapel Hill Chamber of Commerce has created candidate profiles based on an interview, a recent forum and responses to their unusual “yes, no, unsure” survey.

Will Raymond, a software engineer and entrepreneur making his third run for council, is stressing more fiscal conservatism this time around, even being so bold as to say that Chapel Hill cannot now afford a public library expansion. His depth of consideration of issues and determination to point out unintended consequences of council actions is a valuable asset to the town. Raymond, a tireless volunteer on town bodies, has previously tried to guide voters through the minutiae of various processes when making his points, but so far this campaign has shown more accessibility into his philosophy of town government and appears to grasp how different being an elected official would be from serving on committees. “A council member’s voice carries beyond the citizen podium.”

In 2007, the Chamber said I was too detailed-oriented, a criticism I found strange as it is rare that Council makes one decision that changes the course of our community. The state of today’s Chapel Hill came from hundreds of decisions, some grounded in detail, made over a course of years.

The Chamber is correct, though, about delving into minutiae. I’ve worked hard at being brief and to the point during the forums this year.

As the Chamber noted, this is the third time I’ve run on a fiscal responsibility platform.

In 2005, the financial difficulties caused by habitually draining the Town’s reserves and the issuance of extraordinary bond debt were on the horizon. In 2007, an election year, the Town’s struggle to maintain its fiscal footing was not being clearly reported by the Council. In 2009, the community understands the problems we face. The clouds obscuring our Town’s fiscal condition are lifting. The need to live within our community’s means quite apparent.

So, as the Chamber points out, with the cupboard bare, a continued economic downturn, our citizens groaning under their tax burden and demands on our Town’s core services increasing, my campaign has once again focused on rebuilding our Town’s financial foundations.

Fiscal responsibility and prudent budgeting is about finding the discipline to make cuts where necessary and provide additional funds where needed (for instance, adequately managing the increasing demand on human services).

I’m confident that if we engage our community clearly and openly, Chapel Hill can weather this storm and come out stronger for it.

Contact Will's Campaign

Here’s how to contact our campaign.

If you want to contact Will, volunteer, need more information:
campaign@willraymond.org
(919) – 932 – 1035

Will Raymond
209 Mt. Bolus Rd.
Chapel Hill, NC 27514

For media inquiries:
campaign@willraymond.org

My campaign will never share your personal information. We will only use it to contact you about Will Raymond for Town Council activities

Bad Behavior has blocked 41 access attempts in the last 7 days.