EAST PROVIDENCE — The administration of East Providence Mayor Bob DaSilva released its draft of the FY2020-2021 budget to the City Council and the general public late Thursday afternoon, Sept. …
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EAST PROVIDENCE — The administration of East Providence Mayor Bob DaSilva released its draft of the FY2020-2021 budget to the City Council and the general public late Thursday afternoon, Sept. 17, doing so at the deadline for its submission as written in the City Charter.
Per charter, the executive must submit a proposed budget to the legislature for the next fiscal year 45 days prior to the end of the current one, which takes place annual on October 31.
The proposed budget recommends General Fund expenditures of $169,051,000, a $4.3 million increase over FY19-20 spending and a tax rate increase of approximately three percent year-over-year.
The city is currently working under a budget approved by the council of $165.8 million that included a 2.3 percent tax increase.
Of the total General Fund expenditure increase, city operating expenditures would increase by $2.6 million, including a request by the school department of an additional $285,000 and an appropriation of $1.4 million to fund future debt payments for the new East Providence High School. The latter of which, the administration said, makes up one-third of the proposed tax rate increase.
The total FY20-21 budget requested for the district by the central office and approved by the School Committee in late August was $50,420,351 up from $50,124,777 in FY19-20.
“This budget was prepared to not only meet the financial challenges of funding our new high school and fulfilling the fixed contractual employee obligations that pre-date this Administration, but also to reflect the uncertainties and hardships that the COVID-19 pandemic has brought to our City,” Mayor DaSilva was quoted as saying in a press release noting submission of the draft.
He continued, “We believe this budget keeps our residents and businesses safe, our city service levels high, our infrastructure in repair, and our parks and recreational facilities maintained, beautiful and enjoyable.”
Most of the city’s $2.6 million operating expenditure increases are due to contractual obligations with personnel, escalations in non-controllable costs and fully funding annual required pension (ARC) contributions.
The following six items total $2.2 million of the overall city operating increase:
The full FY20-21 draft budget can be viewed at https://stories.opengov.com/eastprovidenceri/published/iNesDQzug.
The council has already scheduled several workshops to review the submission from both the city and the school department, are scheduled to take place the evenings of September 22 and 24 as well as October 1. Each workshop is slated to begin at 6:30 p.m. According to a preliminary opinion of the City Solicitor’s office, October 24 is the last day to pass budget and still override a potential veto by the mayor, as provided in the charter.
Key dates in the process are as follows:
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