DeKalb CEO Michael Thurmond fulfilled a promise made in January to usher in a new era of government transparency and financial accountability by proposing a FY2018 budget free of deficit spending. Officials say the budget that will be delivered to the Board of Commissioners on Dec. 15 bucks the trend of county budgets that included millions of dollars of deficit spending and unstable or non-existent fund balances.
“We have gotten our fiscal house in order by ending deficit spending and building a $75 million fund balance, or rainy day fund. We must take the next critical step and address long-festering issues that are threatening to undermine the quality of life in DeKalb,” Thurmond said.
The Thurmond administration’s top priorities for FY2018 include repairing DeKalb’s deteriorating roads and reducing homeowner property taxes using Special Purpose Local Option Sales Tax (SPLOST) funds. Also, the proposed FY2018 budget calls for increasing the number of sworn police officers on patrol, preventing juvenile delinquency and improving customer service for residents who utilize county services.
According to county staffing reports, the number of DeKalb police officers has declined by 284 officers, or 28 percent, from 994 officers to 710 officers, since 2012. To increase the number of sworn officers, CEO Thurmond’s general tax fund budget proposes to relieve critical police officer shortages by revamping police recruitment efforts, developing a new recruitment marketing plan and adding hiring incentives. The budget also includes $7.9 million to fund 155 sworn positions above current staffing levels.
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YEAH RIGHT! Still does not want to adress the water billing and meter issue.JUst blames others and kicking the can down the road!