Long-term Master Planning
The Civic Center Campus comprises the 3 blocks between Church Street and Dowdy Streets from east to west, and between 6th Street and 7th Street from north to south. With the exception of the library and the police station, this campus is underutilized with buildings in various degrees of deterioration. This budget allocates $700,000 to commence the evaluation process of adding a Gilroy Community Center along with the potential redesign of other aged assets (e.g., Wheeler auditorium, the former police station, the Senior Center, and City Hall) and including the city-owned Center for the Arts on Monterey and 7th Street. This effort to add a Community Center and re-evaluate underutilized and/or deteriorated space will hopefully spur the addition of recreation programs for all ages, multi-purpose space for gatherings, events, and the arts, and provide an inviting City Hall that welcomes and serves our community.
Housing and Community Services
This budget creates a focused division within the Community Development Department called Housing and Community Services. This specifically-focused division will be run by a Housing and Community Services manager and will enable the City to make more concentrated efforts on affordable housing production, preservation, and protection for our residents. The position of manager does not necessitate additional staff because it will instead re-purpose an existing position created during the COVID-19 pandemic for program administration/coordination.
Economic Development
This budget continues to support the Council’s direction of making Gilroy a “Recreation Destination” and three primary economic development projects:
The Sports Park – Expanding the Sports Park to include two NHL-size hockey rinks for programs and events operated by the San Jose Sharks organization is under way. The City is responsible to bring necessary utilities to the site, the costs for which are allocated in this budget. Expected work includes design, environmental work, construction for site grading, installation of site stormwater collection system and stormwater treatment facilities, sewer collection, water service distribution, and joint trench. Also included is the design and construction of traffic signal improvements at the entrance to the Sports Park at the Monterey Road/Monterey Frontage Road intersection. Evidence of this exciting new addition should be visible shortly to anyone visiting the Sports Park. Construction of the actual ice facility will be financed through a revenue bond paid for by the Sharks. Construction timeframe for the facility itself is 18-24 months.
Downtown alleys – Adding lighting and landscaping, decorative paving, common trash enclosures and other amenities are all part of the improvements to occur on Gourmet Alley from 4th to 7th Street, and on Railroad Alley from Lewis to 7th Street. Design is complete and construction should begin this Fall. The goal is to convert these alleys into inviting pedestrian pathways for strolling, shopping, dining and seating. Together with the multi-purpose parking lot already completed at 7th and Eigleberry and a parking management plan that has already been initiated, we are well on our way to significant improvements downtown, amounting to over $6.5 million since the end of the pandemic lockdown, not to mention private investments and new businesses.
Gilroy Gardens and surrounding City-owned land -- We have recently concluded the process of official publication required by Senate Bill 330 (effective 1/1/20) and known as the Surplus Lands Act for the entire 536 acres owned by the City in the vicinity of and including Gilroy Gardens. The conclusion of this process means that we are now in a position to receive formal proposals and explore all possible uses for this entire area.
This budget also includes the funding for a position of Economic Development Manager.
California Public Employees Retirement System (CalPERS)
This is a sore subject for me because it’s killing us financially with no solution in sight. The CalPERS system promises retirement packages to public employees at a fixed dollar amount regardless of how investments are actually performing. As a consequence, when the investment market loses money or doesn’t meet the necessary earnings mark, retirement benefit obligations can’t be met in full. Note also that incoming CalPERS contributions from employees are a mere fraction of the outgoing benefits paid to retirees. The city pays the minimum required annual payment on our retirement obligations and accrues a growing “unfunded liability” that gets larger and larger (and accrues interest!) depending upon the magnitude of the shortfall of the investment market performance from the interest rate assumed by CalPERS. Gilroy’s unfunded CalPERS liability is over $100 million, the amount required to meet our current and future pension obligations as they exist today. We have additional unfunded liabilities of nearly $20 million for Other Post-Employment Benefits (OPEB). OPEB refers to retirement benefits other than pensions that public employees receive, such as medical, dental, vision or life insurance.
In 2019, the then City Council voted to establish and fund a Section 115 Trust, a mechanism for setting aside and investing current funds to offset future pension liability payments. At that time, when I too was on the Council, we voted to amend the Fiscal Year 2020 budget by $2 million to fund the trust. In 2022, we formally adopted a pension funding policy which requires annual contributions to the Section 115 Trust so that money would be available to help offset rising pension costs during more difficult budgetary or economic times. To date, $3.0 million has been contributed to the Section 115 Trust and this budget allocates an additional $750,000 to be contributed. This budget also includes funding for the required CalPERS annual minimum payments of $13.6 million for fiscal year 2024 and $14.7 million for fiscal year 2025.
Citywide Park Improvements
This budget allocates $1 million from the General Fund for improvements to parks citywide, including park restroom rehabilitation (replacing approximately 32 park restrooms throughout the city with fire retardant roofs and durable, fire-resistant building materials). It has become increasingly challenging to maintain public restrooms due to growing incidents of vandalism, but this rehabilitation effort is a matter of public safety and ultimately reduces maintenance costs. Additionally, this budget provides for annual funding of $100,000 for general citywide park needs, a portion of which may be used to improve dog parks, for example.
Water/Wastewater Rate Adjustments
As a full-service City, Gilroy owns and operates its own water and wastewater utilities, providing services to over 15,000 customers and growing. To ensure both utilities collect revenue sufficient to meet the growing demand, keep pace with the rising operational costs – including groundwater extraction charges assessed by Valley Water, and fund the multi-year capital improvement plans, the City has conducted a utilities' rate study. The last utilities' rate study was completed in 2015, and the City has not increased its water or wastewater rates since January 2019. In April 2023, the City approved the updated Water and Wastewater Master Plans, which collectively identified over $50.3 million in new improvements, of which $21.7 million is for existing users (ratepayers) and $28.6 million for future developments. For the City to continue investing in critical utilities' infrastructure and keep pace with rising operational costs, the City needs to establish multi-year rate adjustments. The study will be presented at the August 21st Council meeting, followed by a community meeting in September. The rate adjustments are scheduled to be adopted at a Public Hearing on October 16th after completing the required forty-five days' notice. The first rate adjustment will be recommended effective January 1, 2024. Additional information will be included with the upcoming monthly utility bill statements and shared via the City’s communication channels.
|