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Montgomery Council members knock executive’s claim of fiscal conservatism

Apr 2, 2008 12:00 AM (282 days ago) by Kathleen Miller, The Examiner
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Related Topics: WASHINGTON
WASHINGTON (Map, News) - Montgomery County Council members are taking issue with County Executive Ike Leggett’s claims of fiscal conservatism, saying his budget has required extensive revisions and cost additions since it was released.

In January, Leggett recommending that spending for capital improvements increase only 1.1 percent to $3.2 billion over the next six years, leaving $2 billion in department requests unfilled. The modest increase compares with a 24.3 percent increase in the two-year budget in 2006 and a 26.2 percent increase in 2004.

In the 10 weeks since his budget’s release, however, as council members pore over the finer points of his proposal, some say they have been left to do the heavy lifting of either cutting projects entirely or signing off on significantly larger figures to fund things that they say Leggett’s office should have realized would have cost more to do beforehand.

During meetings Tuesday, council members debated funding for library construction, expressing frustration that place holder budget amounts were left in for certain projects from prior budgets and not adjusted for inflation, and that decisions were not made to advance or kill other projects.

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“I have to suspect that the lack of deciding is as intentional as anything else,” Councilman George Leventhal said. “If you don’t have to decide you don’t have to spend money.”

After the council was informed that a recreation center in North Potomac could cost $17 million more than the $22 million allocated in Leggett’s budget, Council President Mike Knapp thought the council was left hanging.

“It’s all well and good to say your budget only increased 1 percent, but then we’re left on the hook for changes,” Knapp said.

Patrick Lacefield, Leggett’s spokesman, said at the time that the price jump was due to an unexpected increase in the cost of land.

“We are working from our best estimates,” Lacefield said via e-mail Tuesday. “My understanding is the council wants to do way more than resources may allow.”

Leggett’s proposal also included about $40 million for renovations to the county’s current judicial center and the planning and design of a new judicial center annex in Rockville, since the current circuit court building has no remaining courtroom spaces left.

Council staff reports said, however, that upgrades to heating and air conditioning systems in the current center alone could eat up $25 million to $35 million, and recommended budgeting $100 million to fund construction of the judicial annex.

kmiller@dcexaminer.com

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Comments from Examiner Readers

11:55 AM MST on Tue., Aug. 12, 2008 re: "40 percent of MontCo public safety retirees receive disability payments, report shows"

Examiner Reader Steve said:
I guess workers in public employees unions don't get enough sweetheart deals from MoCo government. Apparently the all-Democratic council fears, or really likes the performance, of union officials and members. Union members persuade via boos and jeers at public hearings. Get a backbone guys and gals.

4 agree | 5 disagree
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8:20 AM MST on Tue., Aug. 12, 2008 re: "40 percent of MontCo public safety retirees receive disability payments, report shows"

Examiner Reader said:
Montgomery County must count obesity and Viagra use as a retirement disability.

4 agree | 2 disagree
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8:16 AM MST on Tue., Aug. 12, 2008 re: "40 percent of MontCo public safety retirees receive disability payments, report shows"

Robin Ficker Broker Robin Realty said:
Do 40% of retirees in your business retire on disabiity?

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8:12 AM MST on Tue., Aug. 12, 2008 re: "40 percent of MontCo public safety retirees receive disability payments, report shows"

Robin Ficker Broker Robin Realty said:
While Leggett know of this massive retirement disability fraud he proposed the largest property tax increase in 20 years. Next year he will proposed the largest property tax increase in 21 years. The county and doctors involved here are complicit. Doubtlessly some of these people were claiming early social security benefits while saying income was disability. The feds should look at this because the elected officials in Montgomery County have shown they are not concerned with governmenbt waste. Why is it that an unelected inspector general finds this and not the elected officials? The Council took the months of December and August as vacation instead of looking for waste like this. 3% of Fairfax retirees and 4% of Howard retirees take disability while 40% of Montgomery retirees do. Obviously there is rampant criminal fraud here.

9 agree | 5 disagree
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7:22 AM MST on Wed., Mar. 19, 2008 re: "Leggett increases funding for youth, slashes immigrant outreach program"

Robin Ficker Broker Robin Realty said:
I would think that speed cameras which have given well over 100,000 tickets in Montgomery County would have made free thousands of police man hours.

8 agree | 5 disagree
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6:40 AM MST on Wed., Feb. 20, 2008 re: "County to shuffle government agencies"

Robin Ficker, Broker Robin Realty said:
If the county wants to serve the citizens they can abandon their plans for a great big property tax hike. The county budget was $3 billion in FY04 and is approaching $4.5 billion now while the population has increased less than 5% during this time. Why should the budget increase ten times as fast as the population during a time of low inflation?

42 agree | 36 disagree
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8:10 AM MST on Wed., Jan. 30, 2008 re: "Leggett facing battle in building new county offices"

Robin Ficker, Broker Robin Realty said:
This is the kind of crony project that has usually sailed through in Montgomery County. The problem for the Leggett-Knapp tax increase team is that they want to seize our Pelosi rebate checks and give us a great big property tax increase to build projects like this. And we have had water bill, electricity bill and Metro fare increases and the largest tax increase in Maryland history.

46 agree | 45 disagree
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9:46 AM MST on Mon., Jan. 28, 2008 re: "Montgomery residents: County outreach lacking"

Examiner Reader said:
The taxpayers funding the purchase of land from the *war company* GE smells rotten. Leggett tax schemes aren't coming from the citizens, so who is driving the county executive's agenda?

49 agree | 50 disagree
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12:16 PM MST on Tue., Jan. 22, 2008 re: "Leggett facing battle in building new county offices"

Examiner Reader said:
Please save money. Don't do it. leggett administration spend too much money on worthless projects. Also, he gave too much raise for county employees. 7% raise is much, much higher than federal government employees. Cut property tax, and reduce unnessary projects for county residents.

64 agree | 51 disagree
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7:37 AM MST on Tue., Jan. 22, 2008 re: "Leggett facing battle in building new county offices"

Keith Annesley said:
I suspect all the hot air coming from Robin Ficker is the true source of our global warming problem. Robin, how much longer does the suspension of your license to practice law have to run? Suspended for negligence!

52 agree | 56 disagree
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5:57 AM MST on Tue., Jan. 22, 2008 re: "Leggett facing battle in building new county offices"

Robin Ficker, Broker Robin Realty said:
The Dow is due to drop 500 points today. How can Leggett continue with a tax and spend government?

35 agree | 51 disagree
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3:50 PM MST on Tue., Jan. 1, 2008 re: "Montgomery residents: County outreach lacking"

Robin Ficker, Broker Robin Realty said:
We shall soon see how well county residents are listened to. The county's own recent "push" poll said that only 7% of residents wanted taxes raised raised. Watch Mr. Leggett and Mr. Knapp lead an effort to exceed the charter property tax limit. They will show the 93% of residents who don't want taxes increased a thing or two. SAVE OUR HOMES!

72 agree | 63 disagree
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9:36 AM MST on Tue., Dec. 4, 2007 re: "Leggett seeking higher gas tax to fund transportation projects"

Robin Ficker, Broker Robin Realty said:
We need to save the homes of Montgomery Countians. We cannot afford to exceed the county property tax revenue limit. Leggett's first year was centered around his call for tax increases. The 20% increase in the state sales tax, the 18% increase in the corporate tax, the 20% increase in the car tax and a huge increase in the state income tax, more than 50% of which will be paid by the 16% of Marylanders who live in Montgomery County. Now Leggett is pushing for a 15 cent a gallon increae in the gasoline tax and a property tax increase by violating the charter property tax revenue limit. He has no shame, decency, or spine to cut spending. He asks for 2% cut recommendations in a budget that increased 8.5%. That is still a 6.5% increase, twice the rate of inflation, not a 2% cut. While the county budget increased from $2 billion in FY 98 to $4.2 billion last year, where has the $2.2 billion gone? Gridlock, crime, and SAT scores are worse!We'll buy our gas in P.G., Va., and Fre

87 agree | 66 disagree
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