Budget proposal reflects constrained spending across the board, exec says

From warehouses to fire stations, severalprojects didn?t make their way into Howard County Executive Ken Ulman?s proposed fiscal 2009 capital budget, or the funding was split across a few years.

The $420.8 million proposal, released Tuesday, reflects tight budget times from declining real estate taxes and state funding, Ulman said.

And it?s far less than the $533.7 million in capital budget requests, he said.

“We squeezed a lot of places in this budget to get it down to an acceptable level,” Ulman said at a briefing on his proposal.

The budget funds some of the county?s top priorities, such as the North Laurel Community Center and technology upgrades, he said.

Spending was strained due to a decrease in real estate taxes, such as the transfer and recordation taxes, which help fund capital projects, said Budget Director Ray Wacks.

Officials expect to collect about $22 million in transfer taxes in fiscal 2008, which is $6 million less than they budgeted for in 2008 and $8 million less than collected in fiscal 2007, Wacks said.

Several school system requests were deferred in the proposed budget, including the $33 million renovation and addition at the former Cedar Lane School site in Columbia for use as a community center and staff offices.

Although he supports the project, Ulman said, “I don?t believe it is something wecan afford.”

Ulman also left out the $12 million requested for a warehouse facility to replace the space the Board of Education rents. The board had not picked out a site for the new facility, Ulman said.

The school system had submitted a $118 million budget proposal, but Ulman?s proposal dedicated $80.47 million for school renovation and construction.

The school system wasn?t the only part of the budget to see tightening.

Funding for the construction of a new Miller branch library was split over two years, with $7.7 million of the $26 million project included in the fiscal 2009 proposal.

Another $6.7 million also was deferred for enclosing a firing range at the new public safety training center in Marriottsville.

Howard Community College also didn?t receive the $15 million requested for a new parking garage, and two new fire station projects were put on hold.

“There were some projects that got cut, but I think they were the right projects,” said Council Chairwoman Courtney Watson, D-District 1, adding the council will review every item “with a fine-toothed comb.”

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