Please prioritize the following Citywide Service Areas.
This service area includes the Planning and Development Services Department, the Public Works Department, the Utilities Department, and the Office of Transportation.
From the list of FY 2021-22 Proposed Budget reductions listed below, please prioritize up to ten (10) items that are the most important to you to restore if funding becomes available. Ranking #1 means this item is your highest priority service to be restored, if additional funding is available.
This action would augment funding for the City Council's "Climate Change Protection and Adaptation" priority.
This action restores funding to maintain the transfer from the General Fund to the Capital Improvement Fund for maintaining the City's infrastructure and capital project investments.
This action would restore funding for City-provided crossing guards at all schools; the budget includes funding only for high-traffic intersections that are part of common routes to schools.
Please share any additional comments on the 2022 Proposed Budgets.
I have said many times to elected officials that the climate crisis is the most important issue that we face, but I must confess that I am not exactly sure how to to apply that sentiment to the FY22 budget process. A year ago, I wrote that these are my top priorities: (1) toilet flushing works (2) water comes out of faucet (3) electricity comes through the wires (4) ambulance and fire vehicles arrive (5) garbage is picked up. I am not exactly sure how to weigh those things versus public safety (e.g., crossing guards at major intersections). My two areas of civic involvement are (A) acting as a Neighborhood Preparedness Coordinator through the ESV program and (B) serving on the Pedestrian and Bicycle Advisory Committee. The former has to do with public safety, the latter with the climate crisis. They have broad impact across most/all segments of the community, as opposed to programs of specific interest to subsets of the community. If I were to make any request, it is that you prioritize budget areas with broadest reach. THANK YOU FOR YOUR SERVICE
Open Town Hall is not a certified voting system or ballot box. As with any public comment process, participation in Open Town Hall is voluntary. The responses in this record are not necessarily representative of the whole population, nor do they reflect the opinions of any government agency or elected officials.
Please prioritize the following Citywide Service Areas.
This service area includes the Planning and Development Services Department, the Public Works Department, the Utilities Department, and the Office of Transportation.
From the list of FY 2021-22 Proposed Budget reductions listed below, please prioritize up to ten (10) items that are the most important to you to restore if funding becomes available. Ranking #1 means this item is your highest priority service to be restored, if additional funding is available.
This action would augment funding for the City Council's "Climate Change Protection and Adaptation" priority.
This action restores funding to maintain the transfer from the General Fund to the Capital Improvement Fund for maintaining the City's infrastructure and capital project investments.
This action would restore funding for City-provided crossing guards at all schools; the budget includes funding only for high-traffic intersections that are part of common routes to schools.
This action would augment funding for the City Council's "Housing for Social and Economic Balance" priority.
This action restores funding to provide services at Fire Station #2 on weekdays from 8 AM to 8 PM dependent on staffing.
Please share any additional comments on the 2022 Proposed Budgets.
I have said many times to elected officials that the climate crisis is the most important issue that we face, but I must confess that I am not exactly sure how to to apply that sentiment to the FY22 budget process. A year ago, I wrote that these are my top priorities: (1) toilet flushing works (2) water comes out of faucet (3) electricity comes through the wires (4) ambulance and fire vehicles arrive (5) garbage is picked up. I am not exactly sure how to weigh those things versus public safety (e.g., crossing guards at major intersections). My two areas of civic involvement are (A) acting as a Neighborhood Preparedness Coordinator through the ESV program and (B) serving on the Pedestrian and Bicycle Advisory Committee. The former has to do with public safety, the latter with the climate crisis. They have broad impact across most/all segments of the community, as opposed to programs of specific interest to subsets of the community. If I were to make any request, it is that you prioritize budget areas with broadest reach. THANK YOU FOR YOUR SERVICE