January 24, 2012

From health insurance, which is generally projected to increase by 9-10 percent annually, to the rising cost of fuel, infrastructure maintenance and education, there are few areas immune to the rising cost of governance.

Referencing the recent decision by the council to sign off on a firefighter contract which he described contained "overly generous benefits," Waluk said that the city is going to have to look for savings at all turns. 

"We have contracts with our employees that we cannot afford to pay, and the people of Newport cannot afford to support," Waluk said, adding that it's important that everyone be aware of the cost of the status quo.

How the city will deal with the deficits will be left to the City Council, which is expected to begin their FY2013 budget process this Spring.

January 24, 2012

Latest Comments

  • A FEW IDEAS TO HELP

    1. Thames St. from Washington Sq. to Mill St; and from Memorial Blvd to Wellington becomes a Toll Road. Also, Bellevue Avenue from Narragansett to Ocean Drive; all of Ocean Drive (both ways); and Morton Ave from Carroll to Spring (because people drive much too fast up there) - all Toll Roads.

    2. One windmill per park to generate enough power to pay for the electric bills in all of our schools and all of the street lamps.

    3. A Jazz Tax/Phil Collins surcharge. So often in the spring and summer I hear people complaining about the kids blasting music from their motorcars. It's annoying, rude and very often difficult to make out what they're singing about. We need to pass a law prohibiting the playing of the loud music from automobiles, subject to high fines (a thousand bucks). However, in order to preserve the integrity and history of the town, we should allow the playing of jazz - provided the driver has purchased a sticker (a day or summer pass, like with the beaches). This, of course can be adjusted for an additional fee to allow recently divorced middle-aged men in fast cars to blast Phil Collins when they go speeding around the Drive with the top down.

    4. Raise the price of going to First Beach to include everyone. Narragansett charges people to go to the beach (that means, people who walk to the beach), so can Newport. Naturally, we'd have to clean the beach up a tiny bit; but for now we can call it "the Seaweed Tax."

    5. Employ The WAL-MART Initiative. Wal-Mart famously employs workers at less than 40 hours a week in order to avoid having to pay for such nuisances as health care and overtime. Newport should adopt this plan for all of its' civil servants. I'm sure no one would mind.

    6. Bring Back the Double-Header to the Creamery. Call it the "City of Newport's Double Header" and see to it that the city gets HALF of every Double-Header cone sold statewide. (Also, they need to bring back the Cabinet - they used to make them really good.)

    7. Sell beer and wine at 1St Beach. If we're going to entertain the idea of full-scale casino gaming at Jai-Alai, then we should consider selling beer and wine at the beach. Look at how well they do over there at Johnny's House of Seafood! Tremendous what goes on over there! Think how much revenue we could generate every summer!

    8. Full Open Bar at all City Council meetings. Since we're on the subject, why not really get residents involved by making the meetings more entertaining and tolerable. Of course, there will be a fee...

    9. More parades. The Police Parade and the St. Patrick's Day Parade generate business and please everyone! We should allow more parades, but charge higher license fees. Consider parades for a Fourth of July; the Jazz & Folk Festivals; Columbus Day, Halloween , Thanksgiving Day; etc.

    10. A Pizza & Beer tax. It won't be popular, but 50 cents a slice and $1 a pie; 50 cents a beer & $1 per six pack. Think about it. In this town? We'd pay off the deficit in a matter of weeks.

    Posted by FRED SULLIVAN January 26, 2012 16:37:44

  • Deficts

    If the current council "has been concerned with [this] for some time," why have they not taken steps to address it? Four of them have been sitting on the counbcil for 10 years or more.

    Their year-to-year budget process has been a major factor in creating the situation. Now they are starting a long range planning process but can't get beyond being a "first class toruist city." Come on - let's have a strategic budget process that forms priorities for 5 years out. Then decide what we can afford to do and what we have to forego.

    Posted by Herb Armstrong January 26, 2012 15:31:37

  • What Services to Cut - Early Public Input ?

    Alien concept for Newport: Survey consumers of City of Newport services on which ones that they'd be prepared to accept changes. Give them "what-if" scenarios. Use those results, however unscientific they may be, to shape the city manager's proposed budget. Why not begin conditioning the population to the inevitable changes early on in the budget process instead of waiting for the formal public workshops ?

    Posted by Mike Cullen @ KnowingNewport January 26, 2012 15:09:27

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