Proposal Must
Now Be Approved
By Commission
To Become
Final
By
TOM YANCEY
Staff Writer
To provide
money for asphalt paving of some county roads, the Greene County Commission's Budget Committee voted
unanimously Wednesday to recommend issuing a $390,000 six-month capital outlay
note.
The committee had earlier decided to provide the money as a
supplement to the county Highway Department's budget.
Increases in the
cost of asphalt (as well as fuel, steel and stone) have stressed the already underfunded county
Highway Department's budget this year.
To be final, the recommendation
that the county government issue $390,000 in bonds requires approval by the Greene County
Commission.
County Mayor Alan Broyles said a resolution about the capital
outlay note can be presented at the Aug. 18 county commission meeting.
The agenda at the Aug.18 meeting is expected to focus on adoption of
Greene County's 2008-09 budget.
"If the budget passes, as I think it
will," Broyles said, the commission can then pass the capital outlay note
resolution.
County government is now operating under a continuing
resolution that allows each department to spend one-twelfth of last year's total budget each year,
but prohibits any non-emergency capital outlays.
Road Superintendent
David Weems said early in this year's budget-making process that his department would not have
enough money in its budget to cover the amount of road patching that is needed on deteriorating
roads, and would not be able to do any significant amount of
resurfacing.
In early July, Weems submitted a budget that was out of
balance by more than $800,000. Weems later trimmed about half of that amount, and the committee
agreed to try to find a way to provide the remaining amount without a tax
increase.
Commissioner Hilton Seay noted that the capital outlay note is
to be repaid in six months, with funds from the General Debt Service Fund. The interest payment is
not expected to exceed $15,000, the committee has been told.
Budget
Director David Weems said Wednesday that the General Debt Service Fund currently has an unencumbered
balance of about $1.1 million.
Lawing, a former state auditor, said state
law would not allow a direct transfer of money from the General Debt Service Fund to the Highway
Department, because the tax money that went into the Debt Service Fund was allocated in previous
budgets to be used to cover county debt.
Issuing a capital outlay note
creates debt that the fund can legitimately cover.