On the Fiscal Crisis, Somerville Leads by Example

On May 15, 2009, in Uncategorized, by The News Staff
 

By Joseph A. Curtatone

(The
opinions and views expressed in the commentaries of The Somerville News
belong solely to the authors of those commentaries and do not reflect
the views or opinions of The Somerville News, its staff or publishers.)

As
the governor and the legislature grapple with what has become, in
dollar terms, the largest fiscal crisis in Massachusetts history, one
of the hottest questions is whether the state can cut its way to
solvency, or whether some new and additional revenues are necessary. My
position on this question has been loud, clear and public. I believe
that:

· Some cuts are inevitable, but you can't cut your way to success;

· Fundamental reform can lead to significant savings;

· We should approach this challenge not by shifting the blame, but by sharing the burden;

· No matter how many cuts and reforms we impose, we cannot maintain core services without some new revenue; and

·
As part of a comprehensive rebalancing of the fiscal relationship
between the state and its municipalities, cities and towns should be
given more freedom and authority to diversify revenue and to manage
costs – especially the soaring cost of health care

I hope that
is the approach that ultimately carries on the day on Beacon Hill. Here
in Somerville, we will do our best to lead by example.

On cost
management, we are taking the lead by collaborating with our police
unions on new contracts that not only include zero percent pay
increases, but also call for pay furloughs in which employees give back
one week's salary without reducing their hours. Our patrolmen's union
courageously led the way on this approach by agreeing to these
provisions in a one-year contract signed in March; our police superior
officers' union signed on to the same austerity measures in a new
three-year agreement signed on May 1st.

I am deeply grateful for
the community spirit represented by these contracts, which set an
example for other municipal unions here in Somerville and across the
state.

This week, I took the next logical step by telling our
non-union workforce (including all elected officials), that they, too,
would be looking at a continued wage freeze in FY2010 – and that they,
too, would be receiving one-week furloughs. Taken together, the
non-union and police furloughs represent a cut in the FY2010 budget of
well over $300,000.

That's a significant amount of money – but
it is even more significant as an indication of the fact that we are
all in this together. The employees covered by these furlough policies
are making a genuine sacrifice to preserve core city services at a time
of fiscal crisis.

Even though it would completely unfair to ask
city workers to bear the entire burden on their own, I wish I could say
that their sacrifice would, by itself, be sufficient to meet our
ongoing budget shortfall. The truth, of course, is that it will take
far more, both in terms of cost savings and enhanced revenues.

To
help us find the best menu of budget options, I turned in January to a
group of outside fiscal experts from both the private and the
non-profit sectors. I asked them to advise the city on a full range of
potential costs savings and revenue items – both short-term and
long-term – that could help us get past the current crisis without
reducing core services.

This week, the Financial Advisory
Committee (FAC) submitted its recommendations. (You can download a copy
from the "FY-2009-2010 Budget Development" page on the city's website.
There's a link to the budget page from our homepage at
www.somervillema.gov.)

It's an impressive, thoughtful and
provocative list. I am grateful for all of the committee's hard work,
and I will carefully review its suggestions. Some of them are entirely
within the City's choice and control, including such options as:
exploring opportunities for competitive sourcing between city employees
and private vendors; establishing higher license fees and violation
fines; or moving the entire city to residential permit parking.

It's
already clear, however, that the City of Somerville cannot implement
several of the FAC's most important recommendations unless the state
gives us the tools to do so – and/or our municipal unions lend their
assent. Nowhere are these restrictions more evident than in the area of
health care cost management.

We have been working steadily over
the past five years – and with some success – to bring employee and
retiree health insurance contributions more in line with standard
practice in the private sector (and, indeed with many other cities and
towns). I am also ready now to embrace the FAC's suggestion that we
"determine and quantify the potential benefits and costs-savings of
joining the Commonwealth's Group Insurance Commission (GIC)."

But
there are millions more in savings (with no loss in access or quality
of services) that can be had from other changes on the health care
front. Here are a few of the key FAC recommendations on health care
that require authorization or endorsement at the state level:

· "Encourage a move away from an Indemnity Plan while ensuring comparable coverage through other cost-effective options

· "Issue a Request For Proposals (RFP) for a sole health insurance provider

·
"Pursue a broad range of plan design changes with the potential of
reducing costs while maintaining coverage and quality of care

·
"Support legislative authorization for cities and towns to have the
same administrative authority to change plan design as exercised by the
Commonwealth since 1955 (plan design encompasses changes in deductibles
and co-pays)"

This week, along with our legislative delegation
and city officials from across the state, I will be helping lead the
fight on Beacon Hill for the authority we need to implement these
changes, as well as gaining more ability to diversify local revenues.

Will
we succeed? It's by no means a certainty. But here's one thing I know
for sure: Whatever the outcome, Somerville will be leading by example.
We will gather the best analysis, look at the big picture, and take on
the shared sacrifices and the hard choices – squarely and fairly.

That's all we can do – and that's all we're asking for.

 

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