Bulk of county budget goes toward salaries, including management of state beach.
Timothy Johnson

County Will Seek Additional Funds from Island Towns

Facing a budget shortfall, county leaders agreed this week to seek additional funding from Island voters to help balance a $1.74 million budget.</p>

Facing a budget shortfall, county leaders agreed this week to seek additional funding from Island voters at annual town meetings this spring to help balance a $1.74 million budget for the coming fiscal year.

The county advisory board, a group made up of town selectmen that has oversight over the county budget, voted Tuesday afternoon to request another $130,000 from the six Island towns. Higher town assessments and new administrative fees for health and human service are planned.

The shortfall is due to the loss of alarm fee revenue from the Island’s emergency communications center after the county sheriff decided to end the funding earlier this year.

“The loss from the alarm fees was a big hit,” county advisory board member and Edgartown selectman Arthur Smadbeck said Tuesday.

The bulk of expenses in the FY20 county budget are for salaries, maintaining the ailing Edgartown courthouse, beach patrol and regional emergency management services.

The advisory board agreed to use three avenues to make up the shortfall, beginning with warrant articles asking towns to increase the share they pay for seven regional health and human service programs. The programs are Vineyard Health Care Access, Healthy Aging MV, Dukes County Social Services, First Stop, CORE, the Center for Living and the Substance Abuse Prevention Program.

To raise an additional $58,000, a five per cent administrative fee will be tacked onto each program’s budget, county manager Martina Thornton said. The fee would cover the cost of the county distributing payments from Island towns to the programs, she said.

She said five per cent number is a common overhead fee charged by the state when administering grants.

“I just wanted a minimal administrative fee that would be a recognition of the work that we do here. I’m not trying to make money, I’m trying to balance the budget,” she said.

The advisory board also agreed to seek another $12,000 through a 2.5 per cent increase in assessments to Island towns. Ms. Thornton said the funding would be specified for Other Post Employment Benefits (OPED) for county employees, previously paid for with alarm fee funding. Town assessments are calculated using a formula based on property valuations and population.

To cover the remaining balance, Ms. Thornton said the county will also ask towns to split an additional $100,000, also specified for OPEB use.

If all requests are approved, additional county funding from the towns would total $170,000, exceeding the $130,000 shortfall. Ms. Thornton said the surplus is needed to help cover the county’s capital expenditure needs.

“It would be used to purchase a truck because I have no vehicle now for the use of the county and paving of the county administrative building parking lot,” she said.

A recent upward trend in spending on health and human services has been a point of discussion in Oak Bluffs and Tisbury this fall, where leaders in both towns have begun to explore collaboration as a way to save money on services.

Ms. Thornton said she was not aware of the concerns.

“I don’t know what’s going on at those meetings,” she said. “It’s their decision. Towns should allow voters to choose how their tax dollars are spent.”

At their meeting Wednesday afternoon county commissioners voted 6-0 to sponsor the warrant article funding requests.

A public hearing on the county budget will be held on Jan. 17 at 4:30 p.m.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 12/13/2018 - 18:24

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Wisher of Good Fortune The County of Dukes County

Good luck with that.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 12/14/2018 - 09:32

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

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Bob Edgartown

Correct long overdue to end this whole department. In fact about 20 years late and millions of dollars in wasted tax payer's money.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 12/13/2018 - 22:21

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Arnold Plotkin County of Dukes County

And how much of this is funding the on-going shortfall at the Martha’s Vineyard Airport...?

Bob Rosenbaum KMVY

The airport does not use any funding from the county and does not have a "shortfall". The airport's entire operating expenses are derived from landing fees, fuel sales, leases, and other similar sources. The airport operates on a surplus basis meaning the revenues exceed expenses.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 12/13/2018 - 23:27

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T Bone OB

Remind me why we have a county government????? Bureaucracy run amok.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 12/14/2018 - 07:53

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Chilmark voter Chilmark

so the sheriff takes money away from the county, causing them to go to the towns for more money. Then the sheriff goes to the towns as well for more money. Does the sheriff do anything other than beg for money? He is out of control.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 12/14/2018 - 10:17

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David West Tisbury

"The County of Dukes County". They should delete the duplicate County in their name, which would save some cash. Seriously, the name of this county is an embarrassment.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 12/15/2018 - 10:22

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Really!!! West Tisbury

So the County owns the land that the Airport is on and the Airport Commission is responsible for its management, so then who is ultimately responsible for the latest round of groundwater pollution? Does the Airport or the County have the money to properly clean this mess up or will they delay and delay to avoid having to pay? In the meantime the adjacent property owners values just took a dive, no lender with do a conventional loan on property that had this black cloud hanging over it and now neither the Airport nor the County has the funds to compensate these property owners. It would seem to me that those of us that are feeling even the smallest effect from the latest round of mismanagement should collectively seek outside professional advice to protect our healths and investments.

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