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RESOLUTION NO. 09 -294 <br /> A RESOLUTION BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF PLEASANTON FINDING <br /> A SEVERE FISCAL HARDSHIP WILL EXIST IF ADDITIONAL LOCAL PROPERTY <br /> TAX FUNDS ARE TAKEN AND ADDITIONAL UNFUNDED MANDATES ARE <br /> ADOPTED BY THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA <br /> WHEREAS, the current economic crisis has placed cities under financial pressure and <br /> caused city officials to reopen already adopted budgets to make painful cuts, including layoffs <br /> and furloughs of city workers, decreasing maintenance and operations of public facilities, and <br /> reductions in direct services to keep spending in line with declining revenues; and <br /> WHEREAS, since the early 1990s the state government of California has taken over <br /> $8.6 billion of city property tax revenues statewide to fund the state budget even after deducting <br /> public safety program payments to cities by the state; and <br /> WHEREAS, in FY 2007 -08 alone the state took $895 million in city property taxes <br /> statewide to fund the state budget after deducting public safety program payments and an <br /> additional $350 million in local redevelopment funds were seized in FY 2008 -09; and <br /> WHEREAS, the most significant impact of taking local property taxes has been to <br /> reduce the quality of public safety services cities can provide since public safety comprises the <br /> largest part of any city's general fund budget; and <br /> WHEREAS, in 2004 the voters by an 84% vote margin adopted substantial constitutional <br /> protections for local revenues, but the legislature can still "borrow" local property taxes to fund <br /> the state budget; and <br /> WHEREAS, on May 5th the State Department of Finance announced it had proposed to <br /> the Governor that the state "borrow" over $2 billion in local property taxes from cities, counties <br /> and special districts to balance the state budget, causing deeper cuts in local public safety and <br /> other vital services; and <br /> WHEREAS, in the past the Governor has called such "borrowing" proposals fiscally <br /> irresponsible because the state will find it virtually impossible to repay and it would only deepen <br /> the state's structural deficit, preventing the state from balancing its budget; and <br /> WHEREAS, the Legislature is currently considering hundreds of bills, many of which <br /> would impose new costs on local governments that can neither be afforded nor sustained in this <br /> economic climate; and <br /> WHEREAS, state agencies are imposing, or considering, many regulations imposing <br /> unfunded mandates on local governments without regard to how local agencies will be able <br /> comply with these mandates while meeting their other responsibilities; and <br /> WHEREAS, the combined effects of reduced City property taxes, increased unfunded <br /> state mandates, and the revenue losses due to the economic downturn have placed the city's <br /> budget under serious fiscal pressure; and <br />