Metro Roundup: Homewood mayor shares budget highlights

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Image courtesy of Volkert Engineers

The proposed fiscal 2022 budget for the city of Homewood includes funding for the continued beautification of the west side of 18th Street, sidewalks, merit increases for employees and more.

Homewood Mayor Patrick McClusky shared the highlights of his proposed budget during a finance committee meeting Aug. 30.

Those highlights include $420,000 worth of payroll merit increases (after taxes and pension), along with a 1% cost of living increase, which will cost about $250,000, McClusky said.

The city has also budgeted about $6.4 million in projects from the GOW Construction Fund, including:

The proposed budget calls for $7 million in capital project expenditures with about $5.8 million in revenues, with expenditures going toward the beautification of 18th Street, with about $2.5 million coming from the city and the other $2 million coming from the Alabama Department of Transportation. Expenditures are also budgeted for a Samford pocket park and sidewalks in select parts of the city.

The city budget also includes roughly $20 million in tax revenue slated to go to Homewood City Schools.

Homewood has also received federal funds through the American Rescue Plan Act and plans to spend that money for city projects and to give certain employees a raise. The money can only be spent in certain ways, McClusky said.

Employees who have been with the city since Feb. 17, 2021, and all department heads are eligible for the one-time payment, which is $2,500 for full-time employees and $250 for part-time employees. The committee approved the payment, which now goes before the entire council.

City projects proposed to be funded by ARPA include:

Proposed general fund revenues total $57.6 million, McClusky said.

Also at the Aug. 30 meeting, the Finance Committee talked about the idea of hiring a city manager. McClusky said he would be bringing the results of his research to the council as soon as the budget process was over, but warned it is a long process, depending on how the council chooses to proceed.

“This is not something you snap your fingers and have a position,” McClusky said.

Other cities in the metro Birmingham area have city managers, but they have different roles, McClusky said.

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