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Dateline: September
13,
2001
County
moving ahead with budget cuts
Roger
Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
The
Donley County Commissioners’ Court decided last week to move ahead with
a proposed budget which raises taxes by seven percent and cuts some
personnel to part-time status.
In
a called meeting last Wednesday, the court discussed the possibility of
raising taxes to just under the rollback rate in order to keep all
employees at their current status and possible give raises in the
sheriff’s department.
But
commissioners expressed concerns that county residents would not be happy
with a higher tax rate, and the court could not seem to find a way to give
deputies a raise.
Commissioner
Buster Shields said people in his precinct said they would not support a
tax rate near the roll back rate and that some did not want their taxes to
go up at all. Commissioner Ernest Johnston said some people he had talked
to said they understood that the cost of things had gone up, but he did
not push for the higher rate.
“I
don’t question the job our sheriff and deputies do,” said Commissioner
Donnie Hall, “and I know they lay their lives on the line every time
they pull somebody over and step out of the car. But I can’t see cutting
one [department] to give a raise to someone else.”
Commissioners
looked at the possibility of hiring another deputy for traffic control
purposes as one possible way to increase revenue, but the idea did not
have the support of the court.
Sheriff
Butch Blackburn countered that his department had already written enough
tickets to justify a raise for his deputies.
After
approximately three hours, the court verbally agreed to proceed with their
original seven percent tax increase and to maintain cutting secretaries in
the extension office, the Precinct 1 J.P.’s office, and the tax
assessor/collector’s office to part time.
The
decision came one week after the court had come under fire from those
departments for those cuts.
A
final hearing on the 2001-2002 county budget will be held next Wednesday,
September 19, at 1:30 p.m. A vote to approve the budget is expected at
that time.
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