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San Diego Council Members To Mayor: Make Our Neighborhoods A Budget Priority

San Diego Council Members To Mayor: Make Our Neighborhoods A Budget Priority
And so it begins. The city of San Diego kicked off its six-month-long budget process Wednesday, and council members representing neighborhoods south of Interstate 8 were first up at the podium.

Budget Priorities Memo For Districts 4, 8 And 9
Councilmembers David Alvarez, Myrtle Cole and Marti Emerald lay out their budget priorities for Fiscal Year 2016.
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And so it begins. The city of San Diego kicked off its six-month-long budget process Wednesday, and council members representing neighborhoods south of Interstate 8 were first up at the podium.

Each budget season starts with the city's nine council members finding consensus on what to fund and then forwarding their recommendations to the mayor.

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In a joint memo, Council members David Alvarez, Myrtle Cole and Marti Emerald came to this consensus: more money should flow to their districts. At a press conference, Alvarez said residents in City Heights, southeastern San Diego, Barrio Logan and San Ysidro aren't just seeing their infrastructure crumble — they're not seeing it at all in some cases.

"While most of the conversation about fixing our broken city has focused on existing city infrastructure, existing city streets, existing community buildings, we represent the nonexistent sidewalks, the missing parks and the neighborhoods that have no paved streets," Alvarez said.

His district includes the now-infamous stretch of road where San Ysidro students walking to school must navigate a steep drop and fast cars without a sidewalk.

Jennifer Fleming works for the City Heights Community Development Corporation and said recent development in that neighborhood shouldn't fool you.

"The new buildings that went up really are about ten years ago," Fleming said. "So that infrastructure located in one very specific zone we call Fairmount Village has completely ignored the rest of City Heights, which is a very large community."

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The memo underscores the council members' support for spending on efforts to keep more police officers from leaving San Diego and efforts to chip away at backlogs in street and storm water maintenance. Both priorities have unanimous support from the council. But it also lays out specific projects in Districts 4, 8 and 9:

The Budget Process

February: Council adopts budget priorities resolution and transmits to mayor

February and March: Mayor develops annual budget working with city departments

April: Mayor releases proposed annual budget

April and May: Council holds public hearings and committee meetings to deliberate the budget

June: Council adopts the budget

July 1: New fiscal year begins

  • Skyline Hills fire station
  • Home Avenue fire station in City Heights
  • Encanto fire station
  • $1 million for streetlights, with $200,000 earmarked for the Greater Logan Heights neighborhood
  • Completion of several parks
  • Maintenance workers to keep existing parks from falling into disrepair

The council members' requests could mean not every district gets an equal slice of the pie, but Alvarez said the strategy will achieve equity.

"Our priorities will ensure that every community is on a level playing field," Alvarez said.

The mayor projects a $58.5 million surplus next fiscal year, but still faces a $300 million shortage to cover street repairs and $700 million shortage for its storm water system.

The mayor's draft budget is expected in April and, if all goes as planned, his final budget in June.