ECON Houston Mayor John Whitmire says city is 'broke' after decades of overspending that has stopped them from being able to pay firefighters

1911user

Veteran Member
Photos at link below.


Houston Mayor John Whitmire says city is 'broke' after decades of overspending that has stopped them from being able to pay firefighters

Mayor John Whitmire proposing a 5% cut across the board, except for fire and police departments
Tax hikes and increased fees for parking and city services are likely

By Maryann Martinez, Texas Bureau Chief For Dailymail.Com

Published: 14:23 EDT, 27 March 2024 | Updated: 18:03 EDT, 27 March 2024

The Mayor of Houston says the city is 'broke' after overspending for decades.

Democrat John Whitmire, who was elected in December, gave the bleak warning at a City Hill meeting this week where he proposed a five percent cut across all city spending to alleviate the cash-flow problem.

'I think we can all agree that we're broke,' Whitmire said, before proposing the planned cuts.

'This gives us a chance to discuss the financial picture of this City. It is broken! It was broken when I got here, ' he said.

America's fourth largest city is spending more money than it's taking in, leaving it with a $160 million deficit, according to FOX 26 Houston.

'We are broke!' Houston Mayor John Whitmire, who took office in January, issued the warning this week at City Hall

Experts say the problem has existed for years, but COVID handouts from the federal government helped mask them.

'COVID really silenced the conversation because we got so much money from the federal government that we were able to make our budgets work, but really, this problem started 20 years ago, almost a quarter of a century ago, with the pension funds,' John Diamond, Center for Public Finance Director at Rice University, told KTRK.

Former Mayor Sylvester Turner, who just left office in January and presided during the pandemic, falsely claimed he was leaving the city with $420 million surplus.

'The budget surplus is largely thanks to $1 billion in federal recovery funds Houston received during the pandemic, which Turner has mostly used to cover city expenses while driving up its reserve account,' wrote the Houston Chronicle.

During his time in office, Turner who could not run again due to term limits, was criticized by former Mayor Annise Parker, financial groups and even the city comptroller for his handling of public funds.

“Let me just say, the sky is not falling,' Turner told the local paper last year.

Sylvester Turner, who led Houston previously, served two terms in office and could not run again.

Houston's cash-flow problem is so severe some firefighters are still waiting to be made whole on pensions and backpay.

A 5% across the board cut in city services has been proposed, but it will not impact fire and police service

But local critics insist Turner wasn't telling the truth.

'This has been obvious to anyone following the city's finances for well over a decade,' Columnist and businessman Bill King told the local Fox station.

'The you-know-what would have hit the fan in the last administration had it not been for this incredible influx of federal dollars.'

A tax hike through a bond is expected in November.

'That's very likely what we're looking at, going to the voters this November and saying, "Here's the plan, here's what it's going to cost, and we're asking you to chip in,"'City Controller Chris Hollins said.

The city has been struggling to make firefighters whole, from meeting its contractual obligation to their pension, to paying backpay and wage hikes that have been promised years ago.

Whitmire's plan to settle with the first responders will cost taxpayers $650 million for over the next five years.

'I don't like a five percent cut now, but you have to make tough decisions, and folks put me in this position to make tough decisions, and I'm going to do my job,' Whitmire stated.

The city also gave away some of its revenue to the public transit system in the 70s.

'They spent $3 billion on light rail system that is performing horribly,' King explained.

Houston's population is growing and is expected to rival Tokyo's with 31 million inhabitants by 2100, if current population trends hold.

H-town's money problems come at a time when the rest of the Lone Star State is swimming in cash.

The Republican state, well-known for not having a state income tax, saw a nearly $33 billion surplus last year-- more than the state budget of South Carolina.

Much of that is due to the hordes of people moving to Texas-- with projections saying Dallas could overtake New York as the most populous city in the country by 2100.

If population trends hold, Houston would replace Los Angeles as the second largest city in the US.

Despite all the newcomers, local leaders haven't been able to cash in on the new arrivals, like other cities and town.

Dallas and surrounding suburban cities are expected to be home to nearly 34 million people by the turn of the century-- making it the largest city in the nation

Critics say the city should not default to taxing residents when they could raise the money but cutting the fat inside city hall and selling an expensive art collection owned by the city.

'The first thing we need to do is find where the money is first as opposed to the typical liberal answer to every problem: raise taxes on the people,' conservative political analyst Gary Polland suggested.

One idea is charge for services like trash collection, which are currently free.
 

WildDaisy

God has a plan, Trust it!
Wow, they are like the lowest paid firefighters in the US. Police, fire, EMT and Military should be some of the highest paid jobs in the US. They put their lives on the line every day.

That is NOT a national average. Something is off on it. I know my city Firefighters START at 97K and almost all of them make at least that in OT. They also DO NOT get Social Security when they retire. The chief makes almost 190K in our town.
 
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dstraito

TB Fanatic
That is so bogus. They identify a group that would evoke an emotional response making a tax hike more likely.

Why not identify a group of city executives they can not pay

It is of corrupt moral character and criminal mentality and blue city overspending as is their MO
 

wab54

Veteran Member
Emergency Services, Police, Fire are the most needed in any municipality, community, town, city, etc. And they are always the first to not be paid. The polititians should always be the first to suffer!!!!

I was a Paramedic. During budget concerns a polititian said that the trash pickup was more important than EMS. A few days later one of the polititians came by the station for a check and I asked him if he was the one who thought trash collectors was more important. Shocked, He said that was someone else! I told him that he was to go tell the one that if his family needed an ambulance then call a trash truck! He looked at me shocked. Then tried to walk back their comment.

WAB
 

20Gauge

TB Fanatic
Photos at link below.


Houston Mayor John Whitmire says city is 'broke' after decades of overspending that has stopped them from being able to pay firefighters

Mayor John Whitmire proposing a 5% cut across the board, except for fire and police departments
Tax hikes and increased fees for parking and city services are likely

By Maryann Martinez, Texas Bureau Chief For Dailymail.Com

Published: 14:23 EDT, 27 March 2024 | Updated: 18:03 EDT, 27 March 2024

The Mayor of Houston says the city is 'broke' after overspending for decades.

Democrat John Whitmire, who was elected in December, gave the bleak warning at a City Hill meeting this week where he proposed a five percent cut across all city spending to alleviate the cash-flow problem.

'I think we can all agree that we're broke,' Whitmire said, before proposing the planned cuts.

'This gives us a chance to discuss the financial picture of this City. It is broken! It was broken when I got here, ' he said.

America's fourth largest city is spending more money than it's taking in, leaving it with a $160 million deficit, according to FOX 26 Houston.

'We are broke!' Houston Mayor John Whitmire, who took office in January, issued the warning this week at City Hall

Experts say the problem has existed for years, but COVID handouts from the federal government helped mask them.

'COVID really silenced the conversation because we got so much money from the federal government that we were able to make our budgets work, but really, this problem started 20 years ago, almost a quarter of a century ago, with the pension funds,' John Diamond, Center for Public Finance Director at Rice University, told KTRK.

Former Mayor Sylvester Turner, who just left office in January and presided during the pandemic, falsely claimed he was leaving the city with $420 million surplus.

'The budget surplus is largely thanks to $1 billion in federal recovery funds Houston received during the pandemic, which Turner has mostly used to cover city expenses while driving up its reserve account,' wrote the Houston Chronicle.

During his time in office, Turner who could not run again due to term limits, was criticized by former Mayor Annise Parker, financial groups and even the city comptroller for his handling of public funds.

“Let me just say, the sky is not falling,' Turner told the local paper last year.

Sylvester Turner, who led Houston previously, served two terms in office and could not run again.

Houston's cash-flow problem is so severe some firefighters are still waiting to be made whole on pensions and backpay.

A 5% across the board cut in city services has been proposed, but it will not impact fire and police service

But local critics insist Turner wasn't telling the truth.

'This has been obvious to anyone following the city's finances for well over a decade,' Columnist and businessman Bill King told the local Fox station.

'The you-know-what would have hit the fan in the last administration had it not been for this incredible influx of federal dollars.'

A tax hike through a bond is expected in November.

'That's very likely what we're looking at, going to the voters this November and saying, "Here's the plan, here's what it's going to cost, and we're asking you to chip in,"'City Controller Chris Hollins said.

The city has been struggling to make firefighters whole, from meeting its contractual obligation to their pension, to paying backpay and wage hikes that have been promised years ago.

Whitmire's plan to settle with the first responders will cost taxpayers $650 million for over the next five years.

'I don't like a five percent cut now, but you have to make tough decisions, and folks put me in this position to make tough decisions, and I'm going to do my job,' Whitmire stated.

The city also gave away some of its revenue to the public transit system in the 70s.

'They spent $3 billion on light rail system that is performing horribly,' King explained.

Houston's population is growing and is expected to rival Tokyo's with 31 million inhabitants by 2100, if current population trends hold.

H-town's money problems come at a time when the rest of the Lone Star State is swimming in cash.

The Republican state, well-known for not having a state income tax, saw a nearly $33 billion surplus last year-- more than the state budget of South Carolina.

Much of that is due to the hordes of people moving to Texas-- with projections saying Dallas could overtake New York as the most populous city in the country by 2100.

If population trends hold, Houston would replace Los Angeles as the second largest city in the US.

Despite all the newcomers, local leaders haven't been able to cash in on the new arrivals, like other cities and town.

Dallas and surrounding suburban cities are expected to be home to nearly 34 million people by the turn of the century-- making it the largest city in the nation

Critics say the city should not default to taxing residents when they could raise the money but cutting the fat inside city hall and selling an expensive art collection owned by the city.

'The first thing we need to do is find where the money is first as opposed to the typical liberal answer to every problem: raise taxes on the people,' conservative political analyst Gary Polland suggested.

One idea is charge for services like trash collection, which are currently free.
Are they able to pay themselves? If so, there is money for the basic needs. Just stop paying the politicians
 

shane

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I was a couple hours away from Houston, and an hour away from San Antonio and Austin, in Gonzales, actually in the middle there surrounded by all three metros.

So relieved now to be established & settled another 500 miles west, well away from all these big population centers.

Hopefully, that distance will greatly thin out numbers of any refugees attempting to head towards our AO fleeing future disasters threatening those metros.

BTW, Gonzales and most other smaller cities inside that triangle got totally over run (traffic jammed to a stop) and quickly depleted of resources (shelter, food & fuel) when Houston, for example, evacuated from past hurricanes.

Panic Early, Beat the Rush!
- Shane
 
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Publius

TB Fanatic
In a big city trash pickup is very important and stopped for budget issues trash will pile up in streets flys will swarm bigly along with other insects that are attracted rotting food. Then there are the rats and mice breeding out of control and all the problem they bring.
As for government getting their foot in the door to run healthcare its something they should not be doing and leave it to the private sector to do that it's cheeper in the long run.
 

ChickenLittle

Contributing Member
That is so bogus. They identify a group that would evoke an emotional response making a tax hike more likely.

Why not identify a group of city executives they can not pay

It is of corrupt moral character and criminal mentality and blue city overspending as is their MO
Yeah, they never say "we have to raise taxes or we will be forced to layoff all of the code enforcement and building permit employees"
 

Southside

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Hey Houston, you're #4, Here is "The Congo". in at #3(largest city) $538 million gap

Council Office of Financial Analysis 3
ANALYSIS OF THE CITY OF CHICAGO’S ANNUAL BUDGET RECOMMENDATION
INTRODUCTION
The City of Chicago submits a Budget Recommendation to the City Council each year. The
recommendation report below presents line-item budget details for all local funds as well as an
outline of the City’s anticipated grant funding for the upcoming year. The City Council has until
December 31, 2023, to approve a balanced budget. The balanced budget approved and voted by
the City Council becomes the Annual Appropriation Ordinance, which goes into effect on January
1, 2024. The Council Office of Financial Analysis (COFA) herein presents its review of the City’s
annual budget recommendations as outlined in the Chicago Municipal Code.
The City released the 2024 Budget Recommendation on October 11, 2023.1 The proposed budget
presents a $16.647 billion spending plan for fiscal year 2024. The City 2024 Budget Forecast
indicated the City had a structural budget deficit, or a gap for the upcoming fiscal year. A structural
budget gap is a budget imbalance between existing revenues and anticipated expenses. The City
of Chicago estimated a Corporate Fund budget gap of $538 million.2 The 2024 Budget
Recommendation presents a budget which closes the $538 million gap, this will be reviewed later
in this report.
The budget is supported by C
 

Matt

Veteran Member
There are probably plenty of college degree'd, fat ass, blue haired, office workers that could be easily be let go rather than fire and police services. HR people, diversity officers, etc.
Lay off the cops and the blue haired leftists will be dead inside of 90 days.... once the blue haired leftists are dead... the vermin will be rolled up into the 9th ward like a frontier reservation.....

I do believe the ferals can be taught civility in the right learning environment
 

Jez

Veteran Member
Yeah, they never say "we have to raise taxes or we will be forced to layoff all of the code enforcement and building permit employees"
They can't layoff code enforcement or permit employees because they are the ones who actually generate income for the city.
 

Red Baron

Paleo-Conservative
_______________
They spent $3 billion on light rail system that is performing horribly,' King explained.
That happens almost each and every time :light rail" is implemented, yet cities still are crazed enough to embrace it regardless of the financial downside.

The easy solution?

It's called a diesel bus.

Duh?
 
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