Mayor, council: We've been fiscally responsible
To the residents of Rockville:
This is in response to the June 24 letter, "Bad timing on pay hike for Rockville city workers."
In a budget as large as Rockville's, it is easy to take some items out of context, thus painting an unfair picture of what your mayor and council have done. But the fact is that we have been fiscally responsible while providing the services our residents demand and deserve.
Your mayor and council reduced the budget by nearly $1 million. We broadened the homeowners tax credit to include income earners up to $85,000 and homes valued at $400,000. We also increased funding to non-profit groups to assist those who are most in need.
At the same time, we took on some important projects:
-Updating and replacing our entire water system. This is a long-term project that we chose to take on, in order to avert the potential crisis of a significant water main rupture.
-Restoration of the historic post office at North Washington Street and West Montgomery Avenue as the new Rockville Police Department.
-Mattie Stepanek Park, with its Peace Garden, beautiful landscaping, tennis courts, dog park, Bankshot basketball for the disabled, and the fields that will be the new home for the Rockville Football League for the next 50 years.
-Thomas Farm Community Center with state-of-the-art exercise equipment, programmed recreational activities, public art in the lobby, and an environmentally sensitive geothermal heating and cooling system, which is a component of our "Clean and Green Rockville" priority.
On a regular ongoing basis, we continue to maintain an excellent parks and street tree system. There are more trees than people in Rockville. And it's a fact that Rockville's street maintenance is first-rate. Our snowy streets are plowed quickly and potholes are virtually unknown.
The list of services the city provides goes on. There's just not enough room for us to list them all.
We did all of this while managing to balance our budget and maintain our Triple A bond rating. Rockville is a well-managed city, both fiscally and operationally, and we are proud of it.
And yes, we also chose to honor our union contracts, our police contracts and our personnel obligations to which this council and the prior council had legally committed. Through sound fiscal management, even in these tough times, we were fortunate to have the resources to maintain our commitments and provide modest pay adjustments to a staff that continues to work hard for our residents and to 60 public safety officers who put their lives on the line every day to protect us.
As for the argument that the federal, state and county governments will punish the city for not having a deficit and for funding our obligations, nothing could be further from the truth. In reality, Rockville has been successful in obtaining funds from those governments, because we are so adept at managing our budget and not falling into debt as so many others, so close to home, have experienced. Any federal, state or county funds we receive are given with the confidence that Rockville will spend the money on the project we asked to be financed, that the funds will be tracked and accounted for as required, and that there will be efficient and waste-free expenditures in the implementation of the project.
Susan R. Hoffmann, John Britton and Piotr Gajewski, Rockville
The writers are Rockville mayor and council members, respectively.