HomeMy WebLinkAbout04-27-1995MINUTES OF THE ADJOURNED REGULAR MEETING
OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
SANTA ANA, CALIFORNIA
APRIL 27,1995
CALLED TO ORDER
ATTENDANCE
SANTA ANA LIBRARY
2ND FLOOR CONFERENCE ROOM
26 CIVIC CENTER PLAZA
6:00 P.M.
COUNCILMEMBERS
Present:
MIGUEL A. PULIDO, Mayor
ROBERT L. RICHARDSON, Mayor Pro Tern
TONY ESP1NOZA
TOM LUTZ
PATRICIA A. McGUIGAN
LISA MILLS
TED R MORENO
Absent: NONE
STAFF:
DAVID N. REAM, City Manager
EDWARD J. COOPER, City Attorney
JANICE C. GUY, Clerk of the Council
WORK STUDY SESSION
Planning and Building Agency Executive Director Robyn Uptegraffoutlined the meeting agenda
indicating staffwould conclude the Development Processing presentation with discussions on the
roles of the Fire Department and the Planning and Building Agency Inspection Section in
development processing. She also stated the meeting would cover the FY 95-96 Annual City
Budget and Urban Rail, and noted that the May 15, 1995 Council meeting would be a study
session in lieu ora business meeting.
Following discussion, the Council decided to modify the agenda order by placing Urban Rail
before the FY 95-96 City Budget.
DEVELOPMENT PROCESSING - Fire Department
Deputy Fire Chief Wayne Bowman gave an overview of the Fire Department's Development
Processing role and introduced Fire Prevention Bureau Field Inspector Lori Smith as the Fire staff
member responsible for Development Processing Plan Checks.
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Smith related the shift in Bureau priorities from construction projects in 1988 to business
retention and attraction in 1995. She then discussed the various Bureau processes (conceptual
meetings, plan checks, permits, certificates of occupancy, and maintenance inspections) and the
various codes on which Bureau actions are based (Uniform Fire Code, Uniform Building Code,
Health and Safety Code, National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) standards, Title 19, Title
24, and the Santa Ana Municipal Code).
Bowman and Smith responded to Councilmember questions on, but not limited to, fire hydrants,
water sprinklers, ingress and egress requirements, procedures for reporting and correcting code
violations, special events such as festivals and carnivals, and fireworks regulations.
Smith stressed that the basic idea behind Bureau requirements was to enable firefighters to do
their job by ensuring consistent access to burning structures and water sources.
DEVELOPMENT PROCESSING- B~tilding lttxpections
Building Safety Manager Jim Lindgren explained the relationship between the Permit & Plan
Check and Inspections processes, and introduced Inspections Supervisor Tony Huaracha.
Using a flow chart, Huaracha presented an overview of the Building Safety Division's Inspection
Section operations and noted that the section's work began where the permit process ended. He
also provided Councilmembers with materials comparing Santa Ana's inspection services, fees,
work scheduling, and staff qualifications with other jurisdictions.
Councilmember Mills asked staff to consider using combination inspectors instead of speciality
inspectors for simple improvements in single-family residences.
Councilmember Moreno suggested the City provide inspectors with pagers to enhance staffs
communication and dispatching capabilities.
Lindgren and Huaracha responded to Councilmember questions on, but not limited to, field
issuance of certain permits, reinspection fees, effective period of permits, expired permits, hazard
calls, and final inspections.
Uptegraff concluded the presentation on Development Processing and indicated that subsequent
actions would include formation of focus groups on key issues and preparation of a report on the
proceedings for Council's review and concurrence.
URBAN RAIL
City Manager David Ream explained impending deadlines for program funding required the
Council to discuss urban rail at this time in order to submit a Santa Aha proposal to the Orange
County Transportation Authority (OCTA).
Public Works Agency Executive Director Jim Ross described three alternative urban rail (fixed
guideway) routes analyzed by staff: Main Street, Bristol Street, and Harbor Boulevard.
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Councilmembers and staffdiscussed various factors related to the Santa Ana fixed guideway route
including but not limited to Main Street's narrow right-of-way, impact on the Bristol widening
project, extra miles of railway the Harbor Boulevard route would require, economic development
potential, activity centers (e.g., Museum District, Civic Center and South Coast Plaza), ridership
volume, and at-grade (ground level) vs. underground vs. elevated rail.
Mayor Pulido requested staffto submit both Harbor Boulevard and Bristol Street as alternatives
for OCTA's consideration.
RECESS - 7:20 P.M.
RECONVENED - 7:45 P.M. - All Councilmembers present.
FY 95-96 ANNUAL CITY BUDGET
City Manager Ream introduced Executive Assistant to the City Manager Francisco Gutierrez and
Budget Officer Gina Schuchard who presented the FY 95-96 Annual City Budget.
Gutierrez reported that the City's FY 95-96 Total Annual Budget was $240,526,165 and provided
charts to show the budget breakdown by revenue and by expenditures. He also noted that the
General Fund Budget (the City's operating budget) was $124,917,135 with 64.1% allocated to
public safety programs.
City Workforce
Gutierrez and Schuchard presented charts showing Santa Ana had the second smallest number of
city employees per capita among the 100 largest cities in the nation, and the least number of city
employees per 1,000 population among the 11 largest cities in California. Gutierrez indicated the
City's workforce will decrease slightly from the current 5.15 city employees per 1,000 population
to 5.14 in FY 95-96 as a result of proposed personnel changes in the budget.
General Fund Budget
Gutierrez outlined the General Fund budget assumptions and indicated a projected deficit of
$7,724,395 would be closed by a combination of expenditure reductions and revenue
enhancements.
Among the expenditure reductions Gutierrez cited were administrative adjustments such as lower
health and benefit costs Personnel Services negotiated with the City's service providers, and
personnel adjustments such as shifting labor charges for Public Works staff from the General Fund
to non-General Fund accounts.
Councilmember Moreno requested staff provide Council with a detailed breakdown of the
budget's administrative and personnel adjustments.
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Personnel Services Executive Director Kermit Francis discussed the City's short-term strategy of
closing the deficit by reducing reserves in the Workers' Compensation and the Liability &
Property Insurance accounts.
Miscellaneous Fees
Gutierrez provided the Council with a Miscellaneous Fees booklet of new and existing
Miscellaneous Fees, noting some existing Miscellaneous Fees would increase by 1% while others
would decrease in the proposed budget.
Councilmember Moreno requested details on the proposed Rotational Tow Fee of $10 per call.
Library Services Executive Director Rob Richards discussed a new Non-Resident Library Card
Fee of $45 per card, noting the fee would allow the City to focus its limited resources on serving
City residents, recoup the cost of serving non-residents, and increase the budget for new books.
Councilmembers expressed the following concerns: a $45 per card fee may be excessive, Santa
Ana residents may lose their reciprocal privileges with other libraries, and other library systems
might retaliate by imposing similar fees.
Councilmember Mills requested more information on the new Mandated Business Security
Evaluation Fee of $120 and the Child Fingerprint Fee of $3.
Gutierrez requested Councilmembers to forward questions regarding Miscellaneous Fees to him.
Rate Adjustments
Public Works Agency Executive Director Jim Ross discussed the proposed rate adjustments to
the Water, Refuse Collection, and Sanitation fees for the FY 95-96 budget.
Ross explained the City is able to keep water rates down because the City's water supply is largely
pumped from City wells instead of imported from other water providers such as the Metropolitan
Water District. Ross stressed the need to continue investing in water facilities since the cost of
importing water is twice the cost of pumping local water. He noted that the $8 million Garthe
Reservoir Expansion Phase II will not be funded due to the Orange County bankruptcy.
In response to Councilmember Moreno's query, City Manager Ream and Gutierrez explained the
City was making up for the budget shortfall caused by the bankruptcy by deferring maintenance
and deleting funding for capital projects.
ADJOURNiVIENT_- 9:45 P.M.
~~& cf the Council
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107 APRIL 27, 1995