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Friday, July 17, 2009

Running out of cash because of the state budget deadlock, the City of Philadelphia has stopped paying many of its bills until the impasse is resolved, City Finance Director Rob Dubow said this morning.

The city must temporarily withhold about $120 million in July and August to avoid running out of cash completely, Dubow said. Payments to contractors stopped Wednesday. Dubow, Budget Director Stephen Agostini and Treasurer Rebecca Rhynhart said that the city will pay its payroll, benefits, debt service and "emergency" contracts. The $4 million a month paid to foster parents, for instance, is considered an emergency, and other contracts will be considered on a case-by-case basis.

In a noon press conference, Mayor Nutter said the city would ask vendors to "understand where we are."

"We're asking them to work with us through this crisis," Nutter said.

The city is suffering for a number of reasons, all related to the state budget, city officials said.

First, the city anticipated receiving nearly $100 million in state payments in July and August that are frozen until a new budget passes. Second, the city is asking the legislature to approve a 1-cent increase in the sales tax, which would generate about $9 million a month, beginning Aug. 1. Third, the city had planned, as it does every year, to take out a $275 million, short-term "tax revenue anticipation note" or TRAN, which municipalities use to provide cash to cover expenses until their tax revenues are collected.

Without the expected state payments and sales tax revenues coming in, borrowing the $275 million would be prohibitively expensive, Dubow said.

“I have made repeated trips to Harrisburg over the last several weeks and I know that lawmakers are working hard to pass a fair and balanced budget,” Nutter said in a press release. “That said, the delay in the State budget process is severely impacting the City’s cash flow and we have no option but to take these difficult steps.”

Passage of the state budget would immediately solve part of the problem, though the city is also dependent on separate legislation to allow a sales-tax increase, and approvals to changes in the pension plan are needed before the city can borrow the $275 million with the TRAN, Dubow said.

Nutter said that "all new capital projects will be under stringent review."

"Over the next few days the City will review every capital project and will determine which can proceed in the absence of the passage of the State budget and the passage of legislation authorizing the City to raise the sales tax by 1% and make changes to its pension payments," Nutter's press release stated.

Even by suspending contract payments, the city cash on hand would dip to $111 million at the end of August. Agostini said anything under $150 million presents a potential problem for the city.

At a news conference outside his Harrisburg office, Rendell urged lawmakers to approve the 1-cent sales tax increase the city is asking for.

 

“It’s my hope that the state will do at least the one percent temporary increase in the Philadelphia sales tax. I stress temporary, and I think the citizens can believe the mayor when he says temporary," said Rendell who nevertheless predicted it won't happen until after the state budget is done.

 

Asked whether the city's predicament adds urgency to getting the state budget done, Rendell said: “I don’t think that can be the tail that wags the dog. I am concerned about it, just as I am concerned about our ability to meet our vendor bills. But look, this is so important to the state’s future…that we have got to get this right. As much as those short-term exigencies concern me, they can not be what motivates me.”


 Click here for Philly.com's politics page.

Posted by Jeff Shields @ 10:37 AM  Permalink | 56 comments
Comments   
Posted 11:02 AM, 07/17/2009
CleanupPhilly
There is $522 million in uncollected property taxes owed the city. There is $1 billion in forfeit bail, as your paper has reported. The city says, "oh, the market is depressed, and no one is really buying and this property is not that valuable, yadda yadda." You know what would make it easier for people to buy this stuff if the lists on the sheriff's website of property for sale WAS CORRECT. It's not! The list for the tax lien sale in August still lists a sale from months ago. The list for the Tax Collection sale is from last month. And the list for the Tax Delinquent sale is never online. Does this sound like a city that is trying to collect hard cash now, or is it playing games to create a crisis to get a sales tax hike? Here's the Sheriff's website: http://www.phillysheriff.com/
Posted 11:04 AM, 07/17/2009
CleanupPhilly
For anyone not keen on paying more in taxes, whether state personal income taxes, or in sales taxes, you can let your state rep know. Just drop them a note and a vote using http://www.stoppataxhike.com/
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Posted 11:06 AM, 07/17/2009
CleanupPhilly
The city needs to improve every aspect of its assessment and collection of property taxes. The leaders are still stuck in let's act stupid and helpless, and get pity from Harrisburg, and they'll bail us out with tax hikes. Let's instead be smart and go and get the money we need now to pay our bills like adults. How much does it cost to borrow using TRAN versus collecting the money on time and paying on time?
Posted 11:09 AM, 07/17/2009
CleanupPhilly
The state payments should be tied to Philly fixing assessments and collections of property taxes, collecting forfeit bail, and paying the state inheritance taxes in full and on time. Philly can be a source of revenue to the state, in the state only requires Philly bureaucracy to work for the money they get from the state.
Posted 11:15 AM, 07/17/2009
SlinkTMP
Cut your spending. he city will claim bankruptcy next. The city needs to start putting people who do not pay their bills out on the street and sell their houses to people that will pay their bills. Stop looking for funding from the state to stay afloat. That is like a kid moving out and getting a job and buying a house, but the parents still have to give the kids money to buy a car. Grow up and sell the house you can't afford for a more affordable house that allows you to be independent and afford a car and a house. Simple, spend within your means (budget) Philadelphia or find new vendors and contractors that fit in these means. I Everyone knows that most of what the city pays for is overpriced due to contracts that were no bid of given to supporters. Move out while you can Philly or start voting in new officials to break up the old guard.
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Posted 11:18 AM, 07/17/2009
CleanupPhilly
Meanwhile "Council finds it hard to decline a pay raise," even if the money goes into the general fund. There's no ability to count here. Every dollar counts.
Posted 11:22 AM, 07/17/2009
CleanupPhilly
In my zip code, 19146, most of the houses that owe big back taxes are empty. That's why they owe so much money. The owner is dead, no is taking care of the place. or it is a case of someone getting a second house from a relative they don't live in. 2320 Fitzwater owes $17,000 over the past seven years and it's empty. It's been empty for 10 years. 2149 Catharine owes $17,000 for the past 12 years, and it's an uninhabitable commercial property that can't be sold (even though it is listed) because the deed is not clean. This has to be sold by the sheriff to ever be sold. This is how City Council's ignorance of law, accounting, deeds, or basic business defeats the city. The state has to step in and tie these fixes to further state grants.
Posted 11:22 AM, 07/17/2009
funnystuff
Oh so when I run out of money cause everything is being raised, I can simply not pay anyone...This is brilliant and solves all my problems.
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Posted 11:26 AM, 07/17/2009
CleanupPhilly
Here's the proof that 2149 Catharine, an empty property that any small business would buy, owes $17,000 and the city does nothing about foreclosing on it: http://ework.phila.gov/revapp/delinqtax/returnprop2.asp?txtBRTNo=302081500
Posted 11:28 AM, 07/17/2009
CleanupPhilly
19146 is SWCC. Think Naval Square, Schuykill River Trail, Bicycle Therapy, Sophisticated Seconds, Ants Pants, Beauty Shop Cafe, Grace Tavern, Sweet Pea, Yello Bar, Side Car, and you get the picture. Come on by sometime.
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Posted 11:31 AM, 07/17/2009
CleanupPhilly
That's just it -- while City Council and the rest of the city was sleeping, the best parts of town got better. You'd have to run through a database of comparative sales, which is what AVI would do, to get an idea of how much the neighborhood has changed, and how valuable it is. Then you can see how much the the BRT, the Dept of Revenue, the Sheriff, the RDA, the PHA, and the city hold natural sustainable growth back, and it how it completely defunds the city and schools. Let the natural market work and the city can pay its bills. The city is causing blight by government policy, and it bankrupts itself.
Comment removed.
Posted 11:35 AM, 07/17/2009
CleanupPhilly
Repeat violent offenders need to be kept in prison for their full sentence, no matter where you live. PA is one of the last states to not do that. When you email your state rep that you don't want to pay more in personal income tax and sales tax, let him know that you want them to pass HB 1567, which removes probation and parole for repeat violent offenders. It's how NYC went from "The Taking of Pelham 1-2-3 (original version) to Times Square 2.0.
Posted 11:36 AM, 07/17/2009
CleanupPhilly
Doe it really take that long to post something? Not if you type and think fast, something that is a premium in Philly, it seems.
Posted 11:37 AM, 07/17/2009
CleanupPhilly
For some reason, you talk about collecting property taxes, and people get upset. But how can you have a city and have a half a billion in uncollected property taxes? $1 billion in forfeit bail? There is a kind of invisible coalition of deadbeats who want this system to stay in place.
Posted 11:44 AM, 07/17/2009
eaglesfan4life
19146! HAHAHA! I worked as a police officer in the 17th Dist there for 6 years .......... SWCC?? No. It's South Philly. U can call it what you want cleanupphilly, but it's South Philly. And although they have tried to "build" it up, it's still a cesspool. Not that long ago, I locked up a guy who did 5 shootings right in your area of "SWCC" and he lived at 23rd & Catharine.
Posted 11:51 AM, 07/17/2009
Noonan
CleanupPhilly - you're one-note Charlie when it comes to fixing the hole in the budget. Could the city improve its property tax collections? Sure. Could it collect enough over the next two years to avoid a tax increase without risking a midyear budget crisis? Only in fantasy land. Try telling the ratings agencies that Philadelphia doesn't need a tax increase - we're just going to collect more delinquent tax revenue. They'll laugh at you and then downgrade your credit below investment grade. The revenue line blew out its achilles last summer and the numbers have gotten worse each month since. Yes, that is directly related to the economy, it's not just a hollow excuse. The next round of cuts is going to jeopardize public safety. That's a reality, not a threat. Last point - the city is not exactly asking Harrisburg for a bail out. We need their permission to tax ourselves. It won't cost the rest of the state a dime.
Posted 11:52 AM, 07/17/2009
CA Scum
I think it's funny (not really, actually pathetic) that when Government runs out of money they have the "option" to not pay their bills or offer IOU's. Anyone that has been in dire straights knows how "well" they were treated by these entities. Not only that, but it is still everyone's problem when a city or state cannot pay it's bills. No one can predict the future but maybe, just maybe the pocket lining and all the "isms" have got to stop. Just put that in the back round and give it a tink'.
Posted 11:55 AM, 07/17/2009
gogglespaisano
Clean-up - this is what they do in Cecil County MD - - they give 1 year to pay back property taxes or it gets sold - we should/must do this too Cecil County will clear its books of unpaid taxes on Monday when it sells all properties with outstanding 2008 tax debt at a public auction. The process is conducted each year so the county can collect past-due property taxes before the start of the next fiscal year July 1.
Posted 11:57 AM, 07/17/2009
CleanupPhilly
Eageles, I HEARD that! I heard they got the guy, and yeah, he's one of these repeat violent offenders that goes in for what should 15 years for armed robbery, guns, drugs, and he gets out in five. We have to pass HB 1567, which removes probation and parole for repeat violent offenders. They serve their true sentence, and unlike Fumo, they get big sentences if they are not allowed to plea out. That's why I support Untermeyer, too, and not Seth Williams. The last thing we need is Williams' letting people plea out of time, because these few guys do all the crime. This is great neighborhood, and I'll never leave, but there are some guys that make it hard because Board of Probation and Parole under Rendell let them right out. I urge people not to vote for Dem for governor again. Vote Corbett, vote Meehan, vote Gerlach, but please, no more of these let 'em loose guys so we can maximize the inner city vote.
Posted 11:58 AM, 07/17/2009
Waywardchk
Where are the people who really want to see Philly prosper, and who are tired of hacks of any color, playing the same old "game" ? I think "Cleanup" has a lot of good points that would benefit "the City of Brotherly Love", the city I love.
Posted 12:00 PM, 07/17/2009
CleanupPhilly
Thank you to the 17th PPD for getting that guy at 23rd and Catharine arrested! We the good people here who live quietly that you don't see that often love you. But there would be no "23rd and Catharine" if that empty property at 2149 Catharine finally went up for sheriff sale, if the city was doing its job in collecting overdue property taxes. Property tax policy affects schools, crime, blight -- it touches everything. If a city does property taxes badly, charges too little, doesn't collect, you have decrepit schools, high crime, and city-sponsored blight.
Posted 12:00 PM, 07/17/2009
KG071
"Does Cleanup Philly have a job or does he/she make a living posting info that no one cares about on bulletin boards?" Maybe THAT is the real problem...no one is truly paying attention and instead are making stupid, assinine, unintelligent comments like you did...
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Posted 12:03 PM, 07/17/2009
CleanupPhilly
Googlespai, you are right. It's all of MD, too, where you get one year to catch up on your property taxes, or the property is auctioned. It's most of PA too. Does is cause massive boarded up houses? No. Does it "create" blight? No. It solves blight. The house with no legal owner gets a new owner who wants to fix it up and will go into the hole to do it. It allows for private investment to come in and renovate. This is not rocket science to anybody who's lived outside of Philly. What is the hold up in Philly to collecting half a billion in overdue property taxes? How can anybody have a problem with it?
Posted 12:07 PM, 07/17/2009
CleanupPhilly
Noonan, I'm not saying the city will never have to raise property taxes. It will. That's what AVI will do on properties that have increased in value. But for properties that have decreased, taxes go down. What you don't have is more sales tax, more personal income taxes, more wage taxes, etc. We have to grow a paying property tax base. That's why most places rely on a stable property tax base and not economic taxes to get their money. I'm just surprised this is all amazing new news to the leadership in Philly. My county administrator had a masters in public administration and an MBA, but the "leaders" in Philly have bogus educational credentials at best half the time. It's going to be up to you to educate them. Tell Harrisburg "NO" to more personal income taxes and a sales tax hike, when there is all this money Philly hasn't collected yet: http://www.stoppataxhike.com/
Posted 12:08 PM, 07/17/2009
CleanupPhilly
Sorry Rosie, I guess I just believe Philly can still be that world class city that I see here on the ground level, if only the top would believe and act.
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Posted 01:07 PM, 07/17/2009
CleanupPhilly
Pennsport, you haven't been down Grays Ferry Ave from South St. in a while. About 20 years.
Posted 01:10 PM, 07/17/2009
CleanupPhilly
UPenn is buying up stuff in West Philly. 10146 is SWCC, below Fitler Square. Drexel is buying up Mantua, and North Philly is being renewed by Temple and big investors. All this stuff has real market value that the city doesn't capture or tax. What little it does levy, it doesn't collect. How long can keep keep pretending that the city can do this? My guess is after the vendors start suing the city, the city will wake up. But you might want to try to get Rip Van Council to respond at this point.
Posted 01:11 PM, 07/17/2009
CleanupPhilly
oops meant to write 19146 is SWCC.
Posted 01:13 PM, 07/17/2009
CleanupPhilly
If Harrisburg gives Philly a sales tax hike, a pension payment delay and refi, and raises personal state incomes taxes, it is saying that it thinks how Philly is doing things is OK. I can't think of a more toxic message to the progress the city has sustained in the past 10-20 years. Just say no: http://www.stoppataxhike.com/
Posted 01:22 PM, 07/17/2009
david wayne
Pay them with IOU's like they are doing in California!
Posted 01:48 PM, 07/17/2009
Jaybird59
Hate to admit it, if Fumo was still in office we'd have a budget by now!!
Posted 02:25 PM, 07/17/2009
digitalowl
Maybe the city can just pass IOU's back and forth with California.
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Posted 03:03 PM, 07/17/2009
MaggieL
Cleanup... go to Google Maps and *look* at 2149 Catherine in Street View, and tell us again that "any small business would buy" it.
Posted 03:24 PM, 07/17/2009
ruserious
Mayor Rizzo, Mayor Green, Mayor Goode, Mayor Rendell, and also Mayor John Street worked through similiar situations. This is nothing new. Does anyone remember when Rendell and Street teamed up during a difficult time putting aside differences and turning the City around from bankruptcy? Where is the partnership today? Mayor Nutter on a high horse - Council fighting back. The State is always going to give Philly a problem so - work with what you have. The Administration must pick the right battles and determine the path to move forward. Might need to give in order to get. Fights with neighborhoods over libraries, pools,and firehouses. Fights with city workers and teachers over contracts. Fights with council over cars and DROP. Fights with Police over residency, while lobbying the state for funds. I think it would be better to have a plan and not try to do it all at once or you may get nothing. Seems like no one is in charge.
Posted 03:51 PM, 07/17/2009
Adam Lang
I would just like to take a moment to note that the above number is about $25 million less than the surplus going into Street's last budget. If the last street budget and Nutter's first budget didn't eat up all $300 million dollar surplus, there wouldn't be any need to take out a short term loan ahead of tax revenues. I wonder how much the city has paid for those loans.
Posted 04:01 PM, 07/17/2009
Pat c
Wow, how do you think Nutter feels about being Mayor now? Its bad news after bad news for him.
Posted 06:18 PM, 07/17/2009
New Media Survivor
Ok, so next year when MY tax bill is due I will simple ask Mayor Nutter to "understand where we are." I'm sure the city will gladly wait for the money. Time to run from the this dump of a city!
Posted 06:51 PM, 07/17/2009
PhillyS1980
Nutter and the Council want to suspend payments, but not their raises, right? Can the Council in the next election. Tommy Two-Teeth could do better than this gang.
Posted 07:09 PM, 07/17/2009
hopster
despicable! Some city employees retire for a day and get to collect $300,000 each, city council "forces" itself to take a pay raise, city unions vow to strike if they don't get a raise and keep their inflated medical benefits and pensions. When will the people who run this city join the rest of us in a place called REALITY.
Posted 09:51 PM, 07/17/2009
KingofthePaupers
Jct: Jct: There’s nothing wrong with small denomination California State IOUs if anyone can pay their taxes with them. When Argentina’s government workers were faced with cuts, their unions talked 6 state governments into paying them with small-denomination state bonds which could be used to pay for state services and taxes by everyone. When the local currency is pegged to the Time Standard of Money (how many dollars per unskilled hour child labor) Hours earned locally can be intertraded with other timebanks globally! In 1999, I paid for 39/40 nights in Europe with an IOU for a night back in Canada worth 5 Hours. U.N. Millennium Declaration UNILETS Resolution C6 to governments is for a time-based currency to restructure the global financial architecture. See http://youtube.com/kingofthepaupers Too bad California IOUs won’t be accepted in payment for state taxes and services like state bonds were in Argentina. Too bad California IOUs will be denominated too big to use as local currency. Too bad Argentina people were smart enough to avoid the tent-cities catastrophe and California people are too stupid to follow their example. If they make IOUs legal tender, I'll take back every joke I ever made about Girlieman Governor Musclehead if he engineers the California state currency lifeboat. But Philadelphia has an Equal Dollars system that could save so they might be even stupider.
Posted 10:52 PM, 07/17/2009
Clark_Kent_SuperHero
in 1990, Finance Director Betsey Reveal set the pace to rescue the City and Ed Rendell put the plan into action starting in 1992. Research Daily News articles as history repeats itself. Although blogging CleanupPhilly repeats factoids over and over, the thread is that City Business continues to fail because it fails to understand it's purpose, it's focus, and squanders resources. A field of "diamonds" do exists right in our own backyard and no one is looking or working to find them. The nickel and dime savings muster no rewards it only adds more stress, frustration and increases future failures to recur a larger levels. Tackle the big stuff and don't sweat the small stuff.(is the Key) The administration is in the worst economic times, but time and time again just re-acts instead of being pro-active. It thinks flat in a 3-dimensional world. Acting contrary to actions that makes the City go backwards in time to 1990. Fours years is too long a learning curve and the time to reboot has passed. Sad comment for a bright "rock" star. Daily News Report Card! Report Card! Help! Lex Luther is on the loose! We need a Report Card!
Posted 06:42 AM, 07/18/2009
CommonSense4Philly
Let's see - tax amnesty program for delinquent real estate taxes and other taxes (ok=that always works), cut wasteful spending in L & I, specifically the curside demolition program designed by the (sic)wizard, Scott Mulderick, which loses tax monies by not having stringent oversight on the low bid contractors, who pay people in cash over the past year or so (ok-that works, but the city has to open its eyes), Kick the lazy, good for nothing Revenue Department in its pants and have them concentrate on tax cheaters (ok-but the Revenue Department does not want to expend more energy and audit the facts...they prefer convincing fiction)..oh yes! Our Mayor Michale Nutter -now he is smart and the people love him! (no -it won't work. Michael is too busy worrying about not minding his own business and writing letters about the Fumo sentencing)....so just pray and hope!
Posted 06:43 AM, 07/18/2009
CommonSense4Philly
Let's see - tax amnesty program for delinquent real estate taxes and other taxes (ok=that always works), cut wasteful spending in L & I, specifically the curside demolition program designed by the (sic)wizard, Scott Mulderick, which loses tax monies by not having stringent oversight on the low bid contractors, who pay people in cash over the past year or so (ok-that works, but the city has to open its eyes), Kick the lazy, good for nothing Revenue Department in its pants and have them concentrate on tax cheaters (ok-but the Revenue Department does not want to expend more energy and audit the facts...they prefer convincing fiction)..oh yes! Our Mayor Michale Nutter -now he is smart and the people love him! (no -it won't work. Michael is too busy worrying about not minding his own business and writing letters about the Fumo sentencing)....so just pray and hope!
Posted 12:11 PM, 07/18/2009
CleanupPhilly
Commonsense, I don't think you can use tax amnesty in the case of delinquent Philly taxes. There has been "tax amnesty" for decades, and the collection that results is 16% of the total Philly city budget. There has to be foreclosure and sheriff sale. The good news is that most of this property is simply vacant lots or empty houses that have tangled legal issues.
Posted 01:30 PM, 07/18/2009
MaggieL
Despite the title of his forthcoming book, Fast Eddie proves you *can* make this stuff up. And some people will beleive you, too...
Posted 09:28 AM, 07/19/2009
saveourhood
Troops Wanted (ALL VOLUNTEERS), Looking for Marines, Seamen, Airman, and Soldiers that are currently on active duty, Reserves, National guard, Veterans, or Retired, that have lived, currently live, served on duty, or have family that reside in the city of Philadelphia. As we all know the deaths, due to violent crimes are on the rise and shows no signs of slowing down. We need to do something about it ourselves. As service members we swore to defend the constitution against all enemies foreign and domestic. We sacrifice our time, money, and family peace of mind, risking our lives in foreign countries to make our country stronger. I think its time to protect our investment. By the use of tactics that have worked for us in countries like Iraq and Afghanistan. The intent is to deter and prevent crimes against persons. This is only the planning phase and suggestions are highly welcomed. This is the plan: On the first day of summer 2010, and for up to six days after, we deploy a Brigade size element (made up of volunteers from all the services) to Philadelphia. We divide them up into Battalion size groups distributed to the troubled sections of Philadelphia (North, South, Southwest, etc.) then further break them down into Company size groups, and place them on patrol in the neighborhoods, focusing on the heavy crime areas(Germantown, Kensington, Logan, etc). We rotate a Brigade of volunteers in every five days until we see improvement. This plan is not perfect, but I think it could not only decrease the violence in Philly, but also the amount of soldiers coming into Philadelphia would beneficial economically. Send this email to everyone you know. Email me back for details at: saveourhood@yahoo.com
About Inquirer City Hall Staff
The Philadelphia Inquirer's Jeff Shields, Marcia Gelbart, and Patrick Kerkstra take you inside Philadelphia's City Hall.