Another unexpected
financial issue from the past has appeared; this time threatening the
loss of Alexander City Hall. This latest revelation, unknown to past
and present city council members, has been ongoing for over 10 years
and started when former Mayor Shirley Johnson was in office.
According to a
letter from the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), sent
to City Treasurer Kenneth Miller, in 2005 the city took out two
loans. The first loan was used to purchase what was the post office
building and property for $364,000. The second loan of $56,000 funded
improvements including the addition of the courtroom and a new roof.
As part of the loan
agreement the city was to establish a “Debt Service Reserve”
account, which would hold one year of premium payments for both
loans. According to the USDA formula the amount needed in the account
is $21,960.
Mayor Paul Mitchell
told council members the city had 10 years to comply. He said the
USDA is allowing Alexander some time, since the issue was just
discovered, but his suggestion to solve the problem quickly is to
take out a loan then put that money into a bank account.
“As long as we
have something to show the USDA they’ll be satisfied,” Mitchell
said. “We might even be able to pay it off at the end of the year.”
Miller has contacted
two banks about the loan and establishing an account. He said
anything can be used as collateral, including the General Fund.
Council members
decided to use the recently purchased 2017 Mahindra Tractor. It was
purchased for the street department, without the need of a loan, for
$32,200. They also gave Mitchell and Miller the authority to proceed
with the loan and establish the debt reserve account.
Mitchell also
informed the aldermen the city still owes the USDA on the principal.
For the past ten years Alexander has, for the most part, been making
payments on the interest.
This is the second
financial surprise to hit Alexander officials this year. According to
a state audit report released last month in 2014, during Mayor
Michelle Hobb’s administration, $46,654 was illegally transferred
from the Parks and Recreation Fund to the General Fund. That fund
receives sales tax revenue dedicated to Parks and Recreation only and
cannot be used by any other fund. Both the current and future city
budgets will have to include paying back the Parks and Recreation
Fund.
For anyone familiar
with City of Alexander history you know this wasn’t former Mayor
Shirley Johnson’s first trip down the “Financial Fiasco Trail.”
Before she ended her 20 years as mayor she oversaw;
- The combined spending over multiple years of $159,913 from the General Fund of state revenue dedicated for Street Fund use only (Legislative Audit Report 2007). The final payment owed to the Street Fund was made in 2016;
- According to the Legislative Audit Report for 2008, "General Fund total disbursements for 2008 exceeded appropriations by $178,707 (27%)." City council was not asked to approve an amended budget;
- Mitchell defeated Johnson in the November, 2010 election. After taking office in January, 2011 another financial secret Johnson kept hidden from aldermen was discovered. The City of Alexander owed several thousand dollars in back payments and penalties to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). Rather than working out a payment plan with the IRS she hired a Texas company to make the IRS go away. In a somewhat similar situation the City finds itself in now, Alexander started 2011 not only owing the IRS but a couple more thousand to the Texas company, which of course was not able to make the IRS vanish.
In other business
during the April 17 meeting;
Mayor
Mitchell provided council members with a copy of the quit claim deed
which gives ownership of a four-foot wide strip of the city easement
at 13401 East First Street, behind Hess, to F & G Commercial,
LLC.. The property was the location of Royal Communications which has
moved.
During sale negotiations with Haynes Equipment a survey was done and it was discovered the wrong survey marker was used when determining where to place the building used by Royal Communications. The building is four feet inside the city’s right-of-way. At the February council meeting aldermen gave Mitchell and City Attorney Pat Marshall the authority to do what was necessary to solve the problem.
During sale negotiations with Haynes Equipment a survey was done and it was discovered the wrong survey marker was used when determining where to place the building used by Royal Communications. The building is four feet inside the city’s right-of-way. At the February council meeting aldermen gave Mitchell and City Attorney Pat Marshall the authority to do what was necessary to solve the problem.
According to the
company’s website Haynes has been providing equipment and service
in the municipal water and wastewater industry for over 50 years. The
Alexander site is their third joining the home office in Olathe,
Kansas and a service center in Sunrise Beach, Missouri.
The city
council voted to, “Dissolve the planning commission and re-establish
it at a later date.” The five-member commission was established
April 6, 2015. Since then two members have resigned and four of the
five terms have expired without the mayor appointing anyone to fill
those positions.
The only position
remaining was held by the commission’s chairman Robert McKeon. His
term would have expired April 6, 2018. The two remaining commission
members, who had not resigned, are former Alderwoman Andrea Bearden
and former Mayor Shirley Johnson. Johnson’s term expired April 6,
2016 and Bearden’s ended this month (April 6, 2017). Under Arkansas
law Johnson and Bearden were still legally members of the planning
commission until they were either replaced or reappointed to a new
term.
According to
Mitchell the last planning commission meeting was held around April
of 2016. He said planning commissions are required to meet once every
quarter.
“They’ve gotten
very little done,” Mitchell said. He wants to appoint, “People
who are really interested.”
Mitchell pointed to
one goal of the planning commission which has yet to be accomplished.
Alexander still does not have an up-to-date zoning map.
Mitchell laid
out a revenue proposal to council members that, if approved, is
expected to increase revenue to the General Fund and bring both
commercial and residential growth to the city. His four-part plan
would increase the city sales tax from two-cents to three, reduce the
property tax millage from five-mils to three, reduce the cost of a
city business license to be more in line with Bryant, and have
Alexander’s classification changed from Class-2 to Class-1. More
details on this in a later article.
The next regular meeting of the Alexander City Council is
Monday, May 15. Meetings start at 6 PM and are held in the courtroom
at the City of Alexander Municipal Complex. The public is invited to
attend.
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ReplyDeleteAhahaha who does this city have running its accounting department and budget committee. " Make the IRS go away" what? I have never laughed so hard.
ReplyDeleteFunny how a city that places extradonarily high fine amounts has trouble allocating funds to pay its loans back. Maybe the citizens of Alexander should fine the city and, since we are going by their example, impose an amount 100x the state average. I'm sure their next "budget: hearing will consist of find ways to issue a tax on the people over their f*up.
Time to get rid of the Mayor as well. Claiming they "didn't know". Who do you think you're fooling, are you 5 years old? Even if you "didn't know" by your own court and laws' examples - ignorance isn't a legitimate defense. Seems inept people have been placed to run this city into the ground.
Obviously, while you may have read the article you did not understand what it said. No one currently occupying an elected or appointed position in Alexander was there when the two loans were approved, the building purchased and then renovated. Perhaps you missed the part which explains how all of this occurred during the reign of former Mayor Shirley Johnson who was either totally incompetent, or thought she was queen of Alexander and answered to no one; the council, state or federal governments. The point was after this administration thought all of Johnson’s financial screw-ups had been solved, except for how to pay-off the city hall loans, one more Shirley Johnson land mine pops up. And, she hasn’t been mayor since January 1, 2011. I hope you don’t vote in Alexander.
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