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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2023-10-18 Commissioner Minutes WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 2023 The Franklin County Commissioners met Wednesday, October 18, 2023, with the following members present: David S. Keller and Robert G. Ziobrowski. Chairman Keller presided and after calling the meeting to order, a Moment of Silence, and the Pledge of Allegiance, proceeded with the business of the day. The meeting was live streamed. Chairman Keller announced that Commissioner Flannery is not able to attend today. Commissioner Robert G. Ziobrowski motioned to approve the agenda which was seconded by David S. Keller; unanimously approved to adopt the agenda. Carrie Gray, County Administrator, asked for a modification to the agenda to omit board action item #2, agreement with Carbyne. This agreement is through a collaboration with a number of other counties and one of them, Adams County, has questions related to the procurement piece of the contract. She will bring the agreement back in the next week or two and approve it after all the counties are comfortable with the agreement. The Commissioners accepted the revision and unanimously approved to adopt the agenda with those modifications. talk about Fulton County concerning actions of two of their commissioners and read an article from CNN concerning Fulton County. She said that Fulton County went overwhelmingly for Donald Trump in November of 2020, same as here in Franklin County, but no further steps were taken on Franklin Coun She wanted to thank them for having the presence of mind for not doing what two of the Fulton County Commissioners did. It appears that the Fulton County taxpayers are going to pay dearly for their short sightedness now. On a motion by Robert G. Ziobrowski, seconded by David S. Keller; unanimously approved all bills presented and ordered paid. The minutes of the October 11, 2023 meeting were reviewed. On a motion by Robert G. Ziobrowski, seconded by David S. Keller; unanimously approved the minutes. The Board reviewed Agreements, Contracts and Reports. Chairman Keller said that it was mentioned that the pending agreement with Carbyne Inc. includes our friends in Dauphin, Adams and Cumberland County for some enhancement of our emergency radio network and he asked our friends from DES who are here today to educate them more on the project. Bryan Stevenson, 911 Coordinator for Emergency Services, explained this project is our shared phone initiative. It includes the 911 equipment that they answer the 911 calls with, trunk wirelines, wireless and they have some non-emergency lines that come in on that system. Along with the other counties we are due a refresh with that so they are looking at refreshing that system and found this to be a perfect opportunity to share with our radio system partners, which is Adams and Dauphin. Cumberland wanted to be involved in this process also. Chairman Keller asked r counties, what was consolidated at that point with aspects of that system, and is this adding an additional Stevenson said yes and we entered into an agreement with Adams and Dauphin counties for a radio system that includes sharing of equipment, training, maintenance, and fees for that project. They found it to be very cooperatively done and they work well together. He gave an example where he helped out Dauphin County yesterday. As they have progressed over the years with the radio system then they looked towards a recorder project that we just completed and that included Cumberland County as well as the other two counties. That records all the calls that come in. Now they are looking at the call handling equipment so this would be the same thing as that. Mr. Stevenson continued that they have gotten some interest from Perry and Juniata counties that are looking to join us on the radio side so there is interest out there. This is something the Commonwealth is asking counties to consider consolidating where they Continued on page 2 can. Chairman Keller asked if there were any savings with this agreement. Mr. Stevenson responded that yes, otherwise we would be doing it by ourselves. We have the opportunity to share and disperse some of those costs to all four counties and these fees are split so that if Adams is a smaller county then they pay a lower cost but a bigger county like Cumberland and Dauphin they pay a higher costthey get the opportunity to work with these folks and share the equipment. Chairman Keller stated that it looks like the statewide interconnectivity grant is referenced and is picking up a large portion of the costs. He takes it the Commonwealth is encouraging projects like this consolidation. Mr. Stevenson said yes they are and are looking at over $2M of state money that can be applied to this project and he sees more funds in 2025. Commissioner Ziobrowski asked what it meant to share radio. Mr. Stevenson responded that reliability and redundancy along with the cost savings. We are operating our radio system with core equipment with Dauphin and Adams counties. We have no core equipment in our server room. However, with the redundant process and how the microwave system and the task force system emergency communications network works we have better reliability and redundancy now with this method then we would have if that core in our back room. Obviously to have a core in your back room for each county would be a huge cost. Chairman Keller stated that we are answering calls in Franklin County but the hardware and software that is processing those calls in the back end are in Adams or Dauphin. Commissioner Ziobrowski asked if Cumberland was formally teamed up with Fulton County. Mr. Stevenson said years ago Cumberland dispatched with Fulton County but once that contract expired they went to Bedford County and there were issues with Bedford County so Fulton is dispatching their own now. Commissioner Ziobrowski asked what Cumberland was doing before and why they decided to come with the three counties. Mr. Stevenson said that Cumberland is still using a proprietary radio system and that company is no longer in service anymore so they are looking at moving to a Motorola Project 25 system as we have now since 2009. He cannot answer the question why they chose not to go with us on the radio side. not worked with Carbyne and that they are a newer company and they felt after performing tests, tasks and demonstrations with them, the technology was moving much further than what our Motorola Vesta project was and when the four counties took a vote it was unanimous with this vendor. They are looking to do things differently while the Vesta project was stagnant. The items will be decided upon in the afternoon session. Teresa Beckner, Chief Financial Officer, and Janelle Friese, Fiscal Director, presented the 2024 prelim Budget cess so today she and Janelle are going to present to them the preliminary budget that represents the picture of the total cost of all department and operation requests, along with some assumptions made along the way. Along with requests for normal and on requests for capital items and personnel, both additional personnel and reclassifications of existing staff. Ms. Friese explained the all service budget is separated into two distinct areas due to how the various areas are operated and managed. She continued that the fiduciary-type -funded health insurance funds. The preliminary budget has a $14.8 million surplus, driven primarily by a budgeted surplus in the Retirement fund. County Operations includes: Elected Officials; Human Services; Courts and related operations; Jail; Emergency Services and 911; Property Management; internal county services; debt service; and capital activities that include the Courthouse Annex project, Bridge Projects (Liquid Fuels) and Community Development Block Grant (CDBG). Ms. Friese continued that Revenues are $48.1 million which are taxes or property taxes (debt service and general purpose), and hotel taxes. There is $1.6 million that is investment Income and intergovernmental revenues are from both the state and federal government. These are budgeted at $42.1 million. She continued that Fees and Charges are budgeted at $16.1 million which is assessed by elected officials for various services, internal charges within the County. Miscellaneous revenues budgeted are at $6.8 million which are contributions, rents, reimbursements and other revenues not classified elsewhere. A large portion of the budget is Continued on page 3 from assuming the issuance debt for the completion of the Court Facility Improvement Project. Transfers IN are internal transactions, from one fund from another. If a fund gets county share it is budgeted at $9.6 million. Ms. Friese continued that expenses include personnel and benefits million. Operating costs are budgeted at $68.1 million which includes supplies and equipment, training and travel, maintenance and repairs, vehicle operation, contracted services which includes human service providers, rent, utilities and Debt service. Transfers OUT between various funds are budgeted at $9.7 million. The majority of this represents General Fund (GF) support to other operations and they will review that further when they talk about the general fund. Capital is projects currently in process or planned are budgeted at $13.6 million which includes the Court Facility Improvement Project as well as bridge projects. Expansion requests represent the requests for capital purchases, new projects and personnel outside of existing operations which is at $9.4 million. The total request for personnel expansions were $1.1 million (4 FT or 1 PT and various reclassifications). Capital is at $8.3 million which includes enhanced technology, public safety equipment, vehicles and computers and other replacement equipment. Ms. Friese said that the total County Operations budget is $151.7 million which includes about $27.5 million in reserve spending. Reserve spending outside of the general fund comes from the spending of: Prior year bond proceeds for the Court Facility Improvement Project; liquid fuels reserves for bridge projects; and debt services reserves. When combined with fiduciary funds, the preliminary all services budget is $170.3 million. Ms. Beckner provided the projections for 2023 shown beside the requests for 2024. Revenue classifications are the same as All Services. Property taxes are general purpose (operating) only and exclude hotel tax and debt service. They remain relatively flat, estimated here at a 1.7% increase and they will have a more accurate/timely number for the proposed budget in a few weeks. The biggest change is in Transfers In. For 2024, this preliminary same for the GF as Janelle presented for countywide operations. Personnel, based on 2023 staff levels only, are at $33.4 million. Operating costs are department requests which equals $19.5 million. Transfers to other county operations from GF total just over $7 million which is an increase from projected 2023 of about $1.1 million, or 18.4%. Commissioner Ziobrowski said increase. He asked how we got to the 10% increase in personnel costs. Ms. Beckner responded that they looked at where we are this year and what we project 2023 to end at and considered a general overall increase in staff salaries of approximately 4% and also where we are estimating benefit costs to be. More detail on the transfers to other county operations includes the following: Human Services equals $5.4 million of the $7 million total; largest piece under Human Services is Children & Youth Services (CYS). At $3.6 million, the contribution to 11 includes the potential impact of requests for personnel adjustments and capital projects; and capital and personnel expansion requests for GF operations is just over $5.9 million. Ms. Friese said of this $5.9 million, personnel makes up $700,000 which includes reclassifications and requests for the addition of 3 full-time and 1 part-time. Capital requests total cost $5.2 million. The largest share is related to the Jail with requests of around $3 million which include: $2 million of is for an upgraded security system; $600,000 relates to facility repairs and improvements; and the rest is for various equipment replacements. Ms. Beckner said in summary, with the exception of transfers in, total revenue remains flat, expense growth is at almost $10 million (17.6%), overall GF revenue is at $52.7 million and $65.9 million in expenses, and a gap of $13.2 million needed from reserves to balance the budget and the $14.6 million in unrestricted reserves. Ms. Beckner said that we started 2023 with $14.6 m Projecting how the 2023 budget year will end, it appears that we will use $2.2 million of the $14.6 million beginning reserve balance. We will end the year at $12.4 million in unrestricted balances, which are defined as 60-90 days of General Fund operating expenses. This is also considered a best practice by the Government Finance Offi Continued on page 4 Independent Auditors. The 60 days equals $8.9 million and 90 days equals $13.3 million. Approving all requests as presented here would use all projected general fund reserves and result in a negativ shown them today is total revenues and expenses, as well as personnel expansion and adjustments and capital requests that were submitted by all County departments and operations. be needed if the Board would grant all the requests as submitted. She continued that over the next several weeks, Fiscal staff will work with County Administration to fine-tune budget lines priorities and recommendations to develop a 2024 budget. Commissioner Ziobrowski wanted to clarify that when they talk about transfers county share he often tells people that we act as a subcontractor to the Commonwealth of PA for these services and they pay us part of the money for it but they never pay us 100%. To make it very clear this is the amount of County General Fund money that we put in for the services that the state mandates. In Children & Youth we are putting $3.5 million or 10% of our entire budget to run a program that the state mandates and has expanded significantly in the last few years. Ms. Beckner responded that 2 mills are what we charge our taxpayers just for Children & Youth services. Commissioner Ziobrowski said those are important services but they are state Accounting Professionals recommend 60-90 days and how does that work for us practically speaking. Ms. Beckner said it works very well for us when we come into the beginning of the calendar year and our tax revenues flow starting in April. So during the course of the year after April, May, June collections when we are cash rich we use those over the course of the year. So coming into the beginning of the year our cash is at one of its lowest points and continues to decline. If our reserves were less we would need to borrow money and take that even further when the state has run into an issue with not passing their budget. It compounded that even -90 days. Chairman used to the extent that it could be put into a CD or some other government backed security to that f themselves through the first part of the year so we do tap into those funds as needed so that we ith everything pass their budget until January and other counties were delaying payments to vendors for Human Services and taking out loans, we were in a position to not have to do that. That put us in a much better position. He agrees with him that having those funds available and being able to invest them appropriately it's money well saved so to speak. Ms. Becker said another reason for having a healthy reserve we do need to borrow. Commissioner Ziobrowski said we have the best credit rating you can have as a county, is that correct? Ms. Beckner said we are one notch below the best and we cannot get to the best because we are committed to our culture here and our Ag. Preservation continued that it would make sense that Cumberland County has a higher rate than we do because they have more commercial growth. Ours is healthy and we have a significant amount of land and property that we are preserving and protecting, rather than commercializing it. Chairman Keller asked where healthcare benefits for employees show up in this. Ms. Friese article that health insurance premiums for the family option are going up next year about 7%. He asked Carrie what we are looking at. Ms. Gray said we are looking at no increase and primarily due to the fact that the Commissioners decided to self-fund the program almost three years ago. We are able to achieve savings and be competitive in the marketplace. Our insurance carrier has agreed to keep our rate the same. Continued on page 5 Chairman Keller said they are looking for guidance on how to proceed. He said that much we are willing to spend on personnel and capital expansion before all managers put the not just this year but going forward. Some needs are maybe low, medium, or high priority and Carrie and the team advise them of what the different priorities are. The all request number is manageable level and taking advantage of whatever revenue streams are available to us and making sure the General Fund is the payer of last resort and pushing for efficiencies and savings where we can get it and tapping into, on a limited basis, our cash reserves and we also still have benefits of having 12M dollars of ARPA funds for various capital needs. You can expect this to come back with guidance similar to what we have in the past. The Commissioners will take the next week or two to review this as well as other information that staff can provide to them and they will come back with an open discussion of where we all are Commissioner Ziobrowski asked about timeframes. Teresa said their plan is to present the nd proposed budget on Wednesday, November, 22 and it would be out for public review and th comment until December 13 and they are hoping the Commissioners will approve the budget on that date. The Board recessed and will reconvene at 2:00 p.m. for final approval of the items that were reviewed. The Board reconvened at 2:00 p.m. During public comment, Christopher Mckissick, a Regional Strategic Sales Manager for Carbyne located in NY, provided a general overview of the company and expressed his enthusiasm on partnering with the County on the new regional shared call handling system proposed for the 911 call center. The Board reviewed Commissioners Office matters. On a motion by Robert G. Ziobrowski, seconded by David S. Keller; unanimously approved for the Chairman of the Board to execute the agreement between the County of Franklin and The Zigmund, Co. for The Zigmund, Co. to act as an advisor regarding insurance related matters including reviewing renewal applications, audits, insurance proposals and loss run reports. This proposal is at a cost of $5,000.00 for the period of November 1, 2023 through October 31, 2024. The Board reviewed Department of Emergency Services matters. On a motion by Robert G. Ziobrowski, seconded by David S. Keller; unanimously approved Resolution 2023-19 to adopt the 2023 Franklin County Hazard Mitigation Plan. The Board reviewed Fiscal matters. On a motion by Robert G. Ziobrowski, seconded by th David S. Keller; unanimously approved 4 Quarter Fiscal Report to the Commonwealth of PA, Office of Children, Youth, and Families (OCYF) for the Children and Youth quarterly income and expenditure report for fiscal year 2022-2023. Expenditures for the 4th quarter totaled $3,684,288.00 resulting in a required county share totaling $713,902. The Board reviewed Grants/CJAB matters. On a motion by Robert G. Ziobrowski, seconded by David S. Keller; unanimously approved the amendment No. 1 to the contract (dated October 1, 2022) between the County of Franklin and Acadia Healthcare White Deer Run, LLC for the Good Wolf Treatment Court (GWTC) program for substance use disorder treatment services. This amendment is to extend the contract for another year through 9/30/2024 and increase the encumbrance for the contract to $15,000.00 for Substance Use Disorder treatment services. All other terms and conditions of the original agreement will remain in full force and effect. Continued on page 6 The Board reviewed additional Grants/CJAB matters. On a motion by Robert G. Ziobrowski, seconded by David S. Keller; unanimously approved the amendment No. 1 to the contract (dated October 1, 2022) between the County of Franklin and Noah's House/Gracie's Place for the Good Wolf Treatment Court (GWTC) Program for substance use disorder recovery housing services. This amendment is to increase the daily rate to $26.50 per hour, increase the contract amount to $25,350.00 and extend the contract through September 30, 2024. All other terms and conditions of the original agreement will remain in full force and effect. The Board reviewed additional Grants/CJAB matters. On a motion by Robert G. Ziobrowski, seconded by David S. Keller; unanimously approved the grant application to Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency (PCCD) requesting a grant in the amount of $500,000.00 to provide funds to the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Use Program (COSSUP) for individuals on supervision that is focused on creating stable living conditions enhanced by case management and various treatment support groups. The grant period is October 1, 2023 through September 30, 2025. The Board reviewed additional Grants/CJAB matters. On a motion by Robert G. Ziobrowski, seconded by David S. Keller; unanimously approved the grant application to Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency (PCCD) requesting a grant in the amount of $32,910.00 for the Franklin County Jail to use the funds to purchase COVID cleaning supplies (Clorox wipes, garbage bags, soap dispenser refill bags), a personal property bag sealer, and 9 inmate shower units. The grant period is August 1, 2022 through July 31, 2024. The Board reviewed Jail matters. On a motion by Robert G. Ziobrowski, seconded by David S. Keller; unanimously approved the amendment to the agreement (dated April 1, 2019) between the County of Franklin and Summit Food Service for inmate meals to increase by 6.5% effective April 2, 2023 through December 31, 2024. This adjustment is based upon the Bureau of Labor Statistics Consumer CPI, US City Average Food Away from Home Table. The Board reviewed Planning matters. On a motion by Robert G. Ziobrowski, seconded by David S. Keller; unanimously approved Resolution #2013-18 to approve and authorize the submittal of modifications listed on the resolution for the Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) program for Fiscal Year 2019. The Board met with Tiffany Bloyer, Human Resources Director and the Controller Harold Wissinger for Salary Board matters. Also in attendance were President Judge Shawn Meyers and Court Administrator Mark Singer. The Board reviewed Personnel matters. On a motion by Robert G. Ziobrowski, seconded by David S. Keller; unanimously approved the revised job description for the Courtroom Technician position The meeting was adjourned at 2:46 p.m. with a motion by Robert G. Ziobrowski; seconded by David S. Keller. Carrie E. Gray County Administrator/Chief Clerk FRANKLIN COUNTY COMMISSIONERS ____________________________________ David S. Keller, Chairman ___________________________________ Robert G. Ziobrowski 2024 Preliminary Budget All Requests– ALL SERVICES, ALL FUNDS GENERAL FUND TRANSFERS (COUNTY SHARE)