{"id":27822,"date":"2017-07-16T15:33:26","date_gmt":"2017-07-16T22:33:26","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spijue.wpengine.com\/news\/assembly-looks-to-put-sales-tax-money-toward-maintenance\/"},"modified":"2017-07-16T15:33:26","modified_gmt":"2017-07-16T22:33:26","slug":"assembly-looks-to-put-sales-tax-money-toward-maintenance","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/assembly-looks-to-put-sales-tax-money-toward-maintenance\/","title":{"rendered":"Assembly looks to put sales tax money toward maintenance"},"content":{"rendered":"
Through vote after vote Thursday night, the City and Borough of Juneau Assembly Finance Committee approved its list of local projects that would benefit from a 1 percent sales tax extension.<\/p>\n
Going down a list of 26 items, the committee voted to fund 13 of them to varying degrees, spreading $47 million between them with an emphasis on building and facility maintenance. The three projects receiving the most money — that is, if Juneau voters choose to extend the 1 percent sales tax increase for another five years in October’s election — would be wastewater maintenance, Augustus Brown Pool maintenance and Juneau School District maintenance.<\/p>\n
The city would allocate $13.5 million to wastewater maintenance over the next five years, $5 million each to Augustus Brown Pool and JSD maintenance. City Finance Director Bob Bartholomew said this focus was no surprise.<\/p>\n
“It was a little bit of a theme,” Bartholomew said. “We started (talking) 12 or 18 months ago that we really need to focus resources on replacing what we have. That seemed to carry into this process better than I expected.”<\/p>\n
Half of the proposed projects missed out on funding, as there were $120 million worth of proposals on the table and only $47 million to divvy out. Projects that didn’t make the cut included the Juneau International Airport’s Snow Removal Equipment Building<\/a>, a parking improvement project that would have affected downtown and Willoughby areas and an initiative that would have kickstarted Juneau’s early childhood education<\/a> programs.<\/p>\n The funding for the school district in particular was a departure from the recommendations of city staff and City Manager Rorie Watt, as both recommendations were to provide $3 million. Assembly member Jerry Nankervis proposed increasing that number to $5 million, as multiple presentations this year from those in the school district have alerted him to the need for more maintenance<\/a> at the schools.<\/p>\n