Pubdate: Sun, 09 Jan 2005 Source: Lancaster Eagle-Gazette (OH) Copyright: 2004 Lancaster Eagle-Gazette Contact: http://www.lancastereaglegazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3143 Author: Rachel Adams Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) OFFICIALS: STAKES ARE HIGH IF LEVY FAILS FAIRFIELD COUNTY -- The DARE program eliminated. Twenty percent budget cuts. One-hundred-thirty jobs lost. The Major Crimes Unit crippled. Deputies delayed because of lack of staffing. No assistance in a natural emergency. That's the picture painted by county officials as they face the Feb. 8 special election. At stake is a safety services tax levy that will raise $6.8 million annually by boosting the county sales tax from 6.75 percent to 7.25 percent. It's money that will swallow the county's $4 million deficit and allow for a new jail and 911 call center to be built. Juvenile and Probate Court Judge Steven O. Williams doesn't like to think about what will happen if the levy doesn't pass. "Certainly it's going to affect every facet of county government," he said. "The plain and simple fact is, they've got a general fund deficit and we have been cutting back and holding back on all kinds of things for a couple of years at least, and now we've made cuts, kept ourselves from replacing people that have quit and gone on, and holding off for the county to get better financially. "You can do that for just so long," he continued. "(We) can't do it any longer." Williams and the other county judges are lucky, in a way, he said: They, along with the Board of Elections and Veterans Services, can mandate budgets. That means they are entitled to a certain amount of money by state law. If the levy doesn't pass, "All the courts are going to mandate their budgets," Williams said, but it's going to be "a restrained budget." He added, "There's no money for pay raises. We've cut every line item that there is except ones that are impossible to cut." If the courts, or any other entity with mandating rights, decide to mandate their budgets, that will negatively affect the rest of the county, said County Commissioner Judy Shupe. "If departments mandate, that changes the (budget's) bottom line," she said. Most county departments have turned in budgets that reflect a 20 percent reduction, Shupe said. The lion's share of the general fund is taken up by the $6 million budget of the sheriff's department, Fairfield County Sheriff Dave Phalen said. Even that number reflects cuts. In 2003, his budget was $8 million. Part of the reason for that budget is the fact that the sheriff's office is now housed in three separate buildings: a jail and an administrative building on North High Street and a minimum-security prison on West Wheeling Street. If the tax levy fails, 30 employees will be cut from the payroll at the sheriff's office, Phalen said. That means fewer deputies on the streets, an inability to perform vacation watches while homeowners are away, and less help when an emergency arises. "I think the public could see delays in the answering of the calls," Phalen said. "They'll also see delays in deputies arriving at crime scenes and car accidents." 911 callers will be affected as well, he said. Right now, three dispatchers answer the phones. One of them will be laid off if the levy fails. The 911 dispatching problem concerns Phalen, but he also worries about the risk of children becoming exposed to illegal drugs. Part of Phalen's budget cut for 2005 includes the Drug Abuse Resistance Education (DARE) program. In addition to that program ending, the Major Crimes Unit, which orchestrates drug busts around the county, will take a big hit because of the lack of deputies. "It's a bad situation, it really is," Phalen said. "The jail is just a part of it -- the big concern is the loss of people out there in the neighborhoods." Even if the levy does pass, relief won't be immediate, Shupe said. The money raised, which won't be collected until September, goes to replace expenditures that are now being taken from the general fund. It will offer respite from budget troubles in 2006, Shupe said, provided county officials are careful to have 'carryover' money at the end of 2005 to last through the first few months of 2006. At least one county office faces complete elimination if the levy doesn't pass. The Office of Emergency Management and Homeland Security is funded through federal grants, said Director Tom Moe, but those are beginning to dry up in the post-9/11 economy. If the levy passes, a line item will be created for Moe's office, allowing them to build a new facility to replace the rickety building they now occupy on East Main Street. "Our current situation is so miserable that the state of Ohio has labeled our facility as unsatisfactory," Moe said. "We are operating so far beyond our means we have no flexibility whatsoever." Although his department often functions unnoticed, Moe and Deputy Director Matt Keefe have attracted some attention with the recent ice storm and flooding. Moe and Keefe are responsible for coordinating help efforts in an emergency and collecting funds from federal entities to reimburse those whose homes have been damaged or destroyed. Moe hosts training sessions, gives lectures and distributes flyers to educate county residents on emergency preparedness. Passing the tax issue will "allow us to tell our citizens, 'We will be here tomorrow,' " Moe said. "It's important for people to really believe there's something in it for every citizen and every citizen's family. We as citizens need to ask ourselves, 'Is a half a penny on the dollar worth spending so we can continue to have our services?' " - --- MAP posted-by: Josh