City of Pasadena Services Protection Measure to Be Placed on Ballot
Last Monday, the Pasadena City Council unanimously voted to place the Pasadena City Services Protection Measure on the Nov. 3, 2020 ballot. The measure, calling for a charter amendment, must be approved by a majority of Pasadena voters to maintain the longstanding Light & Power Fund transfer to the General Fund that pays for services including 911 emergency response, fire, paramedics, and programs for public health.
Currently,the Pasadena Light & Power Fund transfer provisions of the Pasadena CityCharter are being challenged in court on whether the portion of the electricrates used is considered a tax and has met the requirements of voter approvalthat are called for in Proposition 218 and Proposition 26, despite havingpreviously gone to and been passed by voters a combined total of seven timessince the 1930s.
Asa full-service city, Pasadena relies on locally generated funds to deliverservices to its residents. The City of Pasadena has experienced a $30 millionloss due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite those losses in revenue, the cityused reserve funds, deferred infrastructure projects, and implemented othercost-saving measures to maintain its current emergency response to thepandemic, public health programs, and critical services.
Ifthe Pasadena City Services Protection Measure does not pass, the loss ofapproximately $18 million annually from the Light & Power Fund transferwill result in significant reductions. The reductions would impact emergency911 response; fire, paramedic, public health, and senior services; homeless programs;and street repairs.
ThePasadena City Services Protection Measure is not a new tax, it does not raisetaxes, and it does not raise utility rates — the charter amendment is meant tosimply protect current funding levels that provide the services residentsreceive today.
Ifapproved by a majority of Pasadena voters, the measure will also require annualindependent audits with public disclosure, reduce and limit the Light &Power Fund transfer to not more than 12 percent, previously as much as 16percent; and will be under local control with monies spent benefiting Pasadenaresidents and businesses.