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Medford budget finally approved

Medford Township Council finally approved a budget forĀ 2011.

The budget, $21,870,040, was arrived at through much difficulty. Earlier in the year residents rejected a referendum that would have allowed the township to raise taxes above the 2 percent cap imposed by theĀ state.

ā€œI am relieved we have an adopted budget and we still have some service levels operating,ā€ Township Manager Christopher Schultz said. ā€œI have tried to be equitable in that cuts have impacted all departments, but the largest impact would be in public work services andĀ police.ā€

ā€œItā€™s a bare bones budget,ā€ Council Member Bob Martin said. ā€œItā€™s going to get us through the nextĀ year.

ā€œItā€™s the best we can doā€ given what they have to work with, he added, noting there have been and will continue to be layoffs and cutbacks.

Resident Chris Buoni, who is running unopposed in next monthā€™s council election, offered guarded optimism about theĀ budget.

ā€œIā€™m glad to see they finally managed to balance the budget,ā€ Buoni said. ā€œUnfortunately they managed to balance the budget by one-timeĀ fixes.ā€

He was referring to assets like cell phone towers that were sold off for a one-timeĀ revenue.

ā€œWe did some things this year that will unfortunately offer us no help towards any kind of long-term solution to our budget problem,ā€ BuoniĀ said.

And what about nextĀ year?

ā€œIt will be a big challenge again,ā€ Schultz said. ā€œWe have a financial gap between the tax levy and the total budget that will require additional cost reductions unless we see an increase in stableĀ revenue.

ā€œOne time revenues are pretty much no longer available which has been artificially subsidizing the budget,ā€ heĀ added.

Buoni pointed to information provided by the township auditor at the council meeting that eight of 40 fixed assets in the township are missing. He said as much as $20 million could be unaccounted for.

ā€œIt becomes apparent to me that they are reluctant to let the members of our township understand the exact nature of the problem weā€™re facing,ā€ Buoni said. ā€œThatā€™s beyond financial mismanagement.

ā€œSomethingā€™s going on here and I want to get to the bottom of it,ā€ he added. ā€œWhere are the assets that are unaccounted for?ā€

Schultz said Buoniā€™s numbers are not necessarily correct.

ā€œThe township has certain assets that may not have been accounted for but may be in inventory,ā€ Schultz said. ā€œThere was a sampling of 40 fixed assets of which the auditor was unable to locate or properly identify eight assets which totaled $15,186.75.

ā€œThe error, when projected through the entire population of assets totaled $657,764,ā€ he added. ā€œThe township is now in the process of developing a complete inventory of its fixed assets and establishing controls to properly account for asset disposition.ā€

This information can be found in the audit which is posted on the townshipā€™s website.

So why is it that many residents mistrust the currentĀ council?

ā€œI donā€™t know,ā€ Martin said. ā€œI feel like I am as honest as they come but I think anything you look at thereā€™s two sides to everyĀ story.

ā€œSometimes it could be political,ā€ he continued. ā€œWhoĀ knows?ā€

Whether real or perceived, governing bodies are accountable for their actions/decisions,ā€ Schultz said. ā€œOvertime, the community, in part, has questioned some of those actions and decisions and the overall direction of the township.ā€

Because Mayor Chris Myers and Council Member Dominic Grosso were absent from the meeting, the council tabled ordinances regarding the controversial Medford Crossings project to the Oct. 10Ā meeting.

ā€œThe Medford Crossings project is a major issue for this community with a long history,ā€ Schultz said. ā€œDepending on if the project is ever constructed and how it comes to that is what is currently atĀ debate.

ā€œThese ordinances are amending previous versions addressed by the planning board which found them to be inconsistent with the master plan,ā€ heĀ added.

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