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City council's budget meetings done until year-end financials completed

City council has finished its pre-budget public meetings and is now waiting for year-end financials to finalize next year's budget.
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The city of Williams Lake is hoping to purchase a new asphalt patcher soon

Williams Lake city council has finished its pre-budget public meetings and is now waiting for the city's year-end financials to finalize next year's budget, Mayor Walt Cobb said.

"The financials have to be done by the end of this month," Cobb told the Tribune Monday. "Then we will know if there are surpluses or overruns from last year so we can adjust our budget accordingly."

Ahead of finalizing the 2015 budget council has, however, approved three capital expenditures.

They are $1,250,000 for road renovations, $120,000 for the installation of an Avgas Tank at the airport and $100,000 for a new asphalt patcher.

"We can't get parts for the old one," Cobb said of the asphalt patcher. "Because of the weather conditions right now with the freezing and thawing you can see what's happening to the roads."

While council has budgeted $100,000 for the patcher, the director of municipal services Gary Muraca told council that he can get one for less than that, Cobb added.

During January and February, the city's finance committee has held meetings at city hall chambers on Thursday to discuss the budget.

At a budget meeting inJanuary, Coun. Jason Ryll made a motion that council approve a zero per cent increase in salaries for council stipends for the 2015 and 2016 budget years, and a zero increase in management salaries for the 2015 budget year.

Presently the stipend for councillor is $15,240 per year and for mayor it's $43,687.92.

Ryll's motion was adopted at the last regular council meeting unanimously. Councillors Ivan Bonnell and Sue Zacharias were absent from the meeting.

 



Monica Lamb-Yorski

About the Author: Monica Lamb-Yorski

A B.C. gal, I was born in Alert Bay, raised in Nelson, graduated from the University of Winnipeg, and wrote my first-ever article for the Prince Rupert Daily News.
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