Dixon a city on the brink before arrest

Layoffs were in works; financial pain ran deep, but ‘city survived’

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DIXON – Just 5 days before FBI agents arrested Rita Crundwell at City Hall in April for taking nearly $54 million from the city since 1990, Shawn Ortgiesen called his weekly meeting of department heads.

Layoffs were discussed.

“We were all feeling that there was no money,” said Ortgiesen, the city’s public works director. “We were trying to figure out more ways to generate revenue for the city or ways to not do layoffs. Fortunately, it never came to that.”

This week, the city’s new finance director, Paula Meyer, reported that operating funds had plummeted from $10.6 million in 2002 to negative $19.7 million at the time of Crundwell’s arrest – a $30 million swing in one decade.

In the past decade, the city went from a desirable surplus of funds, with the ability to pay for city improvements, to pure survival mode, all while Crundwell enjoyed a lavish lifestyle.

The general fund, which pays for most operations, including police, fire and roads, had sunk to $5.7 million in the hole. Loans were obtained to pay bills, and that debt climbed to more than $12 million. The City Council was forced to borrow off anticipated tax collections for the third year.

Streets were not improved, until a pothole developed. Improvements to the water system were not made until after a main break. Both police and fire departments were short-staffed, and stains from water leaks were left unrepaired on the walls of City Hall.

“We weren’t able to be proactive,” Ortgiesen said. “We were reactive.”

Not only were city budgets feeling the pinch, but pay for city employees was frozen. Retired employees were not replaced. Negotiations with the city’s unions were conducted on a year-to-year basis, instead of every 3 years.

As the hole grew deeper, the city was running out of answers.

“There are limits to what you can do once you get to this point,” Meyer said. “There’s limits to what you can borrow, limits to what you can levy in taxes based on your EAV [equalized assessed value – total amount of taxable property]. It had to either reduce spending or increase revenue.”

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