Dixon a city on the brink before arrest

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

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That’s when possible layoffs were brought to the picture.

Even though Police Chief Danny Langloss said his department was short-staffed in comparison to other communities of similar size, one officer who recently returned from military service in Afghanistan was near the chopping block.

“There was a great deal of concern with all the city’s departments before [Crundwell’s] arrest,” Langloss said. “Who was going to lose their job?”

Her arrest came not long before the city’s budgets had to be set and possible layoffs would be issued.

“That’s a testament to all the department heads; nobody lost their job,” said Fire Chief Tim Shipman. “We did what we were able to do with our budgets to prevent that from happening.”

The financial pain, however, was felt across the city’s departments.

Ortgiesen highlighted the kind of infrastructure projects that were not being completed.

For example, the wastewater treatment plant needed two new screws for its lift station, so the City Council was approached for the money. Those screws, which were rusting and long overdue for maintenance, pull up sewage from underground to start the treatment process. If any of them were to malfunction, homes or businesses would back up with sewage.

The $80,000 project was never done.

“We never had the money to do it,” Ortgiesen said.

Now, public works will proceed with the maintenance at a cost of about $400,000.

Crumbling downtown sidewalks, deteriorating streets, and the loss of part-time summer help also made Ortgiesen’s list.

For the police department, those tighter budgets prevented upgrading of the radio system, purchasing new bulletproof vests for its technical response team, replacing outdated laptops in squad cars, and hiring more staff.

“There’s several dead spots with our radio system and the dispatcher in certain spots of the city,” Langloss said. “We have to send more than one officer out to these areas, because it’s quite the safety issue. This has been a problem for 15 years, and we’ve never had the money to fix it.”

The fire department would not have been able to update safety equipment if it wasn’t for more than $640,000 of grants, Shipman said.

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