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Baltimore County Budget

Monday, April 15, 2013

Kamenetz Holds The Line On Property, Income Taxes

The Baltimore County executive praises county employees but asks employees to "stay the course" because the proposed budget contains no cost of living salary increases.

UPDATED (10:29 a.m.)—Baltimore County residents will not have to dig deeper for local taxes again this year under a budget proposed by County Executive Kevin Kamenetz. Kamenetz is expected to introduce his third county budget to the Baltimore County Council at 10 a.m. The proposed $2.8 billion operating budget will contain no increases in property or income taxes for the budget year that begins July 1. The county has not raised property taxes in 25 years. The county income tax rate has not been raised in 21 years. The council's Spending Affordabillity committee in January set the limit for ongoing costs subject to spending guidelines at $1.675 billion. Kamenetz said Monday that his plan meets the revised spending guideline. Kamenetz's …

Buzz Beeler

7:43 pm on Thursday, May 16, 2013

Thanks Kevin. They just never figured on the cost, training, liability or the other details needed for an operation this size. This issue was no secret in the department. Everyone on the job knew about it. It's hard to keep a secret among 2,000 employees. No bang for the big bucks after the horse left the barn.   more ›

Thursday, May 24, 2012

County Council Approves 'Bare Bones' Budget

Council raises concerns about future spending and revenues.

The Baltimore County Council gave unanimous approval to County Executive Kevin Kamenetz's second budget, which totals more than $2.9 billion. Council members called the budget bare bones, but at the same time raised questions about the future trajectory of increased spending over the next three years as revenues decline. Final approval was a foregone conclusion after the council cut $208,000 last week from Kamenetz's proposed $1.6 billion general fund budget. Council Chairwoman Vicki Almond said the cuts were relatively small because "this was a bare bones budget." During the two weeks of budget hearings, the council noted projected future spending would outpace revenues by nearly $200 million over the next three years. That projection …

Arbutus Town Crier

10:35 pm on Tuesday, May 29, 2012

a Catonsville Democrat, He believes in the quality of life issues that make southwest Baltimore County a great place to raise a family? understanding of the hardships of working families? Democrat or Republican do the right thing, there is a area completely missed 21229. Do the right of the people and correct the issues here in Arbutus 21229 Get us out of the CITY ZIP! We are ARBUTUS we have not …   more ›

Monday, April 16, 2012

Council Members Claim Kamenetz Retaliation Over Pension Vote

Four Baltimore County Council members accused County Executive Kevin Kamenetz of cutting off their access to department heads and of intentionally delaying projects in their districts.

  Four members of the Baltimore County Council say County Executive Kevin Kamenetz is retaliating against them by delaying projects in their districts after they voted to table the administration's pension bill last month. Council Chairwoman Vicki Almond, Councilman Ken Oliver and Councilman Tom Quirk—all Democrats—and Councilman David Marks, a Republican, said their access to county department heads to address constituent concerns has been greatly diminished since the day after they voted March 19 to table the bill. All said they believe the executive is further penalizing them by withholding money for projects in each of their districts while providing funds to council districts whose members voted to pass the pension bill. Oliver said …

Jimmy

8:40 pm on Wednesday, April 25, 2012

The fire department has been asking for laptops to help increase productivity in support services for years and are constantly being turned down. The other monetary perk was the drop. only those with over 32 years of service were eligable for that. But why were these drop payments criticized? They are less offensive that KK and Gardina and others double diping with their county council pension. …   more ›

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

County Budget To Focus on Education, Public Safety

No layoffs, furloughs or increases in property or income taxes are expected when county executive releases second budget Thursday.

County residents and employees can expect some good news Thursday when Kevin Kamenetz releases his second budget as county executive. Kamenetz will deliver his budget message before the Baltimore County Council Thursday at 10 a.m. Sources familiar with the budget say it will contain no tax increases for residents and no furloughs or layoffs for county employees. The focus of the budget will remain on schools, which make up more than 50 percent of the county's total budget, and public safety. The county executive will also announce the results of a early retirement incentive program that officials hoped would save $15 million through the retirement of at least 200 employees. Sources said the county will surpass those expectations with the …

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Buzz Beeler

7:24 pm on Saturday, April 14, 2012

At the ceremony for the opening of the bank here in Dundalk the county executive was the only political official present. I saw Mike Weir who was at a community volunteer clean up. Bread and Cheese Creek had a clean up at the same time, so it's possible some of the them were at that event. Saturday is a tough day to schedule events. Marge Neal from Dundalk Patch was covering the Bank opening.   more ›

Saturday, February 4, 2012

Baltimore County Stories of the Week

The best and most interesting stories from Baltimore County Patch sites in the last week.

Here are the big stories out of Baltimore County that you may have missed on Patch this week: Foundry Row Developer Says It Can Fix Reisterstown Road Traffic A debate is brewing in Owings Mills over development, with traffic being of central concern. Glyndon-Based Courage Lion Program Continues to Pick Up Steam Behind President John Ramming and support from communities across the country, Duffy, the Courage Lion, is having an impact on more ailing children every day. Baltimore County Budget Could Grow by $47 Million The county's budget could grow by 3 percent next year under a recommendation approved by the County Council's Spending Affordability Committee. Man Shot, Killed by Police After Patrol Car Stolen A man was shot and killed by …

Monday, September 19, 2011

County Employees Offered Early Retirement; Layoffs Not Ruled Out

Officials hope to eliminate 200 positions, save as much as $15 million through a voluntary process, but hint at layoffs if goals fall short.

UPDATED (7:59 a.m.)—Baltimore County officials say 1,100 current employees will be offered voluntary early retirement as part of an effort to deal with ongoing budgetary woes related to a slumping economy. Don Mohler, a spokesman and chief of staff for County Executive Kevin Kamenetz, said the county is hoping to eliminate 200 positions from a workforce of about 8,000 through what he called a "voluntary, humane and evaluative process." "Clearly this is an attempt to right-size government," Mohler said. County Administrative Officer Fred Homan said the county hopes the early retirements will save the county as much as $10-$15 million in salaries. A bill creating the early retirement program is expected to be introduced to the County Council…

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sylvia

9:11 am on Friday, October 21, 2011

I agree. It really would be fair to put more names in the mix if the position held is not one that they were elected to hold. Fair is fair in these economic times. I cannot work because of my age and retirement, unless it is part time. How many are willing to work part time at their job for less money?   more ›

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