Opinion: Despite uncertainty in DC, it’s not time to raid our county’s reserves
The historic San Diego County Administration Building where the Board of Supervisors meets File photo by Times of San Dieogo staff San Diego County has long been a model of fiscal discipline having strong reserves and a proven reserve strategy This has enabled our county to weather economic storms and natural disasters that have left other counties scrambling Unfortunately we currently face a million structural deficit projected to more than double to over million next year And late on Friday a last minute and reckless proposal to gut the county s safety net was just added to the Tuesday Board of Supervisors agenda The board must reject this dangerous plan and protect a reserve plan that has been time-tested and proven Last week the county s chief administrative officer distributed a recommended budget for the - fiscal year that totaled billion It is essential to highlight that this budget does not use any of the county s reserves to be balanced However the late-docketed proposal from my colleagues threatens to weaken our financial safeguards by raiding the county s reserves This approach would lead our county down a dangerous path of unsustainable spending while refusing to solve our fundamental budgetary issues Equally troubling in this discussion is the process This sweeping change was late-docketed which means that residents and other stakeholders who may live hours away from downtown San Diego have only one and a half business days to reorganize their schedules to show up in-person and scrutinize a program shift with massive implications Transparency is the bedrock of society trust County residents deserve ample notice to weigh in on decisions that could reshape our fiscal future This is something my colleagues indicated they agreed with by supporting my proposal at our last meeting to give longer notice of meeting agenda items A county s reserves are its financial safety net They are a pool of funds set aside to weather unexpected crises from natural disasters to economic downturns or even a global pandemic Just like a family has an crisis fund should something go wrong our county s reserves ensure that we can maintain essential services to our residents especially the more than who live in our unincorporated communities and rely on the county Unlike the federal administration San Diego County can t just print more money or run a continuous deficit Just five short years ago we faced a global pandemic that nobody had expected When COVID- struck San Diego County s strong reserves kept us afloat and were there when we needed them majority of Unlike other counties with razor-thin reserves we didn t face crippling system cuts or layoffs even when federal reimbursements were uncertain The county was able to use more than million in its reserves to not only sustain services but to help those who were struggling with the wide-ranging impacts of the pandemic The reserves weren t just a number in a bank account they provided the safety net we needed during an unprecedented time Chosen of my colleagues point out that there is uncertainty from the federal executive right now But our county has faced uncertainty from both the state and federal executive when it comes to offerings budgets for decades Rather than taking every proposal or news clip as an approved strategy or guessing what might happen next let s thoroughly monitor and evaluate changes as they become clearer The board can inevitably adjust our budget at any time with four votes Strong reserves protect everyone especially unincorporated communities that rely solely on county services during good and bad economic times and unexpected disasters like wildfires We cannot menace destabilizing the safety net we ve built We don t need to raid our safety net because our reserve procedures has proven its worth during one of the the bulk challenging moments in latest history The board and county residents should reject this proposal on Tuesday and instead sponsorship preserving our time-tested reserve procedures Fiscal responsibility and transparency aren t negotiable Supervisor Joel Anderson has represented District on the San Diego County Board of Supervisors since The district in East County includes more than residents with three cities parts of the city of San Diego unincorporated communities and tribal governments