May 21, 2012

Cedar Rapids residents approve flood recovery tax

Cedar Rapids voters approved a one-percent increase in their sales tax Tuesday that’s expected to bring in millions of dollars for flood recovery. The tax hike passed with nearly 60% of the vote.

Mayor Kay Halloran says okaying the tax sends a strong message that those in Cedar Rapids are willing to help each other recover. Mayor Halloran says, "We are a community and the people of Cedar Rapids are willing to help their friends and neighbors who are hurting and I am proud of that."

The tax will take effect April 1st and is expected to generate 18-million dollars a year for five years.  Dale Todd, co-chair of a group that supports the tax, says the extra money will help speed up Cedar Rapids’ flood recovery.

Todd says, "This is a small step in the process and a journey but it’s hopefully one that will help get this community back on its feet."

Five of the 15 Linn County communities turned the tax down, including Center Point, Hiawatha, Marion, Robins and Walford. The extra tax will not be collected in those towns, but it also means they will not receive any additional sales tax revenue.

Voters in Johnson County will vote on a similar tax hike proposal May 5th. 

State universities hope to get part of stimulus money

The presidents of the three state-supported universities are urging state lawmakers to steer federal and state economic stimulus money their way to offset severe budget cuts.

The University of Iowa, Iowa State University, the University of Northern Iowa, along with the schools for the blind and deaf, are looking at a possible reduction in state funding of $75-million in 2010 compared with this fiscal year. Board of Regents president, David Miles, says the schools need help from the federal government to avoid more slashes in programs and staff.

Miles says, "There’s clearly a portion of the federal stimulus dollars that have been set aside for education and I think it’s now a determination of where within the education budget that money will go and we’re hoping we’ll participate that money in an appropriate basis and we will appreciate whatever they can do."

Miles says there are a lot of unknowns about the stimulus money. "I think it’s very difficult for even our legislators to know exactly what the restrictions are going to be and how much flexibility they will have. I think we’re getting good feedback in terms of an interest and a willingness and support for our institutions but nothing at a detailed level yet," Miles says.

Miles says he also hopes the universities and the schools for deaf and blind students get some money from the Governor’s proposed $700-million state stimulus package, if it passes the legislature. 

Bills would assist schools, AEAs in disaster zones

Legislators are working on bills that would help schools in areas where tornadoes and floods struck last year.  Mary Gannon of the Iowa Association of Schools Boards says Cedar Rapids officials believe dozens of students didn’t show up for classes this past fall because they’re living outside the district now — either with family or in a FEMA trailer. 

"Those families who were living in the area that flooded, we assume the vast majority of them will come back and rebuild," Gannon says.

One proposal under consideration would change the state financing formala and forward Cedar Rapids and other Iowa school districts in a disaster zone the same amount of general state aid they received last year, so the schools aren’t dealing with budget cuts at the same time they’re trying to repair or rebuild after tornadoes, flooding or even a fire.

"So basically it allows them to maintain funding while they’re going through that fluctuation in enrollment, until it stabilizes itself," Gannon says.

The Iowa Association of School Boards is also urging legislators to make these proposals law for all disaster-struck schools — now and in the future — rather than just the schools hit by last year’s natural disasters. "This is not the first time we’ve had natural disasters hit schools," Gannon says. "We’ve had schools that were shut down for other reasons — fires, etc. — so this would actually help us in other situations."

Area Education Agencies are also asking for a change in state law so when AEA facilities are damaged, they can quickly hire contractors to make repairs.

Ron Fielder is head of the Grand Wood Area Education Agency in Cedar Rapids which serves nearly 70,000 students at schools in the region. He says while schools got to bypass the state law which requires waiting period for contractors to submit bids, his AEA had to wait to start repairs. "We waited all of the adequate time frames and as a result, probably our construction was delayed two to three months," Fielder says.

Water flooded into the Grant Wood AEA building this past June and remained for about three days. "We had Prairie Creek that backed up in the southwest part of Cedar Rapids because the river was rising and the creek had no where to go and it kept raining," Fielder says. "We have a facility that’s about an acre under roof, a one-story building, and it filled with about a foot and a half of water."

Fielder and his staff "saved" about $10 million worth of property — things like computers and office supplies — by moving it to higher ground before the flood waters swamped the building.

But Fielder says the flood damage to the facility is still significant. "Whether you’ve got a foot-and-a-half or five feet (of water) — carpet, drywall, (and) ceiling tile all has to come out," Fielder says.

Fielder hopes to have the building completely ready by this summer.