Sarah Coppola
AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF
Austin City Manager Marc Ott no longer plans to cut library hours to save money. But he said he does want some firetrucks to at times operate with fewer firefighters.
Ott on Thursday announced those changes to the $20 million cost-cutting plan he unveiled earlier this month.
He had proposed cutting library operations at every branch by 9.5 hours a week. But he said he reconsidered after talking with residents in small groups and at a town hall meeting and hearing how much they value libraries.
"I cannot guarantee that we will not need to reduce hours as part of 2010 budget development if we see a continued downward trend in revenue this year," Ott told the City Council on Thursday .
Austin's sales tax revenues, which make up a quarter of the $621 million budget, have been dipping as the economy has struggled.
Under Ott's plan, the library director will hold open 10 vacant jobs and hire temporary employees if necessary, saving $80,000 . About $285,000 would have been saved by cutting library hours.
To save $200,000 , Fire Chief Rhoda Mae Kerr agreed to put in place a "flexible staffing plan." Instead of paying overtime to have four firefighters (the national standard) on a truck at all times, the department will have only three firefighters staff some firetrucks at various times.
That change will cut 0.2 percent from the Fire Department's budget, the second-smallest percentage reduction among the 12 city departments in which Ott plans cuts.
The department had only three firefighters on trucks until it began adding a fourth person to some trucks in 2003. Shift commanders will decide on a day-to-day basis which trucks in which areas most need four firefighters and which can operate effectively with three, spokeswoman Michelle DeCrane said.
DeCrane said that under the plan, no stations will close, no firefighters will be laid off, and response times will remain under eight minutes.
Council Member and former firefighter Mike Martinez and Stephen Truesdell , president of the Austin Firefighters Association, said three-person staffing will threaten the efficiency and safety of firefighters and residents, because state law requires that two firefighters be outside a burning building before two others can enter.
"Waiting for another truck could take a few seconds or a few minutes, depending on the area and time of day," Truesdell said. "Mr. Ott is entirely changing the way we operate on an emergency scene, all just to save a minute fraction of the budget. " It's a striking contrast to have the manager say we can maintain library hours but have to decrease the staffing on firetrucks."
Fire Battalion Chief Harry Evans said a three-firefigher unit can still enter a burning building if it's obvious that people inside need to be rescued. And in fires that don't require a rescue, other trucks would arrive quickly, he said.
Martinez said the department can and should find other cuts that don't compromise day-to-day firefighting, such as trimming the salaries of executive-level fire officials.
Ott unveiled a few other changes Thursday .
He said he will consolidate two work units in the purchasing office to create a vacancy and save $86,000 . And he will use $80,000 for youth and parent support programs, including money to send 80 children to summer camp. He had proposed saving that money.
Council Member Lee Leffingwell asked Ott to consider moving some social services programs into the city's Economic Growth Department, which operates on the monthly fees that Austin Energy customers pay. That change would help preserve important programs such as job training and take pressure off the city's day-to-day operating budget, Leffingwell said.
Ott said he has begun an organizational review to look for inefficiencies in programs and services citywide. And he has asked finance staffers to assess city financial policies because, he said, Austin relies heavily on sales taxes, a volatile source of income.
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