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HomeMy WebLinkAboutMemo - Read Before Packet - 10/5/2021 - Memorandum From Travis Storin And Teresa Roche Re: Councilmember Questions Regarding Agenda Item #21 - Gratitude Pay City Hall 300 LaPorte Ave. PO Box 580 Fort Collins, CO 80522 970.221.6505 970.224.6107 - fax fcgov.com M E M O R A N D U M Date: October 5, 2021 To: Mayor Arndt and City Councilmembers Thru: Kelly DiMartino, Interim City Manager From: Travis Storin, Chief Financial Officer Teresa Roche, Chief Human Resources Officer Re: Councilmember questions regarding Agenda Item #21: Gratitude Pay On Monday, October 4, staff received the following questions regarding Gratitude Pay: 1. What is the purpose of this payment? Is it just gratitude or is it being used as a morale booster? The purpose of the proposed payout is to acknowledge the unprecedented environment that was successfully navigated during the pandemic and the wildfires of 2020. The staff has been under a pay freeze since the pandemic's early days, except for employees within the collective bargaining unit and other low-volume exception requests outlined in the September 9 Council memo. While the purpose is to express gratitude, executive staff believes this will also positively impact morale. 2. Are there service areas where this money could be used to alleviate staffing/overtime constraints? There are multiple things at play within staffing levels: The City has a significant amount of vacant positions (currently 158 vacancies in budgeted positions). Now that the hiring freeze has been lifted, we are actively working to recruit positions. As they are filled, it will add considerable support to staff. A significant contributor to current pressures is the nationwide labor shortage. The City Manager's Recommended Budget also includes 39 proposed positions for areas which are deemed to have the highest priority and greatest need. In compliance with state and federal FLSA standards, once an overtime hour is worked it is always paid out regardless of budgetary status. Departments carrying material vacancy savings within their budget are able to utilize those savings for unbudgeted overtime when warranted by business need or circumstance. 3. Is this in line with other companies who are expressing gratitude to their employees through bonuses? Not hazard pay, but gratitude bonuses. The City has limited information regarding what other companies in the region have done around gratitude or hazard pay in 2021. In speaking with Colorado municipalities about hazard or gratitude pay, a number are currently considering it, and Greeley did a 2% COLA retroactive to March 2021 and is doing a 2% bonus using HERO funds for essential employees. Staff has gathered solid information on changes that have occurred within the municipal market. When proposing the 2021 budget, Executive Staff recommended 0% pay increases in 2021, largely due to the anticipated financial pressures of a presumed economic recession in 2021. Earlier this year, to calibrate this recommendation, we surveyed 17 other Front Range cities, 100% of whom were also instituting a pay freeze for 2021 at the time of the survey. Since that survey of other cities,13 of the 17 have revisited their earlier decision, instituting some form of pay increase, whether one-time or ongoing, at an average increase of 2.2% in 2021. 4. What percent of our budget is relying on ARPA funds to close the $15 million gap? Staff is not currently projecting a budget gap for 2021 or 2022. At this time last year, budget cuts of $15M were necessary based on the prevailing and anticipated economic conditions. The 2022 Budget currently recommends offers totaling $4.1M to come from ARPA proceeds, of which $1.8M can be considered ongoing, most notably the Police Services Mental Health Response Team. Total ARPA funding represents 0.75% of the overall proposed operating budget for 2022 5. Is it correct that the City Manager does not need Council's approval to appropriate this money? If the City Manager were to appropriate without Council approval, is this reversible by the Council? As Council had already appropriated these dollars for personnel expenditures, the City Manager is legally permitted to spend those funds for this purpose. However, it was never our intention to do this without Council support which is why it was a topic brought forward in discussions and subsequently placed on the Council agenda based on those discussions. In the case of 2021, roughly $4.3M of personnel savings across all Funds exist via vacancies, year-to-date August. The proposed administrative action to award Gratitude Pay ($2.9M) is possible through these vacancy savings on personnel.