Faced with the stark reality of a structural deficit that is beginning to strain the city’s ability to pay for its most critical operating and facility needs, the Camas City Council is considering various revenue-building options, including a possible 3% tax on the city’s utilities.
“When I came in as mayor, I got hit with a lot of items that were basically identified as failing — key capital and building needs,” Camas Mayor Steve Hogan explained to the Council’s newest member, Councilman John Nohr, during a Council workshop on Monday, Oct. 17. “So, I worked with staff and asked them to focus on critical needs, on things that were failing and needed to be dealt with now.”
The mayor recently put those critical needs — as well as things the city needed to fulfill legal compliance requirements and minimize its risks and more discretionary “wants” — into his proposed 2023-24 budget.
“Now the Council gets to decide what’s in and what’s out,” Hogan said Monday.
One of the most important questions Council members will ask is: “How do we pay for it?”