Placerville Newswire
  • Crime
  • Culture
No Result
View All Result
Get Started
Placerville NewsWire
  • Crime
  • Culture
No Result
View All Result
Placerville NewsWire
No Result
View All Result

El Dorado County Budget Crisis: Short-Term Fixes, Long-Term Consequences

Exclusive: County Taps Emergency Funds, Suspends Retiree Contributions to Avoid Budget Breakdown

Cris Alarcon by Cris Alarcon
April 24, 2025
in Government
454 5
0
El Dorado County’s Hidden Pay Raises: The Costly Expansion of Section 504

Lee Tannenbaum

Share on FacebookShare on TwitterWhatsappReddit

Commentary by Lee Tannenbaum (April 24, 2025) — If your family took a break from paying into retirement, used up federal relief, and scraped together spare change from the couch just to pay monthly bills—would you call that stable? That’s what El Dorado County is doing with its soon-to-be-adopted budget, and it’s not sustainable.

To close the gap in a structurally unbalanced budget, the County is relying on $12.6 million in one-time funds. This patchwork includes:

You might also like

Sean M. Coppola Takes Commanding Lead in El Dorado County Treasurer-Tax Collector Race

Sean M. Coppola Takes Commanding Lead in El Dorado County Treasurer-Tax Collector Race

June 2, 2026
Ted Gaines Leads El Dorado County District 4 Supervisor Race With 46% of Vote as Early Returns Roll In

Ted Gaines Leads El Dorado County District 4 Supervisor Race With 46% of Vote as Early Returns Roll In

June 2, 2026
  • – A “Retiree Health Rate Holiday” that suspends contributions to retiree health benefits for six months of FY 2023–24 and all of FY 2024–25.
  • – Use of ARPA (American Rescue Plan Act) funds for short-term community investments, such as park improvements and a navigation center.
  • – Other temporary financial sources with no long-term replacement.

While these maneuvers free up money for now, they also defer obligations to future budgets. These are not savings—they’re IOUs. And with core revenues like property tax growth slowing, the road ahead only gets bumpier.

In the case of the retiree health rate holiday, departments are not required to repay the suspended contributions. The County is instead drawing from the Retiree Health Fund balance to cover the costs. While this avoids creating a new repayment obligation, it also drains reserves set aside for future retiree healthcare needs. That may mean higher costs down the road to keep the program solvent.

At the same time, costs keep rising, especially from obligations created by County Charter Section 504. Section 504 was originally passed by voters in 1995 to ensure that Deputy Sheriffs received competitive salaries. Over time, however, it expanded to include other high-ranking positions—such as the Chief Administrative Officer, County Counsel, and Public Defender—resulting in automatic salary increases tied to external agency averages, regardless of the County’s financial condition.

What began as a policy to attract and retain law enforcement officers has become a runaway cost escalator that now impacts some of the highest-paid positions in the County. These increases are locked in by ordinance and can’t be stopped without voter action.

And it’s not just salaries. County staff have acknowledged that rising costs in insurance premiums, retirement contributions, utilities, and other operating expenses are also driving the budget higher. These pressures are real—but so are the questions taxpayers deserve to have answered. Have alternative benefit providers been explored? Have health insurance and liability coverage plans been competitively shopped to ensure taxpayers are getting the best value? Are departmental budgets being reviewed for outdated or redundant expenditures?

This strategy may balance a spreadsheet today, but it sets the stage for a deeper hole tomorrow. It’s classic “kicking the can down the road”—delaying hard choices while fiscal risks grow.

The El Dorado County Taxpayers Association believes residents deserve better. That starts with a public, five-year fiscal recovery plan—a real roadmap to reduce dependency on one-time fixes and rebuild long-term sustainability. This should include cost containment, smarter labor policy, and a realistic view of service levels.

El Dorado County can’t afford to wait until the IOUs come due. A sustainable budget isn’t built on skipping obligations—it’s built on discipline and forward-thinking leadership.

Let’s stop borrowing from tomorrow to pay for today. It’s time to plan ahead

Cris Alarcon

Cris Alarcon

Former Member: Executive Board of Directors, Treasurer, Boys & Girl Club of El Dorado County Western Slope. - Former Member: Board of Directors, Treasurer, Food Bank of El Dorado County. - Opening Team Dealer at Red Hawk Casino - Retried EDC Elections Department Inspector. - Chairman of El Dorado County Charter Review Committee, Youngest Charter Member of the Hangtown Kennel Club. - Political Strategist and Campaign Manager.

Related Stories

Sean M. Coppola Takes Commanding Lead in El Dorado County Treasurer-Tax Collector Race

Sean M. Coppola Takes Commanding Lead in El Dorado County Treasurer-Tax Collector Race

by Cris Alarcon
June 2, 2026

Early election returns show Sean M. Coppola with a commanding lead in the race for El Dorado County Treasurer-Tax Collector....

Ted Gaines Leads El Dorado County District 4 Supervisor Race With 46% of Vote as Early Returns Roll In

Ted Gaines Leads El Dorado County District 4 Supervisor Race With 46% of Vote as Early Returns Roll In

by Cris Alarcon
June 2, 2026

Former state legislator Ted Gaines has emerged as the early frontrunner in the El Dorado County District 4 Supervisor race,...

Republican Christine Bish Switches to California’s 3rd Congressional District Race After Kevin Kiley Leaves GOP

Crime Victims United Endorses Christine Bish in California’s 3rd Congressional District Race

by Cris Alarcon
May 28, 2026

Crime Victims United has endorsed congressional candidate Christine Bish in California’s 3rd District, citing her focus on crime victims and...

El Dorado County Grand Jury Finds Major Communication Failures Across County Departments

El Dorado County Grand Jury Finds Major Communication Failures Across County Departments

by Cris Alarcon
May 28, 2026

El Dorado County Grand Jury report finds major communication failures between county departments and the public.

Recommended

Buckeye Union School District Parental Notification policy meeting

Buckeye Union School District Parental Notification policy meeting

February 4, 2024
EDSO Eagle

El Dorado County Arrest Log: Felony Violence, Probation Violations, and DUI Cases – Sept. 12, 2025

September 12, 2025

Popular Story

  • James K. Veerkamp, Lifelong Placerville Mechanic and Community Fixture, Dies at 91

    James K. Veerkamp, Lifelong Placerville Mechanic and Community Fixture, Dies at 91

    675 shares
    Share 270 Tweet 169
  • Jail Log: DUIs, Domestic Violence Cases and Felony Holds Mark Busy Day Across El Dorado County

    688 shares
    Share 275 Tweet 172
  • El Dorado County Arrest Blotter: DUI, Identity Theft, Vehicle Theft and Probation Violations Fill June 3 Jail Log

    666 shares
    Share 266 Tweet 167
  • EDSO Blotter: Casino Resistance Arrests Lead Busy June 1 Jail Bookings in El Dorado County

    644 shares
    Share 258 Tweet 161
  • Sean M. Coppola Takes Commanding Lead in El Dorado County Treasurer-Tax Collector Race

    637 shares
    Share 255 Tweet 159
  • Buy JNews
  • Support Forum
  • Pre-sale Question
  • Contact Us

© 2023 Placerville Newswire Commentary is produced by the Placerville Newswire, a private service focusing on Placerville Local Area issues. All conclusions expressed in this publication should be understood to be solely those of the author(s). You may find us in El Dorado County Placerville, CA 95667

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Landing Page
  • Buy JNews
  • Support Forum
  • Pre-sale Question
  • Contact Us

© 2023 Placerville Newswire Commentary is produced by the Placerville Newswire, a private service focusing on Placerville Local Area issues. All conclusions expressed in this publication should be understood to be solely those of the author(s). You may find us in El Dorado County Placerville, CA 95667