Are you a current business owner in Lambertville?
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Are you a potential business owner in Lambertville?
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Read the introductory letter from the City's Business Administrator about the City's plans to get feedback from and provide more support for local businesses. Since the impact of COVID-19 on our community in 2020 this has has only become more important, especially as we look towards the summer and future of our downtown and business community. 1. Read Recent Updates to and about the Business Communitiy below:
Click here to find the presentation from the June 10th City Council meeting describing various initiatives being undertaken to help promote a safe reopening. More updates in the above emails and below calls. 2. Join weekly roundtables with the business community To join our weekly roundtables, which are every Monday at 130pm, please click here, or find the Zoom meeting information below. We hope to see you there! Join from a PC, Mac, iPad, iPhone or Android device: Please click this URL to join. https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83633160818?pwd=ZkhudWxrclJldFpOQVJXOUhtRVVGUT09 Password: 838263 Or join by phone: Dial(for higher quality, dial a number based on your current location): US: +1 312 626 6799 or +1 929 205 6099 or +1 301 715 8592 or +1 346 248 7799 or +1 669 900 6833 or +1 253 215 8782 Webinar ID: 836 3316 0818 International numbers available: https://us02web.zoom.us/u/kbq3hhOoOe 3. Provide feedback: Online survey about business support and needs |
The City is working on a number of programs in partnership with the Hunterdon County office of Economic Development to help make Lambertville an even easier place to open a new business!
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-- July 2020 Update --
Please find all budget documents below.
- Full 2020 Budget Presentation - May 5th 2020
- 2020 Preliminary Budget Presentations From 2019
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- August 2019 Preliminary Overview
- 1: DCCB Presentations/Requests Part One PDF
- 2: DCCB Presentations/Requests Part Two PDF
- 3: DCCB Presentation/Requests Part Three PDF
- 4: Key spending categories - drilldown on Capital/Facilities, Debt service and professional service fees PDF
- 5: Revenue overview and setting long-term goals PDF
- 2020 Adopted State Budget Document (pdf)
- 2020 "User Friendly" Budget document (pdf)
- 2020 Introduced State Budget Document
- Budget Prep Overview (More user-friendly overview) Document
- All other required introductory documents
-- May 21st 2020 Update --
City Responds to Misleading Budget Information
Dear Lambertville:
An unsigned budget analysis was provided to the public and to the City this week. It is filled with inaccurate information that misleads readers. I feel strongly that this document requires a detailed response. Everyone is entitled to their own opinions, but not their own facts.
This document is built specifically to make it appear legitimate, with charts and graphs and specific numbers, but it is not accurate. To help show the total lack of legitimacy of the circulated information, we are providing the following summary of the over ten false, opaque, or misleading claims on just the first page of this document, to serve as an example.
Some key takeaways of the first page of this document:
- This document is a misrepresentation of the numbers the City provided to the public to create a narrative that the city is over spending.
- If you include all spending by the City, both operating and capital, the 2020 budget will likely have the lowest spending levels since before 2017.
- There is basic math in this document that does not work. It is impossible to tell why because no proper citations are used nor was any backup documentation provided.
- Multiple line items from the budget were wrong. In our response we have provided the Sheet and Cell number for each of our corrections in the state budget document.
- This document uses a label “discretionary spending” within which they include over a dozen completely non-discretionary items, in an attempt to exaggerate spending levels.
Our community deserves better. My administration has shown our work by providing dozens of presentations totaling over hundreds of pages of accurate budget and finance information. All of which was vetted by named finance professionals, auditors, and others. This includes spreadsheets and screenshots of the City’s accounting system. A historic level of data has been provided to the public for review. All information was shared publicly in six presentations in 2019, as well as several Council meetings in 2020 and the Q+A webinar hosted by myself and our Administrator. I have asked this local organization that produced this “analysis” to do the same: Sign your names to your work, provide backup documentation, and host a public forum where the public can ask questions.
Click here to view a detailed point-by-point analysis of the first page of the presentation.
-- May 20th 2020 Update --
Thank you to the 45 members of the public who tuned into the Mayor and Administrator's live Question and Answer session on the 2020 budget last night! The next discussion is the public hearing/adoption scheduled for June 9th.
-- May 6th 2020 Update --
Last night, the City Council introduced the City’s 2020 Budget. This budget confronts a number of significant challenges, and makes sustainable choices to help reduce the short and long-term tax impact to the community in a way that is more responsible. We encourage all community members to familiarize themselves with the available information. The public hearing and adoption is scheduled for June 9th at 7pm.To help navigate the various budget documents that the City has made available starting this year, please feel free to use this list:
- Full 2020 Budget Presentation - May 5th 2020
- 2020 Preliminary Budget Presentations From 2019
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- August 2019 Preliminary Overview
- 1: DCCB Presentations/Requests Part One PDF
- 2: DCCB Presentations/Requests Part Two PDF
- 3: DCCB Presentation/Requests Part Three PDF
- 4: Key spending categories - drilldown on Capital/Facilities, Debt service and professional service fees PDF
- 5: Revenue overview and setting long-term goals PDF
- 2020 Introduced State Budget Document
- Budget Prep Overview (More user-friendly overview) Document
- All other required introductory documents
-- May 1st 2020 Update --
The City faces a number of financial challenges going into 2020 and beyond. These challenges require immediate and significant action to help prevent future tax increases.
Join Mayor Julia Fahl and Business Administrator Alex Torpey as they give a comprehensive review of the City's finances and budget for 2020, including:
Background of the budgeting practices that created the City's current financial challenges
- A detailed explanation of the status of the City's savings, reserve accounts and surplus
- The impact of COVID-19 on the City's finances and taxes, and why the City's finances were especially vulnerable to this unexpected event
- A review of the available options the City has to reduce the oncoming tax increases caused by many years of spending beyond our means
- Tax impact for 2020, and anticipated impact for 2021 (and through 2025)
- And more
All documents available prior to the meeting can be found here.
If you'd like to review only the summary highlights, we have also created a short ten-minute video with some of the key takeaways.
--April 24th 2020 Update--
To view the budget slides from the 4/23 Council meeting, please click here.
-- March/April 2020 Update --
Due to the coronavirus public health emergency, the anticipated introduction, public hearing and adoption of the budget has been pushed back, per guidance from the New Jersey Department of Community Affairs. The current anticipated schedule is as follows. As soon as materials are completed they will be made available here.
- April 23rd 2020: Budget Discussion
- May 5th 2020: Budget Introduction (and public comment)
- June 7th 2020: Budget public hearing & adoption
-- December 2019 Update --
Part Three - Administration/Finance Presentation
Part Four - Key spending categories - drilldown on Capital/Facilities, Debt service and professional service fees
Part Five - Revenue overview and setting long-term goals
-- October 2nd Update --
Would you like to learn more about the City's finances and new budget process?
Please join Mayor Fahl and other interested and engaged Lambertville residents to learn about the City's new budget process, ask questions about the City's finances, and find ways to get more involved as important changes take place in how the City's budget works.
The dates and locations are below. If you can't make any of the dates, please don't hesitate to reach out to Mayor Fahl at [email protected] to find offices hours, setup a one-on-one meeting or learn more. More dates may be added so check back on this page as well.
- Budget Talks: Monday, October 28th 6:30 p.m. at 208 Holcombe Way. Please reply to Barbara Coe [email protected]
- Budget Talks: Wednesday, October 16th 6:30 p.m. at 10 Hillside Court. Please RSVP to Kelly Kappler at [email protected]
- Budget Talks: Friday, October 25th at 6:30 p.m. at 65 South Main Street. Please RSVP to Megan Ruf [email protected]
Don't forget to check out the resources below if you want to learn more!
-- August 12th Update --
Thank you for taking some time to learn about the City's budget and new budget process! Below, you can first find a summary video prepared by Mayor Fahl and the City's Business Administrator as they walk you through an overview of why this process is so crucial, some important facts and figures, and where we go from here.
Below, you can find a link to the full presentation that was given at the August 6th meeting of the Governing Body.
Download PDF
-- August 6th Update --
You can view an (anticipated) timeline of steps of here:Early August 2019 |
Governing Body goal setting process - workshop where Governing Body sets goals/priorities for the coming year |
Early August 2019 |
Departments and Commissions are briefed on new budget process and provided summary sheet of the timeline and steps for new process |
September 2019 |
Capital planning (for six years) performed, including facility reviews, vehicle inventories, infrastructure evaluation, etc |
Mid October 2019 |
All operating and capital requests due from Departments and Commissions |
Mid/Late October 2019 |
Administration discusses and finalizes requests with Departments and Commissions |
End of October 2019 |
Mayor and Administrator finalize requests for Governing Body |
November 2019 |
One or two public budget workshops held (Approx 2-3 hours of time total), where departments and commissions present “year in review” as well as operating and capital requests |
December 2019 |
Feedback (from governing and/or public) from budget workshops taken back and Administrator and Mayor finalize anticipated 2020 budget introduction |
January/February 2020 |
Budget is reviewed by Financial Team, and ready for introduction as soon as state/county/etc numbers become available |
Late February/Early March 2020 |
In three sequential governing body meetings:
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End of March 2020/Early April |
2020 Municipal Budget Adopted |
Early April 2020 |
Bond ordinance for 2020 capital items introduced/adopted |
April 2020 |
2020 Capital spending, road resurfacing, etc will begin process |
Prior to serving on Council, Julia served on the Environmental Commission for nine years and was chairperson for two of those years. As part of the Environmental Commission, she was instrumental in organizing a citywide visioning process that resulted in conceptual plans for the park at the corner of Cherry and North Union Streets and in developing our Third Can Program. Julia was also a founding member of an environmental group called SEE Lambertville (standing for Society, Environment, Economy) that raised funds for and constructed the Lambertville Learning Garden at LPS, successfully encouraged area restaurants to offer more locally produced foods, and hosted several environmental education events.
A city planner by training, Julia is currently the Senior Director of Programs & Partnerships with the Trenton Health Team, where she fosters collaborative efforts at the intersection of community development and public health to ensure the long-term well-being and prosperity of Trenton's residents and neighborhoods. Prior to joining THT, for more than a decade Julia lead large-scale community development initiatives in Trenton as Managing Director of Community Planning & Development and Deputy Operations Officer at Isles, Inc. Julia earned a Master of City Planning degree from the University of Pennsylvania and a Bachelor of Arts degree in history from Princeton University.
Email Councilwoman Taylor