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Albuquerque Mayor Tim Keller’s list of proposed stimulus money expenditures includes improvements to the Balloon Museum. (Journal file photo)
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. It was a busy night for the Albuquerque City Council, with legislative body’s second May meeting taking longer than a road trip to Denver.
Somehow the council’s annual budget vote barely contributed to the seven-hour run time, as the panel quickly passed the $711 million general fund spending plan for fiscal year 2022. As council budget chairwoman Klarissa Peña noted, it was a pretty “painless” process. (Read about the budget here.)
But the meeting minutes really piled up during a separate discussion about money specifically how to spend the city’s federal COVID-19 windfall.
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The Albuquerque City Council’s fiscal year 2022 operating budget bill has money to make bus rides free for all. (Roberto E. Rosales/Albuquerque Journal)
Thousands of city of Albuquerque workers would get bigger pay increases than initially proposed under a budget bill now before the City Council, thanks in part to dropping some unfilled jobs from the books.
The council’s fiscal year 2022 operating budget bill, sponsored by Klarissa Peña, also has money to make bus rides free for all and to sponsor a series of community festivals.
Peña’s proposal – which the council’s budget committee advanced Thursday – is not a drastic departure from what Mayor Tim Keller already has recommended for the fiscal year that begins July 1. It still represents about $711 million in general fund spending, but includes over $8 million in internal tweaks.