On one side of the room: around 25 motorcycle enthusiasts wearing lots of leather. Scattered throughout: a couple dozen blind or otherwise disabled Albuquerqueans. The bikers showed up at the June 22 Council meeting to comment on a proposed change to the city’s noise ordinance that would curtail loud engine revving. The disabled citizens populated City Hall in force to urge the renewal of the quarter-cent gross receipts tax for transportation projects. Two and a half hours into the meeting, the Council deferred the noise issue until August. The bikers took off at the break, and the sounds of Harley and Japanese bike engines rumbled away. In other business, financial gurus told the Council that gross receipts are down about 5 percent, or $20 million, for the month of April. (There is a months-long lag in gross receipt reporting.) The General Obligation bond was approved for the October ballot.
Council Watch:
Council Watch: General Obligation Bond Funding Approved For The October Ballot
$8.4 million: Police and Fire Departments$22.7 million: Senior and community centers$34.4 million: Parks and Recreation$16.2 million: Public facilities water conservation$5.1 million: Libraries$31.4 million: Street bonds$7.8 million: Public transportation$13.8 million: Sewer$9.7 million: BioPark, Zoo, Museum$10 million: Affordable housing
Council Watch: Breakdown Of The $36 Million In Transportation Gross Receipts
31 percent (up from 26 percent) for road rehabilitation 15 percent (down from 26 percent) for road deficiencies12 percent (no change) for road maintenance4 percent (no change) for trails and bikeways36 percent (up from 30 percent) for public transit
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