Burnsville city officials are scrambling to fill a $500,000 hole in next year's budget once occupied by garbage — or rather, the annual fees that a landfill owner pays the city to take trash.
Waste Management told city officials in October that its annual payment of about $1.3 million likely will go down to $800,000 next year. The amount is based on the tons of garbage that come in, and Waste Management says it soon will be hauling more garbage to its Iowa dumps and less to Burnsville, where it is running out of room.
"We got walloped with a half-a-million-dollar surprise," said City Council Member Dan Kealey. "It's quite a conundrum."
City officials plan to use a variety of measures to bridge at least part of the shortfall, such as cutbacks in seasonal workers, hiring delays and pushing back plans for new software. The proposed 2019 budget includes new revenue from permits, emergency medical services and ambulance payments.
But that still would leave a $200,000 budget gap that city staffers will try to fill in the coming year, said Dana Hardie, interim city manager.
Burnsville's situation underscores how much cities and counties with landfills come to rely on the host fees they receive to supplement their bottom lines.
The city knew that the landfill, just south of the Minnesota River, would run out of space in a few years for municipal solid waste, or household garbage. But officials didn't know that Waste Management soon would be reducing how much it sends to Burnsville.
"We've been cutting [city expenses] for a decade and so there's nothing left to cut that won't impact services," Hardie said.