City staff presented the Punta Gorda City proposed fiscal year 2027 budget at a public workshop, detailing the general construction fund, a set of capital projects and a list of unfunded projects grouped for consideration under a proposed 1% sales tax extension.
At the workshop staff described the general construction fund as the account for capital improvements funded by grants, transfers, financing and contributions, and presented a pro forma through fiscal year 2031 that included a $212,000 contingency reserve. For FY27 staff projected roughly $1.5 million in capital projects and identified about $4.8 million in projects currently unfunded and placed in tiered lists for future funding decisions.
Staff highlighted several high‑cost items: a railroad crossing rehabilitation that has increased based on railroad input and a fire apparatus planned for 2031 that staff said would require about two years to build and therefore must be planned now if financed by a sales‑tax extension. The living‑shoreline project was out to bid and staff offered to provide an update at the next meeting.
Revenue assumptions driving the pro forma included a roll‑back approach to ad valorem collections, state revenue‑sharing estimates that typically arrive in July or August, and an interest revenue estimate of about $915,000 for FY26. Staff noted a new estimated recurring revenue stream of $400,000 annually from recently approved school speed‑zone enforcement, but counseled the amount could vary and early years may be higher while the long‑term average is expected to be lower if the program reduces speeding.
Councilmembers and residents pressed staff on priorities and specific items, including maintenance and an elevator and generator for Herald Court; staff said those needs would be considered for re‑appropriation or future funding. Departments reviewed personnel and operating requests line by line; overall the package used a mix of operating reductions, targeted capital reserves and reserves to cover near‑term gaps.
Why it matters: staff said the pro forma keeps reserves above minimum through FY28 but warned that proposed state property‑tax legislation reducing taxable values for homesteaded properties could materially reduce city ad valorem revenue beginning in FY28 and require either expenditure reductions, use of reserves or new dedicated funding mechanisms such as MSBUs or fees.
The council did not take formal votes at the workshop; staff will return with updates, specific bids (living shoreline) and suggested edits to the proposed packet before the formal budget adoption calendar.