Council debated and then approved a one-time amendment to the 2026 appropriations (Ordinance 58-26) to provide $6,953 from the Special Projects fund (Fund 101-120) for a 250th-anniversary July 4 picnic and performance series organized by the Southeast Ohio History Center and local volunteers.
The request arrived late; organizers reduced the budget and sought city support for a portion of local entertainment and logistical costs. Several council members voiced concern about precedent and the city becoming a fallback funder for short-notice events. "My only real heartburn... is what Josh pointed out last week... we will get more people asking us to fund things," said Member Wood, stressing the risk of ad-hoc budgeting for community events.
Supporters described the ask as a unique, one-time celebration of the nation’s 250th anniversary. Mayor Patterson said the city has historically supported community events (including fireworks) and indicated he would have been willing to scrutinize and consider such a request administratively, calling the 250th a special occasion: "There’s not going to be another 250 year anniversary." The administration and acting auditor confirmed $44,000 sits in the Special Projects line and that the requested appropriation was available.
After discussion, council amended Ordinance 58-26 to add the $6,953 appropriation specifically for the 250th celebration and voted to suspend the rules and adopt the amendment in the same session. Council members who supported adoption framed it as a limited, one-time commitment; several members asked the administration to channel future funding requests through the usual administrative review to avoid setting an open-ended precedent.
Next steps: the administration will allocate the funds from Special Projects and organizers will proceed with the planned picnic, local bands and other activities; council members asked for clearer administrative pathways for future event funding requests.