How much debt should a city risk? CEDAR RA

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CEDAR RAPIDS — Little gets more talk on the national political stage than debt.

Republicans call for spending cuts by the federal government, while opposing tax increases on wealthier Americans. Democrats support such revenue-increasing taxes, while opposing spending cuts.

“The federal government is using debt to pay for operating expenses in a lot of cases,” said Cedar Rapids City Council member Kris Gulick, an accountant and business consultant and current president of the Iowa League of Cities. “That would be like us going out to borrow money for the Police Department to operate. That’s a bad business practice, but that’s what the federal government is doing.

“And it hurts from a perception standpoint. The perception is that all debt is bad.”

In Iowa, cities must balance their annual budgets, and little or none of the borrowing they do pays for the operation of government.

Instead, municipal debt helps cities invest in streets, bridges, water and sewage plants and other capital improvement projects, plus economic-development incentives and big-ticket equipment purchases like firetrucks.

Brian Richman offers a caution to cities, though.

He’s a former financial adviser for cities and other public entities, mostly in California, and now a lecturer and director of the Hawkinson Institute of Business Finance at the University of Iowa’s Henry B. Tippie College of Business.

Cities, he said, are no different from people when it comes to debt. Some are reasonable and responsible, others more speculative. By speculative, he said, he means communities that have invested in what can be reasonable-sounding economic development projects that come with the hope of increasing a city’s opportunities and tax base.

“You pick up the newspaper here, and you don’t have to read very long to see that there are governments in Iowa that tend to take on riskier projects,” said Richman, not specifying any one government.

“Economic development projects — whether it’s a hotel or a convention center or a stadium or an industrial park, whatever — are inherently more speculative and therefore somewhat more risky than what are called essential services — water, sewer, roads, schools,” he adds.

Where the line is between safety and speculation, Richman said, is hard to know.

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