Council approves private repayment strategy for Edmonton Police Service deficit
By
Mack Male
City council has approved a repayment strategy that would see the Edmonton Police Service pay down its outstanding budget deficit within three years, but the details of how that will be achieved are being kept private for now.
The EPS Operating Reserve, established in 2018 alongside the funding formula to manage operational surpluses and deficits in the police budget, currently has a negative balance of $2.895 million, though EPS is projecting that will shrink to $854,000 by the end of 2022.
During the meeting, Coun. Erin Rutherford indicated the private report outlined a strategy that reduced the original deficit, but that the strategy ended in October when city council approved the new funding formula for 2023. As part of that decision, responsibility for salary settlements was transferred from EPS to the city.
"At a high level, when they thought they might be responsible, they had a strategy to put money aside," Rutherford explained to Taproot following the meeting. "Now, since the city is responsible, that money can go to the reserve."
During the meeting, Rutherford sought to understand why that strategy isn't ongoing given that the reserve remains in deficit.
Rob Davidson, a member of the delegation from EPS, responded that no plan or strategy was stopped at the time of the funding formula decision. "We still proceed with opportunities in our budget ... to create a favourable situation at year-end," he said. "We still anticipate changes will happen from Q3 to year-end; could be positive, could be negative."
"In the report, it does specifically say that the accrual process that was being done was stopped," Rutherford countered.
Davidson said the process in question was related to collective bargaining settlements.
"Why wasn't that same strategy carried forward to completely address the deficit?" Rutherford continued. "The plan basically just says we'll clean up that deficit in three years, but I don't really see concrete steps to do that."
She also criticized the report for a lack of information about how future deficits might be avoided. "They didn't provide a strategy for how to keep the reserve from going back into deficit," Rutherford told Taproot.
She suggested upcoming council decisions could have a significant impact on that. "If we don't continue with a funding formula, I wouldn't be surprised if there's another deficit."