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Commissioners drop family health
by Bob Shiles
Staff writer
Robeson County Commissioners Raymond Cummings, left, Jerry Stephens and Tom Taylor review the county's proposed budget during Monday's budget work session. | Bob Shiles | The Robesonian
Robeson County Commissioners Raymond Cummings, left, Jerry Stephens and Tom Taylor review the county's proposed budget during Monday's budget work session. | Bob Shiles | The Robesonian
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LUMBERTON — The Robeson County Board of Commissioners on Monday agreed to cut its members’ discretionary funds for the upcoming fiscal year by $10,000 each and do away with free family health insurance.

The moves will save the county an estimated $110,000 a year, according to County Manager Ricky Harris.

The motion for the cuts was made by Commissioner Roger Oxendine and it was approved unanimously, but Commissioner David Edge missed the meeting. Commissioner Tom Taylor made a motion that the commissioners look at cutting their salaries and mileage stipend, but it died for a lack of a second.

The free family health insurance saved the commissioners a little more than $300 a month, the amount county employees pay for the family health benefit. All the commissioners except Chairman Noah Woods and Taylor were taking advantage of the benefit.

The commissioners will continue to get free health insurance for themselves, retirement, a $700 monthly stipend, and their salaries will remain the same. The Robesonian has looked and found that the commissioners’ salary and stipend when combined make them the fourth highest paid commissioners in the state. The commissioners also can take free health insurance with them when they leave the board if they have served on it long enough.

The commissioners last year got rid of a deferred compensation plan that allowed them to draw salary after they left office.

Oxendine said Monday that he made the motion to reduce the discretionary money and eliminate free family health insurance because “it was recommended by the staff and a third party.” Oxendine may have been referring to Tony Normand, the former executive director of COMtech, who did an informal study of their pay, benefits and discretionary money, and reportedly made recommendations. Those recommendations were verbal and were never made public.

Before Oxendine’s motion, Harris recommended the $80,000 reduction in the discretionary fund, which this year was a total of $320,000 for the commissioners to divide equally. The commissioners will each lose $5,000 of $20,000 designated for township use and $5,000 of $20,000 for recreational use.

According to Harris, dropping free health insurance for the family of commissioners has the potential to save the county about $30,000 for the fiscal year that begins July 1.

“The commissioners will now be treated like all other county employees,” Harris said. “If they want family health insurance, they will pay $311 a month, just like other county employees.”

The action came during the last budget work session. It fulfilled a promise by Woods that the matter would be addressed and talked about openly. The commissioners over the years have increased their pay and benefits during the budget process, and without discussion in public.

“My word is my bond,” Woods said after the meeting. “When I tell you I’m going to do something, I do it.”

The $145.5 million budget is $4 million more than the current budget, and includes a General Fund of almost $107 million. It calls for maintaining the property tax rate at 77 cents for every $100 of property value, includes a 2 percent cost of living raise for all county employees, and will raise the cost of water and some ambulance services.

It also increases appropriations for Robeson Community College by $100,000, COMtech by $40,000, and the Robeson County Public Library system by $50,000.

A public hearing on the budget is scheduled for the next board meeting on June 17. A copy of the proposed budget will now be available for public review in the clerk’s office of the county administration building on North Elm Street.

Comments
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ROSSisRIGHT
|
June 05, 2013
This county is 92% democrat. The commissioners know it and nothing else will be done. Until the voters wake up(never) it will remain the same.

The only way to change this mess is stop allowing everybody to vote. YOU do not, REPEAT, DO NOT have a constitutional right to vote. Google it. We should only allow the ones who matter to vote. And if you disagree with that YOU don't matter.
lock1tobe
|
June 05, 2013
ROSSI, it's time to put that dead horse in the ground. Get something else to gripe about.
PercyKution
|
June 05, 2013
I won't believe they cut ANYTHING or dropped ANYTHING until MR. Douglas, MR. Shiles and THE ROBESONIAN PRINT THE PROOF IN BLACK AND WHITE. How would you REALLY know if they did? You KNOW they ALL will lie, steal, and scam. How do you KNOW this is not just more of their LIES? These PUKES can say ANYTHING in a "public meeting", but the REAL MEETING will take place somewhere else. Count on it. And THE PEOPLE would never have known what they were doing if THE ROBESONIAN hadn't printed it.
BarbArity
|
June 04, 2013
So wait, they reduced the discretionary fund by 10k each; that leaves 30k each. What is the average of the other comparable counties discretionary funds? They cut 1/4 of this crazy unaccounted for fund.

They must now pay the same for family insurance as employees. Great! But they keep FREE healthcare when they retire or leave? Not good enough.

They didn't touch their salaries or stipends. Not good enough either.

What just happened was designed to shut the public up. Does everyone know the definition of 'Pacify'?

pac·i·fy transitive verb \ˈpa-sə-ˌfī\

pac·i·fiedpac·i·fy·ing

Definition of PACIFY

1

a : to allay the anger or agitation of : soothe

b : appease, propitiate

2

a : to restore to a tranquil state : settle

b : to reduce to a submissive state : subdue

exp221
|
June 04, 2013
Nothing will really change until we REPLACE each and every commissioner. We need to send a clear message by electing new commissioners. We need to let the new commissioners know that if they do not make decisions that are in the best interest of the citizens, they also will be replaced. We can complain all we want. NOTHING will really improve until we act.
payup
|
June 04, 2013
Good Job Commissioners, but it is not over. The path of least resistance is an easy path to follow. $10,000 dollars of tax money already belonged in the budged and health care should have been payed by you. Your county full time jobs that you already have or that your spouses have so your wallets are not going to feel the sting of that small amount. We the people are happy that one ear has been opened. Are you receiving the 2% raise??? If so, then the shell game was played and you just hid another prize. Until you are not the 4th highest paid and receiving $700 for travel our county will continue to suffer under your guidance. This was a baby step so keep walking toward the gates of character and the Citizens will believe you want a change. Or you did this due to the People/Robesonian exposing what goes on behind the closed door.
BBBD
|
June 04, 2013
I'm not satisfied. Too many concerns were not addressed. The discretionary money, if they insist on keeping it, needs to be voted on before it is spent. Cutting the amount misses the point entirely as it still remains an unaccounted for, vote buying fund.
RobesonStepUp!
|
June 03, 2013
Greed is known to be one of the 7 deadly sins...and none of us who are in the flesh and American in this "land of opportunity" are immune. Lead by example....only this movement was not begun by the Commissioners... but by the concerned and outraged tax-paying citizens!!! JUSTICE always has to be fought for according to one lawyer/author. In this case it seems that our commissioners were almost forced to LISTEN and it seems that they did to a degree. Thank you Robesonian for your steadfast attention to this matter!!!!!! Thank you Commissioners!!! Thank you concerned citizens!!!!
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Happy 236th
Thousands of people were dazzled by the fireworks display at the annual Lumberton Family Fourth celebration at the Lumberton High School football stadium on Tuesday. Many watched the display from parking lots and sidewalks around town and from their own front yards. Before the show, attendees were treated to a performance by the Carolina Breakers, and a stunt by the Army Rangers, who parachuted onto the football field.

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