Mayor: 'Trim the fat from within'
New Castle Mayor
York told the
Health insurance changes
York said the city's number one goal is to get the health insurance costs under control.
In mid-April, the health fund had a negative balance of
"It's very obvious that the insurance is the problem," York told the council Monday. "We've got to get insurance fixed, number one."
He told the council members that one step is to increase insurance premiums for city employees.
"Our insurance is not going to change," York said. "It's the exact same coverage. (Employees) will not lose any insurance, will not lose HealthLink. Will not lose anything that we've had. Just the premiums are going up a little bit."
York said he is working "extremely hard" to not implement a "spousal carve-out." If the
Other local public institutions — including the Henry County government,
"We're trying to do all we can do to work around the spousal carve-out," York said.
The city has also added a third tier for employee insurance coverage. York said new hire employees will start at this tier, paying a
York clarified that any current employees who move to the this insurance option will not lose coverage for their spouse.
York told the council that the City of New has spent about
"Month by month, we're in better shape right now than we were last year, as far as having to pay on insurance claims," he said.
York said the city's biggest Achilles' heel right now is in the "insurance-for-life" plan given to city retirees.
Since the 1970s, New Castle city employees have qualified for a Humana secondary insurance plan for
"If that was affordable then, that's a good thing," York said. "But today's day and age, that's not exactly affordable. So we need to address that with the unions and see where we end up there."
As of Monday, 116 city retirees are on this Humana plan. York said the
York also told the council that the
As of Monday, the city had paid
"I'm a bit concerned, at the present time, we have (former) employees that work a full-time job in the county (government), and we're paying their full-time insurance. We're paying all their insurance. Well, the county offers insurance," York said. "In my opinion, if they can get insurance at the county, they should go to that insurance."
York would be fine with early retirees coming back to work for the
York said the city can save more than
Immediate changes
York announced Monday that all city employee overtime is frozen, unless approved by the department heads and reported to the mayor himself.
"We've had some departments that have been taking advantage of that (overtime) that we're putting a halt to in a hurry," York told the council Monday evening.
The mayor said his administration is also going to restructure the capital improvement process.
York said the city has about 15 positions that are budgeted but not filled. He plans to combine those job responsibilities and job titles with current employees.
Peckinpaugh said eliminating a position is not really a cost savings because the funds are not being spent right now anyway. Council member
"It would save us on salary and on insurance both," York said.
York estimated that combining job roles and not hiring new staff would save the city
Other plans
"The plan that I've got is trim the fat from within and sale off some properties that I don't think that we need," York told the council.
York told the city council he is getting multiple appraisals on seven city-owned properties, including land on
The mayor will bring those appraisals to the city council once they are complete. The council members will make the final decision on whether or not to sell the land.
York acknowledged that selling off excess property will be a financial "shot in the arm" but will not have a year-after-year impact on the city budget.
"We're looking at at least
Clerk-Treasurer
"The department heads are rocking this," Huffman told the council. She said they are each meeting with her weekly to prepare for the 2025 budget.
"All of them are doing everything in their power to figure out how we can make cuts and save money," Huffman said.
York told the city council it is also a priority for New Castle to get its employees raises "as soon as we possibly can" in order to keep the public jobs filled.
"That's the second most important priority," York said.
The Courier-Times will continue coverage of the



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