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I believe that if one group doesn't think this is "alarming" then I will get behind those that do because while it isn't a problem now, it is most certainly a problem for us as taxpayers in the future. We have to address it and change the structure. The longer we keep accepting that this is how things have always been done, the harder it will be to fix. I would like to look at other cities that have tackled the same problem and the solutions they came up with to address it. What worked? What didn't work? How do we think outside of the box?

Why is it always that people run on campaign promises that they will change this and that, only to get into office and continue to do the same old thing?

From: City headed towards a fiscal cliff?

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