Tag: Henry Tingle

  • Sept. 30 is officially Henry Tingle Day in Citrus Heights. Here’s why

    A plaque in front of City Hall in Citrus Heights honors the legacy of former City Manager Henry Tingle. // CH Sentinel

    Sentinel staff report– Friday is “Henry Tingle Day” in Citrus Heights, following a formal vote by the City Council in 2016 to make Sept. 30 a day to honor former City Manager Henry Tingle who led the city for 17 years and was credited with keeping the city out of debt during his tenure.

    Under Tingle’s successor, Chris Boyd, the city soon went into debt by opening a $12 million line of credit. However, after Boyd retired last year, one of the first actions of the new city manager, Ashley Feeney, was to recommend the council approve paying off the debt. The city returned to its debt-free status in March of this year.

    From March: Citrus Heights becomes a debt-free city again

    Known as the “Gentle Giant” for his soft-spoken demeanor and tall stature, a tribute to Tingle remains etched in a plaque outside the new City Hall. An 18-minute tribute video was also published on the city’s Youtube page, but has since been made private.

    In a final interview with The Sentinel prior to his retirement, Tingle reflected on his tenure as city manager. The Sentinel has republished the article in its entirety below.

    Oct. 5, 2016– Seated at his already emptied-out desk just days before his official retirement, Henry Tingle sat down for a final interview with The Sentinel last week to discuss his reflections on being city manager of Citrus Heights for the past 17 years.

    With a note of satisfaction in his voice, Tingle said his decision to retire came as a result of several factors, including turning 60 years old, serving 42 years in the public sector, building a “highly efficient and effective” staff, and seeing the recent completion of the new city hall — which he called one of his “ultimate goals.”

    “Seeing that the [city] has grown and matured into a really fine organization, my job here is done,” Tingle said with his signature soft, but articulate voice. The retiring manager said he’d seen Citrus Heights grow into a respected city in California over the past two decades, and believes it’s ready to move on without him at the helm.

    Growing up in Oakland and serving as deputy city manager of Richmond beginning in 1995, Tingle first came to Citrus Heights as its general services director in Sept. 1998, just over a year after the city incorporated in 1997. He was later appointed as city manager in Oct. 1999 and served in that capacity until last month.

    Moving to Vallejo in 1989, Tingle commuted a 75-mile distance to Citrus Heights each day for nearly two decades of working for the city. Though a much further commute than his first job out of high school with the East Bay Municipal Utility District, Tingle said he enjoyed the lengthy drive time to look ahead on what needed to be accomplished, and then reflect on the day during his return trip.

    ‘Tightwad Tingle’
    Affectionately referred to by many staff and city leaders as “Tightwad Tingle” for his fiscal focus and strong stance against taking on debt, Tingle spent much of his time focusing on financial aspects of running a city. He explained his philosophy in more detail during his final interview, emphasizing that Citrus Heights has stayed out of debt ever since becoming a city.

    “It’s so easy to spend other people’s money and create debt and put the burden on taxpayers,” said Tingle, crediting his grandfather as the one who instilled fiscal values in him.

    “My grandfather was one of my most important mentors in my early childhood,” he said. As a young boy, Tingle recalled his grandfather — who was born in 1899 — teaching him to always save money for “a rainy day, a sick day, and a good day.”

    Under Tingle’s leadership, the city has operated under that savings model, still holding at least $5 million in reserves after purchasing its nearly $22 million new city hall in cash. His leadership also led to the city operating with a 10-year budget model for assessing the financial prudence of a proposal.

    “Any adjustment you make in the first year, look over 10 years,” said Tingle. The model encourages decision-makers to look not just at immediate costs of a proposal, but their cost in the long-run, like with pay raises or community donations. In contrast, Tingle said most cities have a 5-year, or less, budget model.

    The challenges
    Asked about challenges he faced during his term as city manager, Tingle focused on his efforts to stabilize city finances — a problem he said was exacerbated by an agreement with the County to not give the city its property taxes for the first 25 years. The “revenue-neutrality” agreement was a condition of Citrus Heights being allowed to incorporate as a city, and when the agreement expires in 2022, Tingle said the city will have lost out on around $100 million in revenue that cities normally receive from property taxes.

    [See related video: Mayor reflects on fight to make Citrus Heights a city]

    A major financial challenge was getting police services “under control,” as Tingle said the city’s initial contract with the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Department was getting more expensive each year. He said switching over to in-house police services by launching the city’s own police department in 2006 has saved the City around $2.5 million per year, beginning with the first year.

    Another hurdle was the medical office building and new city hall project, which Tingle described as a “big challenge with a lot of opposition.” He said with Citrus Heights approximately 98 percent built out, most development projects in the city have to come from tearing down existing facilities and turning them in to new — and hopefully better — uses.

    When Dignity Health proposed constructing a three-story medical building in place of the old city hall at Fountain Square Drive and Greenback Lane, Tingle argued in favor of tearing down the old hall and moving it — pitching the plan as a “once-in-a-lifetime” chance to get a new hall at a subsidized price, using $6.9 million in lease payments from the medical building along with added annual energy savings from a new building.

    The proposal initially faced intense opposition and a lawsuit threat in 2014, but tensions eased after the city turned its focus to the nearby 10.9-acre property the new hall now sits on — instead of the original proposed location for the hall on Antelope Road, over a mile away from other civic buildings on Fountain Square Drive.

    [From 2014: Council Postpones Vote on New City Hall Deal, After Lawsuit Threat]

    Tingle also said another difficult challenge was a rent control proposal for mobile home parks in the city in 2006. He said the parks had threatened a major lawsuit and the proposal ended up with a tied 2-2 vote on the council, with one member abstaining due to conflict of interest.

    Asked how he handled controversy as a leader, Tingle said he focused on a win-win, or a win-lose as a second-best — as long as the win was for the community. He also emphasized patience, active listening, and hearing from all those involved — characteristics that, along with his tall stature, earned him the name “Gentle Giant.”

    As a well-loved manager, spoken highly of by virtually all local community and city leaders, an honorary plaque titled “the Gentle Giant” is now featured at the new city hall. Vice Mayor Jeff Slowey explained the name as referring to Tingle’s somewhat imposing six-foot-plus height, along with his likeable, approachable character. Another community leader referred to him as “a big, huggable teddy bear” for his warm, accessible style.

    Accomplishments
    Preferring to operate behind the scenes, Tingle has not left behind stacks of interviews and public records with his name and face in the papers, but he has left behind a behind-the-scenes legacy.

    “It’s not really my job to be in the public spotlight,” said Tingle, deferring that role to elected members of the council.

    Asked to comment on his accomplishments over 17 years as manager, Tingle named the startup of the new police department among his top-ranking achievements, but said his “top and most important accomplishment” was building a team of customer-service-oriented staff — something he said is generally missing in the public sector.

    “Understanding the history of government and a lot of the negative connotations associated with government, particularly at the federal level, we really wanted to make sure that we had a customer-friendly service to the community,” said Tingle. He added that in hiring the team of about 65 city staff, he sought those with a “dominant trait” of serving people, and those “able to put the organization in front of self.”

    Though not volunteering his salary as an accomplishment, Tingle also rose from a starting salary of $120,000 up to the highest base pay of any city or county employee in the region by 2015, according to an Aug. 18 report in The Sacramento Bee. Salaries published on the State Controllers Office website indicate Tingle’s base pay in 2015 was $296,000, with total pay and benefits equaling just under $400,000 — although the city’s Human Resources Department said his base pay was slightly less, at $272,000 in 2015, and total pay and benefits equaling $374,000.

    Commenting on his salary, Mayor Jeannie Bruins said “every penny paid to Henry Tingle came back to the city a thousand fold. Look at the result of his leadership and it speaks for itself.” She also said his long tenure of service contributed to the final salary, with annual pay raises being typical for employees.

    The future
    Following his retirement, Tingle said he’s considering writing a book on “how to run a city.” During a retirement celebration held at the community center on Sept. 30, he also said he looks forward to fishing, traveling to see family around the country, and watching 20-plus episodes of the TV series “Gunsmoke.”

    His wife of 27 years and three grown sons will also likely keep him busy in his retirement.

    Tingle is also confident that his successor, Christopher Boyd, who has served as police chief of the city for the past 10 years, will do a good job as the new city manager. Tingle said he had mentored Boyd over the past few years, ever since he said the chief had expressed an interest in possibly becoming city manager some day.

    “It should be a really smooth transition,” Tingle said confidently. Citing Boyd’s 10 years in the city as police chief, he said the experience should help continue the city’s stability, rather than bringing someone new in from the outside where “you don’t know what you’re getting.”

    Boyd officially took the helm as city manager on Oct. 1 and appointed Rocklin’s top cop, Ron Lawrence, to be the new Citrus Heights police chief.

    The legacy
    At a Sept. 22 council meeting, city leaders unanimously voted to name Sept. 30 as “Henry Tingle Day,” in honor of his impact on the city. Commenting on Tingle’s legacy, Mayor Bruins said “his policies and the groundwork that he’s laid for Citrus Heights will be enjoyed for generations to come.”

    The mayor also highlighted his long-term planning as the reason the city was able to move ahead without any debt, while at the same time investing money in three new civic buildings, a major Auburn Boulevard revitalization project, LED street lighting upgrades, and other infrastructure projects.

    “It’s one thing to save money,” said Mayor Bruins. “It’s another thing to make millions of dollars of improvements at the same time.”

    “We are thrilled for him that he can enjoy many years of retirement, but it’s always hard to say goodbye to a friend.”

  • Sept. 30 is officially Henry Tingle Day in Citrus Heights. Here’s why.

    Henry Tingle, Citrus Heights city manager
    2016 File photo, Henry Tingle. // Citrus Heights Sentinel

    *Editor’s note: This article was originally published in 2020 and is being republished.

    Sentinel staff report– In 2016, the Citrus Heights City Council formally voted to make Sept. 30 “Henry Tingle Day,” in honor of the city’s retiring city manager who was recognized for his leadership and credited with keeping the city out of debt for his 17-year tenure.

    Known as the “Gentle Giant” for his soft-spoken demeanor and tall stature, a tribute to Tingle remains etched in a plaque outside the new City Hall. An 18-minute tribute video was also published on the city’s Youtube page, but has since been made private.

    In a final interview with The Sentinel prior to his retirement, Tingle reflected on his legacy in Citrus Heights. The Sentinel has republished the article in its entirety below.

    Oct. 5, 2016– Seated at his already emptied-out desk just days before his official retirement, Henry Tingle sat down for a final interview with The Sentinel last week to discuss his reflections on being city manager of Citrus Heights for the past 17 years.

    With a note of satisfaction in his voice, Tingle said his decision to retire came as a result of several factors, including turning 60 years old, serving 42 years in the public sector, building a “highly efficient and effective” staff, and seeing the recent completion of the new city hall — which he called one of his “ultimate goals.”

    “Seeing that the [city] has grown and matured into a really fine organization, my job here is done,” Tingle said with his signature soft, but articulate voice. The retiring manager said he’d seen Citrus Heights grow into a respected city in California over the past two decades, and believes it’s ready to move on without him at the helm.

    Growing up in Oakland and serving as deputy city manager of Richmond beginning in 1995, Tingle first came to Citrus Heights as its general services director in Sept. 1998, just over a year after the city incorporated in 1997. He was later appointed as city manager in Oct. 1999 and served in that capacity until last month.

    Moving to Vallejo in 1989, Tingle commuted a 75-mile distance to Citrus Heights each day for nearly two decades of working for the city. Though a much further commute than his first job out of high school with the East Bay Municipal Utility District, Tingle said he enjoyed the lengthy drive time to look ahead on what needed to be accomplished, and then reflect on the day during his return trip.

    ‘Tightwad Tingle’
    Affectionately referred to by many staff and city leaders as “Tightwad Tingle” for his fiscal focus and strong stance against taking on debt, Tingle spent much of his time focusing on financial aspects of running a city. He explained his philosophy in more detail during his final interview, emphasizing that Citrus Heights has stayed out of debt ever since becoming a city.

    “It’s so easy to spend other people’s money and create debt and put the burden on taxpayers,” said Tingle, crediting his grandfather as the one who instilled fiscal values in him.

    “My grandfather was one of my most important mentors in my early childhood,” he said. As a young boy, Tingle recalled his grandfather — who was born in 1899 — teaching him to always save money for “a rainy day, a sick day, and a good day.”

    Under Tingle’s leadership, the city has operated under that savings model, still holding at least $5 million in reserves after purchasing its nearly $22 million new city hall in cash. His leadership also led to the city operating with a 10-year budget model for assessing the financial prudence of a proposal.

    “Any adjustment you make in the first year, look over 10 years,” said Tingle. The model encourages decision-makers to look not just at immediate costs of a proposal, but their cost in the long-run, like with pay raises or community donations. In contrast, Tingle said most cities have a 5-year, or less, budget model.

    The challenges
    Asked about challenges he faced during his term as city manager, Tingle focused on his efforts to stabilize city finances — a problem he said was exacerbated by an agreement with the County to not give the city its property taxes for the first 25 years. The “revenue-neutrality” agreement was a condition of Citrus Heights being allowed to incorporate as a city, and when the agreement expires in 2022, Tingle said the city will have lost out on around $100 million in revenue that cities normally receive from property taxes.

    [See related video: Mayor reflects on fight to make Citrus Heights a city]

    A major financial challenge was getting police services “under control,” as Tingle said the city’s initial contract with the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Department was getting more expensive each year. He said switching over to in-house police services by launching the city’s own police department in 2006 has saved the City around $2.5 million per year, beginning with the first year.

    Another hurdle was the medical office building and new city hall project, which Tingle described as a “big challenge with a lot of opposition.” He said with Citrus Heights approximately 98 percent built out, most development projects in the city have to come from tearing down existing facilities and turning them in to new — and hopefully better — uses.

    When Dignity Health proposed constructing a three-story medical building in place of the old city hall at Fountain Square Drive and Greenback Lane, Tingle argued in favor of tearing down the old hall and moving it — pitching the plan as a “once-in-a-lifetime” chance to get a new hall at a subsidized price, using $6.9 million in lease payments from the medical building along with added annual energy savings from a new building.

    The proposal initially faced intense opposition and a lawsuit threat in 2014, but tensions eased after the city turned its focus to the nearby 10.9-acre property the new hall now sits on — instead of the original proposed location for the hall on Antelope Road, over a mile away from other civic buildings on Fountain Square Drive.

    [From 2014: Council Postpones Vote on New City Hall Deal, After Lawsuit Threat]

    Tingle also said another difficult challenge was a rent control proposal for mobile home parks in the city in 2006. He said the parks had threatened a major lawsuit and the proposal ended up with a tied 2-2 vote on the council, with one member abstaining due to conflict of interest.

    Asked how he handled controversy as a leader, Tingle said he focused on a win-win, or a win-lose as a second-best — as long as the win was for the community. He also emphasized patience, active listening, and hearing from all those involved — characteristics that, along with his tall stature, earned him the name “Gentle Giant.”

    As a well-loved manager, spoken highly of by virtually all local community and city leaders, an honorary plaque titled “the Gentle Giant” is now featured at the new city hall. Vice Mayor Jeff Slowey explained the name as referring to Tingle’s somewhat imposing six-foot-plus height, along with his likeable, approachable character. Another community leader referred to him as “a big, huggable teddy bear” for his warm, accessible style.

    Accomplishments
    Preferring to operate behind the scenes, Tingle has not left behind stacks of interviews and public records with his name and face in the papers, but he has left behind a behind-the-scenes legacy.

    “It’s not really my job to be in the public spotlight,” said Tingle, deferring that role to elected members of the council.

    Asked to comment on his accomplishments over 17 years as manager, Tingle named the startup of the new police department among his top-ranking achievements, but said his “top and most important accomplishment” was building a team of customer-service-oriented staff — something he said is generally missing in the public sector.

    “Understanding the history of government and a lot of the negative connotations associated with government, particularly at the federal level, we really wanted to make sure that we had a customer-friendly service to the community,” said Tingle. He added that in hiring the team of about 65 city staff, he sought those with a “dominant trait” of serving people, and those “able to put the organization in front of self.”

    Though not volunteering his salary as an accomplishment, Tingle also rose from a starting salary of $120,000 up to the highest base pay of any city or county employee in the region by 2015, according to an Aug. 18 report in The Sacramento Bee. Salaries published on the State Controllers Office website indicate Tingle’s base pay in 2015 was $296,000, with total pay and benefits equaling just under $400,000 — although the city’s Human Resources Department said his base pay was slightly less, at $272,000 in 2015, and total pay and benefits equaling $374,000.

    Commenting on his salary, Mayor Jeannie Bruins said “every penny paid to Henry Tingle came back to the city a thousand fold. Look at the result of his leadership and it speaks for itself.” She also said his long tenure of service contributed to the final salary, with annual pay raises being typical for employees.

    The future
    Following his retirement, Tingle said he’s considering writing a book on “how to run a city.” During a retirement celebration held at the community center on Sept. 30, he also said he looks forward to fishing, traveling to see family around the country, and watching 20-plus episodes of the TV series “Gunsmoke.”

    His wife of 27 years and three grown sons will also likely keep him busy in his retirement.

    Tingle is also confident that his successor, Christopher Boyd, who has served as police chief of the city for the past 10 years, will do a good job as the new city manager. Tingle said he had mentored Boyd over the past few years, ever since he said the chief had expressed an interest in possibly becoming city manager some day.

    “It should be a really smooth transition,” Tingle said confidently. Citing Boyd’s 10 years in the city as police chief, he said the experience should help continue the city’s stability, rather than bringing someone new in from the outside where “you don’t know what you’re getting.”

    Boyd officially took the helm as city manager on Oct. 1 and appointed Rocklin’s top cop, Ron Lawrence, to be the new Citrus Heights police chief.

    The legacy
    At a Sept. 22 council meeting, city leaders unanimously voted to name Sept. 30 as “Henry Tingle Day,” in honor of his impact on the city. Commenting on Tingle’s legacy, Mayor Bruins said “his policies and the groundwork that he’s laid for Citrus Heights will be enjoyed for generations to come.”

    The mayor also highlighted his long-term planning as the reason the city was able to move ahead without any debt, while at the same time investing money in three new civic buildings, a major Auburn Boulevard revitalization project, LED street lighting upgrades, and other infrastructure projects.

    “It’s one thing to save money,” said Mayor Bruins. “It’s another thing to make millions of dollars of improvements at the same time.”

    “We are thrilled for him that he can enjoy many years of retirement, but it’s always hard to say goodbye to a friend.”

  • Citrus Heights city manager announces retirement. What’s next?

    Strategic planning, citrus heights, Chris Boyd, Jeff Slowey, Jeannie Bruins, Ron Lawrence
    File photo, City Manager Chris Boyd discusses objectives with other city leaders during a break-out small group session during a 2017 strategic planning meeting. // CH Sentinel

    Sentinel staff report–
    Citrus Heights City Manager Christopher Boyd on Thursday publicly announced that he will be retiring from his position as the top executive tasked with running the city, coming on the heels of the assistant city manager retiring earlier this year.

    “For quite a while now, I have been contemplating my next chapter,” said Boyd in a prepared statement, which said advance notice had been given to the City Council. “After 31 years of public service, I have decided it is time for me to focus on my family, so that my wife and I can enjoy the few short years we have left with our teenage sons before they are grown.”

    Boyd served as the original chief of police for the Citrus Heights Police Department, later replacing former City Manager Henry Tingle in 2016 upon Tingle’s retirement. Accomplishments listed by the city during Boyd’s term include undertaking “sizeable economic development projects including the Sunrise Mall Specific Plan, pushed forward revitalization efforts of the Auburn Blvd. corridor which was recently awarded $9 million in grant funding, realigned staffing for significant cost-savings, and more.”

    “Convincing Chris to move from Chief of Police to City Manager was one of the best things our Council has done for the City,” said Mayor Steve Miller in Thursday’s statement from the city. “Thanks to his leadership we have weathered a pandemic while keeping all our City service lines open, launched economic development plans to secure a bright future for our City, and undertaken massive efforts to balance our budget and remain committed to fiscal prudence. ‘Thank you’ just does not seem like enough.”

    From April: Discussion during Citrus Heights budget meeting gets heated

    Boyd also received criticism during his five-year tenure as city manager, facing a rocky relationship with the city’s newest two council members and also from some members of the public for his advocacy that the city make the historic move to go into debt for the first time in 2018 and his support of the Measure M sales tax increase proposed last year.

    Following Boyd’s official retirement date of May 11, the council will meet Thursday to consider hiring an interim city manager while also launching immediate recruitment efforts to find a permanent replacement.

    Potential names to fill the interim or permanent position have not been made public, and an agenda packet for the May 13 City Council meeting includes no further details. In an email response, the mayor opted to not include names being considered for the interim position, but said the council “will discuss our options in closed session this Wednesday,” prior to Thursday’s public meeting.

    He also said, “I anticipate we will be very deliberate hiring a permanent City Manager.”

    Some who have been unhappy with Boyd’s leadership have advocated bringing back Tingle as city manager, including former councilwoman Jayna Karpinski-Costa.

    “Everybody loves Tingle and knows he was the best thing to ever happen to Citrus Heights,” she told The Sentinel on Saturday. “He’s more than qualified (and could) return us to a debt-free city with a big, healthy reserve. He could fix anything.”

    Contacted by phone Saturday, Tingle sounded caught off guard and told The Sentinel he hadn’t considered returning to a position with the city.

    “I’ve not given that any thought, I’m just enjoying my retirement,” he said. When asked specifically if he would consider returning for an interim city manager position, he said “probably not.”

    From 2016: Henry Tingle reflects on 17 years as Citrus Heights city manager

    Councilman Tim Schaefer, contacted for comment by The Sentinel on Saturday, declined to comment on Boyd’s retirement announcement or potential replacements, saying he was “not legally allowed to discuss terms or payment until there is not a city manager,” which won’t happen until Boyd formally retires Tuesday.

    The City Council will meet Thursday, May 13, at 7 p.m. via Zoom to consider an interim hire. Comments up to 250 words can be submitted in advance to cityclerk@citrusheights.net.

    Want to share your thoughts on the city manager’s retirement or replacement options? Submit a letter to the editor or opinion column for publication: Click here

  • EDITORIAL: Council should re-watch tribute to ‘Tightwad Tingle’ before $12M vote

    City Hall ribbon cutting, Citrus Heights
    From 2016, City Council members along with Henry Tingle join together for a ribbon-cutting ceremony at the new City Hall. // Photo credit: City of Citrus Heights

    When former Citrus Heights City Manager Henry Tingle retired two years ago, incoming City Manager Christopher Boyd assured him of one thing: “We’ll never go into debt.”

    That quote and many others were included in an 18-minute video tribute to the outgoing city manager during his retirement ceremony in 2016. Known as “Tightwad Tingle” for his fiscally conservative policies and operating the city debt-free during his 17-year tenure as manager, the video showcases how the City of Citrus Heights operated with a “pay as you go” philosophy under his leadership, while building up millions of dollars in reserves and still making capital improvements like the new Community Center on Fountain Square Drive, completing the first phase of major roadway improvements on Auburn Boulevard from Sylvan Corners to Rusch Park, and most recently constructing the new $21 million city hall — a project that would have cost taxpayers millions more in interest payments if the money had been borrowed.

    Now, the City Council is poised to vote at 6 p.m. tonight — for the first time in its 21-year history — for a $12 million revolving line of credit in order to finance “anticipated operating and capital funding needs for the next four fiscal years until property tax revenues become available,” according to a city staff report. For perspective, that’s about one-third of the city’s $36 million General Fund budget.

    This isn’t the first time councilmembers have been tempted to go into debt. In the Tingle Tribute video, former Mayor James Shelby recalled times where taking on debt was discussed as an option, but in each case he said the city manager kept them focused on making Citrus Heights a “model city.” And indeed, not many cities can claim to be without debt.

    Tingle told The Sentinel in his final interview before retirement that he resisted taking on public debt because, “It’s so easy to spend other people’s money and create debt and put the burden on taxpayers.” He’s also said he knows of no city that’s ever gone into debt and then gotten out of it.

    Read the final interview: Henry Tingle reflects on 17 years as Citrus Heights city manager

    In the tribute video, his policies about fiscal management are praised by city staff and council members alike. Sept. 30 has even been officially declared by the City Council as “Henry Tingle Day” to honor his impact on the city.

    Vice Mayor Jeannie Bruins is quoted in the video saying the council knew the lack of receiving property tax revenue, part of a 25-year “Revenue Neutrality Agreement” with the county as a condition to incorporate as a city in 1997, meant planning ahead and meant “we couldn’t have everything we wanted, today.”

    With just four years out from receiving an estimated $5-6 million annually in property taxes, the temptation to borrow in advance to fund projects today is understandable. While the projects are not specified in the staff report or resolution to be voted on, according to Mayor Steve Miller the funds are intended to go primarily towards two “big ticket” expenses: buying the old Sylvan Middle School property and helping pay for the second phase of improvements on Auburn Boulevard.

    Related: SJUSD moves forward with plan to sell old Sylvan school site

    If the debt incurred is truly short-term and paid off when the city finally receives its property taxes from Sacramento County in four years, the proposal might not actually be a bad thing. However, the proposal being considered by the City Council allows for the line of credit to extend as long as 20 years and cover a broad range of both operating and capital expenditures — not just the two “big ticket” items.

    There’s also the question of whether the debt will be able to be paid off early, by 2024, as the city intends, or whether it will wind up keeping the debt for the full 20-year term of the credit agreement and end up paying as much as $9 million in interest, according to figures listed in the loan agreement. In 2022, there are sure to be competing interests regarding how to spend the additional revenue from property taxes — repaving roads, infrastructure projects, and rising pension costs, to name a few that have been cited by current members of the City Council.

    An economic slowdown, or another recession that Gov. Jerry Brown has consistently warned of, could also put increased strain on the city’s budget in the next four years and eat up the line of credit on operating expenditures rather than just “big-ticket” items.

    With the sharp change in the city’s pay-as-you-go policy being proposed, it’s also unusual for the city to not bring the item up for public input several months in advance. In this case, the proposal was only made public three days after the Nov. 6 election.

    For context, see story: Citrus Heights is considering a whopping $12 million line of credit. Here’s why.

    By comparison, when the recent Rental Housing Inspection Program (RHIP) was proposed, which involved only a $505,000 budget, the idea was first brought up during a strategic planning meeting, then discussed at an open-to-the public study session, then a police representative presented the proposal to each neighborhood association and received community feedback, then a public hearing was held, and then finally a vote was taken by the City Council.

    Why not follow that same transparent process when dealing with a $12 million proposal?

    If the council still decides debt is needed as a last resort in order to stay afloat the next four years, a few considerations should be made:

    Voters should have a say. A bond measure would allow voters to decide whether to approve additional major expenses, giving voters a direct say in whether they want to move on from the city’s pay-as-you-go policy. Bonds also typically provide citizen oversight to ensure funds are spent as intended. Likely there is not enough time to pursue this route now, but given that the city prides itself on a 10-year budget model that looks long into the future to foresee needs and plan in advance, this lack of funding before Revenue Neutrality ends should have been anticipated in time to put this on the ballot.

    The city’s new council member should have a say. To help ensure the money is paid back as planned, the same council members who vote on the debt should be the same ones to vote on paying it back. However, tonight’s meeting will be Councilman Al Fox’s last meeting and he will be replaced by Middleton on Dec. 13th. Since voters have chosen Porsche Middleton to be their next council member and she will be tasked with approving the 2022 budget and allocating the first influx of property tax revenue in four years, it makes sense that she should be seated first before this vote. That would mean holding off for just one meeting.

    Exact use of funds should be specified. The resolution council members are set to approve regarding the $12 million credit line is far too vague, saying only that the funding is intended for “certain capital improvements and operating expenditures,” which are not specified. Residents deserve to see where this money will be going in advance, before it is approved, and specific wording should be added to the resolution to bind the credit line’s usage to serve only short-term “big ticket” items.

    This is critical for both transparency and also to prevent a future City Council from using the new funding source as a $12 million credit card to artificially boost the General Fund budget on any expense they choose. By the time the debt is expected to fully be repaid in six years, there will be at least two new members on the City Council, as both Councilman Jeff Slowey and Mayor Steve Miller have said they will not seek another term. This simple step would help ensure funds are only used as originally intended.

    Alternatively, the City Council may be better off following the original plan laid out by the current city manager in following Tingle’s legacy. As City Manager Boyd said two years ago:

    “There’s no greater honor for me than to take over as city manager and carry on your tremendous legacy. And one final thing I just want to make sure you know: We’ll never go into debt, I can assure you of that.”

    The City Council is slated to vote on this matter at 6 p.m. on Thursday, Nov. 15, at City Hall. To read the staff report and full proposal, click here. The Tingle Tribute video can also be viewed by clicking here.

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  • Citrus Heights looking at options to make business licensing faster, easier

    city hall, Citrus Heights

    Sentinel staff report–
    The City of Citrus Heights is currently exploring options to streamline its business licensing process, with a goal to make licensing faster and easier for business owners in the city. Currently, business licenses in Citrus Heights can only be obtained and renewed each year by mailing in a check and application, or personally dropping it off at city hall.

    “Quicker, faster, cheaper, easier,” is how Senior Planner Casey Kempenaar summed up what he’d like to see happen with business licensing in Citrus Heights. Through implementing one of several online tech options currently being researched by city staff, he said he’d like to significantly cut down on processing time and make it so business owners won’t have to come to city hall to apply or renew a license.

    Kempenaar, who took charge of business licensing at city hall last month, said specific changes to the licensing process are yet to be determined, but the goal is to make the licensing process the “most-user friendly we can have.” He said some features being looked at are having an online payment aspect and a print-from-home option to print licenses.

    Kempenaar told The Sentinel on Wednesday that the city is currently looking at best practices being used by other cities, which vary widely in how they handle business licensing.

    Elk Grove already has an almost-entirely automated online business licensing system that enables most business owners to have a print-from-home temporary license in hand after submitting a short, 10-minute application online at www.ElkGroveCity.org.

    Other cities, like the City of Dana Point in Southern California, have free or low-cost “business registration” programs instead of licensing, which enable cities to collect demographic data about local businesses and assist officials in contacting business owners in the event of an emergency. Others require a revenue-based “Business Operations Tax” instead of a license, and others offer a lifetime business license rather than requiring annual renewal.

    The City of Lafayette in the Bay Area has not required businesses to be licensed ever since the city incorporated in 1968, and the San Diego County Board of Supervisors deleted its requirement for businesses to obtain a license in 1998.

    While not all cities require business licenses, Kempenaar said Citrus Heights’ purpose in licensing is “to ensure businesses are operating within our zoning requirements and located in places they should be, which protects the safety and welfare of those around them.”

    Asked how Lafayette handles zoning without requiring business licenses, Administrative Services Director Tracy Robinson told The Sentinel that businesses are still required to follow the city’s land use and zoning regulations.

    “It’s not been a problem,” said the Lafayette administrative director. “It’s not like we don’t control [zoning] just because we don’t have a business license fee.”

    Related: “Editorial: Citrus Heights is a business-friendly city; but it could do better”

    Licenses for most businesses in Citrus Heights currently cost $51 to renew each year, with an extra $25 processing fee charged for new businesses. Kempenaar said the city is not proposing any changes to fees or adding a new business tax.

    Local changes to business licensing are expected to be finalized and implemented sometime next year.

    Among other changes, business licensing in Citrus Heights recently changed from being under the city’s finance division and is now under the community and economic development division. The move was one of many internal changes made by City Manager Christopher Boyd after he replaced Henry Tingle as manager last October.

  • Henry Tingle reflects on 17 years as Citrus Heights city manager

    Henry Tingle, city manager, Citrus Heights
    2016 file photo, Henry Tingle. // Citrus Heights Sentinel

    Updated Oct. 5, 11:14 p.m.–
    Seated at his already emptied-out desk just days before his official retirement, Henry Tingle sat down for a final interview with The Sentinel last week to discuss his reflections on being city manager of Citrus Heights for the past 17 years.

    With a note of satisfaction in his voice, Tingle said his decision to retire came as a result of several factors, including turning 60 years old, serving 42 years in the public sector, building a “highly efficient and effective” staff, and seeing the recent completion of the new city hall — which he called one of his “ultimate goals.”

    “Seeing that the [city] has grown and matured into a really fine organization, my job here is done,” Tingle said with his signature soft, but articulate voice. The retiring manager said he’d seen Citrus Heights grow into a respected city in California over the past two decades, and believes it’s ready to move on without him at the helm.

    Growing up in Oakland and serving as deputy city manager of Richmond beginning in 1995, Tingle first came to Citrus Heights as its general services director in Sept. 1998, just over a year after the city incorporated in 1997. He was later appointed as city manager in Oct. 1999 and served in that capacity until last month.

    Moving to Vallejo in 1989, Tingle commuted a 75-mile distance to Citrus Heights each day for nearly two decades of working for the city. Though a much further commute than his first job out of high school with the East Bay Municipal Utility District, Tingle said he enjoyed the lengthy drive time to look ahead on what needed to be accomplished, and then reflect on the day during his return trip.

    ‘Tightwad Tingle’
    Affectionately referred to by many staff and city leaders as “Tightwad Tingle” for his fiscal focus and strong stance against taking on debt, Tingle spent much of his time focusing on financial aspects of running a city. He explained his philosophy in more detail during his final interview, emphasizing that Citrus Heights has stayed out of debt ever since becoming a city.

    “It’s so easy to spend other people’s money and create debt and put the burden on taxpayers,” said Tingle, crediting his grandfather as the one who instilled fiscal values in him.

    “My grandfather was one of my most important mentors in my early childhood,” he said. As a young boy, Tingle recalled his grandfather — who was born in 1899 — teaching him to always save money for “a rainy day, a sick day, and a good day.”

    Under Tingle’s leadership, the city has operated under that savings model, still holding at least $5 million in reserves after purchasing its nearly $22 million new city hall in cash. His leadership also led to the city operating with a 10-year budget model for assessing the financial prudence of a proposal.

    “Any adjustment you make in the first year, look over 10 years,” said Tingle. The model encourages decision-makers to look not just at immediate costs of a proposal, but their cost in the long-run, like with pay raises or community donations. In contrast, Tingle said most cities have a 5-year, or less, budget model.

    The challenges
    Asked about challenges he faced during his term as city manager, Tingle focused on his efforts to stabilize city finances — a problem he said was exacerbated by an agreement with the County to not give the city its property taxes for the first 25 years. The “revenue-neutrality” agreement was a condition of Citrus Heights being allowed to incorporate as a city, and when the agreement expires in 2022, Tingle said the city will have lost out on around $100 million in revenue that cities normally receive from property taxes.

    [See related video: Mayor reflects on fight to make Citrus Heights a city]

    A major financial challenge was getting police services “under control,” as Tingle said the city’s initial contract with the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Department was getting more expensive each year. He said switching over to in-house police services by launching the city’s own police department in 2006 has saved the City around $2.5 million per year, beginning with the first year.

    Another hurdle was the medical office building and new city hall project, which Tingle described as a “big challenge with a lot of opposition.” He said with Citrus Heights approximately 98 percent built out, most development projects in the city have to come from tearing down existing facilities and turning them in to new — and hopefully better — uses.

    When Dignity Health proposed constructing a three-story medical building in place of the old city hall at Fountain Square Drive and Greenback Lane, Tingle argued in favor of tearing down the old hall and moving it — pitching the plan as a “once-in-a-lifetime” chance to get a new hall at a subsidized price, using $6.9 million in lease payments from the medical building along with added annual energy savings from a new building.

    The proposal initially faced intense opposition and a lawsuit threat in 2014, but tensions eased after the city turned its focus to the nearby 10.9-acre property the new hall now sits on — instead of the original proposed location for the hall on Antelope Road, over a mile away from other civic buildings on Fountain Square Drive.

    [From 2014: Council Postpones Vote on New City Hall Deal, After Lawsuit Threat]

    Tingle also said another difficult challenge was a rent control proposal for mobile home parks in the city in 2006. He said the parks had threatened a major lawsuit and the proposal ended up with a tied 2-2 vote on the council, with one member abstaining due to conflict of interest.

    Asked how he handled controversy as a leader, Tingle said he focused on a win-win, or a win-lose as a second-best — as long as the win was for the community. He also emphasized patience, active listening, and hearing from all those involved — characteristics that, along with his tall stature, earned him the name “Gentle Giant.”

    As a well-loved manager, spoken highly of by virtually all local community and city leaders, an honorary plaque titled “the Gentle Giant” is now featured at the new city hall. Vice Mayor Jeff Slowey explained the name as referring to Tingle’s somewhat imposing six-foot-plus height, along with his likeable, approachable character. Another community leader referred to him as “a big, huggable teddy bear” for his warm, accessible style.

    Accomplishments
    Preferring to operate behind the scenes, Tingle has not left behind stacks of interviews and public records with his name and face in the papers, but he has left behind a behind-the-scenes legacy.

    “It’s not really my job to be in the public spotlight,” said Tingle, deferring that role to elected members of the council.

    Asked to comment on his accomplishments over 17 years as manager, Tingle named the startup of the new police department among his top-ranking achievements, but said his “top and most important accomplishment” was building a team of customer-service-oriented staff — something he said is generally missing in the public sector.

    “Understanding the history of government and a lot of the negative connotations associated with government, particularly at the federal level, we really wanted to make sure that we had a customer-friendly service to the community,” said Tingle. He added that in hiring the team of about 65 city staff, he sought those with a “dominant trait” of serving people, and those “able to put the organization in front of self.”

    Though not volunteering his salary as an accomplishment, Tingle also rose from a starting salary of $120,000 up to the highest base pay of any city or county employee in the region by 2015, according to an Aug. 18 report in The Sacramento Bee. Salaries published on the State Controllers Office website indicate Tingle’s base pay in 2015 was $296,000, with total pay and benefits equaling just under $400,000 — although the city’s Human Resources Department said his base pay was slightly less, at $272,000 in 2015, and total pay and benefits equaling $374,000.

    Commenting on his salary, Mayor Jeannie Bruins said “every penny paid to Henry Tingle came back to the city a thousand fold. Look at the result of his leadership and it speaks for itself.” She also said his long tenure of service contributed to the final salary, with annual pay raises being typical for employees.

    The future
    Following his retirement, Tingle said he’s considering writing a book on “how to run a city.” During a retirement celebration held at the community center on Sept. 30, he also said he looks forward to fishing, traveling to see family around the country, and watching 20-plus episodes of the TV series “Gunsmoke.”

    His wife of 27 years and three grown sons will also likely keep him busy in his retirement.

    Tingle is also confident that his successor, Christopher Boyd, who has served as police chief of the city for the past 10 years, will do a good job as the new city manager. Tingle said he had mentored Boyd over the past few years, ever since he said the chief had expressed an interest in possibly becoming city manager some day.

    [Related: Citrus Heights council appoints police chief as new city manager]

    “It should be a really smooth transition,” Tingle said confidently. Citing Boyd’s 10 years in the city as police chief, he said the experience should help continue the city’s stability, rather than bringing someone new in from the outside where “you don’t know what you’re getting.”

    Boyd officially took the helm as city manager on Oct. 1 and appointed Rocklin’s top cop, Ron Lawrence, to be the new Citrus Heights police chief.

    The legacy
    At a Sept. 22 council meeting, city leaders unanimously voted to name Sept. 30 as “Henry Tingle Day,” in honor of his impact on the city. Commenting on Tingle’s legacy, Mayor Bruins said “his policies and the groundwork that he’s laid for Citrus Heights will be enjoyed for generations to come.”

    >Sign up for The Sentinel’s free Weekend e-Edition to follow future stories and local news.

    The mayor also highlighted his long-term planning as the reason the city was able to move ahead without any debt, while at the same time investing money in three new civic buildings, a major Auburn Boulevard revitalization project, LED street lighting upgrades, and other infrastructure projects.

    “It’s one thing to save money,” said Mayor Bruins. “It’s another thing to make millions of dollars of improvements at the same time.”

    “We are thrilled for him that he can enjoy many years of retirement, but it’s always hard to say goodbye to a friend.”

    Want to comment on this article? Submit a letter to the editor for publication by clicking here.

    Henry Tingle, Roberta MacGlashan
    An archive photo of Henry Tingle, reportedly taken during the council meeting in 1999 where he was first appointed as city manager of Citrus Heights. // Courtesy, City of Citrus Heights

  • Citrus Heights News Briefs: Sunday Funday, marijuana, Tingle Day, biz walk

    Sunday Funday, Citrus Heights
    Organizers and police estimated several thousand people attended the annual Sunday Funday event at Rusch Park on Sept. 25, 2016. // CH Sentinel

    Latest news briefs include thousands attending a Sunday Funday event at Rusch Park over the weekend, state marijuana regulators holding a public meeting at the community center, a “business walk” conducted around Sunrise Marketplace, and the city council officially naming Sept. 30 as “Henry Tingle Day” in honor of the retiring city manager.

    Sunday Funday event draws thousands to Rusch Park
    Despite 94-degree weather, several thousand kids, families and other attendees took part in the 20th annual “Sunday Funday” festivities at Rusch Park in Citrus Heights. The event sprawled through most of Rusch Park, with numerous inflatable play areas, games, food trucks, and more than 100 vendor and sponsor booths. New this year was an “It’s a Small World” stage that featured presentations including an “extreme martial arts” and K9 police dog demo, as well as cultural dance and music presentations from several parts of the world. Michele Saario, an event coordinator with the City, said shaved ice was “definitely big” this year, reporting the temperature was the hottest of any Sunday Funday event she’s helped organize in recent years.

    Mayor Jeannie Bruins, who attended with three of her grandkids, said Sunday Funday traditionally wraps up the summer season of outdoor events co-sponsored by the City, with the next major event being the Christmas tree lighting in December. Saario and police estimated between 3-5,000 attendees participated throughout the day, with no negative incidents reported by officers other than several balloons that went missing in the sky.

    Council honors city manager, names Sept. 30 as ‘Henry Tingle Day’
    During last week’s council meeting on Thursday night, city council members surprised retiring City Manager Henry Tingle by passing a resolution officially recognizing Sept. 30 as “Henry Tingle Day.” Tingle first took seat as manager of the City in 1999 and announced his retirement at the beginning of this year. He has been praised by city officials and residents for his fiscal responsibility in keeping the city out of debt, while overseeing the completion of three public buildings during his term — most recently, the new city hall. City Clerk Amy Van confirmed Sept. 30 will be recognized annually as Henry Tingle Day. A full story will be published by The Sentinel on Tingle’s retirement this weekend.

    >>Don’t miss out on local news and events: Sign up for The Sentinel’s free Weekend e-Edition

    State bureau holds marijuana regulation session in Citrus Heights
    A collaborative discussion on statewide marijuana regulation was held at the Citrus Heights community center last week, with various state agencies, cannabis industry leaders, and the public. According to a CBS 13 news report, about 100 people attended the Sept. 20 session, which was the second of eight different meetings scheduled around the state by the recently formed California Bureau of Medical Cannabis Regulation. The Bureau is charged with licensing and enforcement related to the marijuana industry and plans to publish a draft set of regulations after receiving input at the series of public meetings. (See full CBS 13 coverage)

    City, Chamber visit 100+ local businesses on annual ‘walk’
    The City and Citrus Heights Chamber of Commerce teamed up again last week for their annual “business walk,” meeting with owners and managers in an effort to learn how to better serve their businesses. Devon Rodriguez, a development specialist with the City, said a total of 16 teams of City staff and Chamber representatives visited about 150 businesses in the Sunrise Marketplace, asking a series of four questions and dropping off a packet of information. Questions included “What do you like about doing business in Citrus Heights?” and “What challenges/obstacles do you face?”

    Last year, responses from a majority of the 77 businesses contacted listed homelessness as “an issue,” prompting a followup letter about the topic to be sent out by the City. The letter listed steps the city is taking to address the issue and also listed several recommendations for businesses to take, including documenting and recording problems and incidents. Rodriguez said a summary of this year’s responses has not yet been compiled. (Read last year’s letter)

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  • Citrus Heights city manager announces plans to retire

    Citrus Heights city manager announces plans to retire

    City Managery Henry Tingle, Citrus Heights
    File photo, Citrus Heights City Manager Henry Tingle addresses a group in 2014 for the Sayonara Center Bus Unveiling // Courtesy, City of Citrus Heights

    City Manager Henry Tingle announced this week he will be retiring from his long-held position in Citrus Heights at the end of 2016.

    In an email to The Sentinel, Mayor Jeannie Bruins praised the city manager for being “largely responsible” for the City’s financial success, calling Citrus Heights “the only known city in California that operates debt-free while continuing to improve the quality of life” for residents.

    On Friday, Tingle declined an interview request to discuss his 15-plus years of service in the City, saying he preferred an interview closer to his actual retirement at the end of the year.

    According to the City website, the manager serves at the pleasure of the majority of the council and his office is responsible for “planning, supervising, and coordinating the City’s operations.” All department heads and key managers in the City report to the city manager.

    Tingle’s leadership has largely been looked on favorably by the community, although his advocacy for the new city hall approved last year stirred some controversy among residents.

    [From 2015: Council votes 5-0 for new city hall & MOB; lawsuit threatened]

    Tim Schaefer, vice president of the Residents’ Empowerment Association of Citrus Heights (REACH), commended Tingle for doing “an exemplary job” over 16 years, although Schaefer himself had been a vocal opponent of the new city hall. The resident leader credited the city manager with helping bring in a “top notch police chief” and the formation of the City’s own police department in 2006.

    REACH President Tonya Wagner, whose organization represents the City’s 11 neighborhood associations, said she was surprised by Tingle’s retirement announcement. She described him as being “pretty low-key” and said he’s always been easy to talk to, but is known to not prefer public speaking.

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    The outgoing city manager is also known for his strong fiscal responsibility, recently summarizing one of his principles as “I hate debt.” His office also took a lead role in securing the new Dignity Health Medical Office Building and City Hall Project on Fountain Square Drive, which Tingle called “by far the largest project in the history of the City.”

    [Related: Citrus Heights leaders break ground on new city hall project]

    According to a 2008 California City Management Foundation newsletter, Tingle received a BA at Sonoma State University and a Master of Public Administration from the University of San Francisco.  Prior to becoming Citrus Heights’ city manager in Oct. 1999, Tingle served as deputy city manager of Richmond, beginning in 1995.

    In Dec. 2015, a Sacramento Bee article listed Tingle as one of California’s top 50 highest-paid local government officials in 2014, receiving a total pay of $282,311 that year.

    A permanent replacement for the outgoing city manager has not been announced, but the city council has responsibility for appointing a successor. Police Chief Christopher Boyd will reportedly fill in for Tingle as-needed this year, according to Melanie Randel, Boyd's executive assistant. City council members reportedly had "mixed feelings" when Tingle told them of his plans to retire, but Mayor Bruins said she's "happy he can retire with years ahead to enjoy it, because he deserves it." "He is a wonderful city manager, loved by so many people in the community and revered by the city council he serves," the mayor said in her email to The Sentinel on Saturday. "He has become my friend and I will miss him when he retires."

  • Citrus Heights leaders break ground on new city hall project

    groundreaking ceremony on new citrus heights city hall
    Citrus Heights city leaders dug in a shovel Wednesday to celebrate the start of construction on a new city hall.

    Updated July 16, 11:42 p.m.–
    After more than two years of discussion, debate, and planning, Citrus Heights city leaders finally broke ground Wednesday in a ceremony to celebrate the start of construction on a new $22 million city hall.

    “I want to thank all of you for being here to join us for this epic moment in our history,” Mayor Sue Frost told a crowd of about 150 people Wednesday morning, calling the city hall groundbreaking “an important step for our future.”

    “This is by far the largest project in the history of the City,” Citrus Heights City Manager Henry Tingle told the crowd, who had assembled under a tent on a patch of dirt and crushed gravel at the site of the soon-to-be new city hall. He praised various City employees for their efforts in making the project go from a dream to reality, highlighting the work of his assistant, Monica Alejandrez, who spearheaded the effort.

    “When this project is completed, there will be a plaque put on this building and it will have your mom’s name on it,” the city manager told Alejandrez’s two children who were present at the ceremony, seeking to highlight the significance of the project. “When you grow up and have your own families, you can bring her grandkids and show what their grandmother did many years ago.”

    Former mayor of Citrus Heights and current Sacramento County Supervisor Roberta MacGlashan was also present for the ceremony, having been one of the City’s first five council members when the City was formed in 1997. MacGlashan called the project a “wonderful accomplishment” and noted it is scheduled for completion just prior to Citrus Heights’ 20th anniversary of becoming a city.

    [GALLERY: Preliminary artistic Images of New City Hall]

    Looking ahead, Capital Partners Developer Rod Johnson told the crowd the site would be transformed quickly, with “a flurry of activity” scheduled to occur next week. He said in a little over 12 months, community members can expect to be sitting outside in a “very beautiful quad area, looking at a state-of-the-art city hall.”

    The new hall is part of a larger $53.2 million project approved by city council members in March, which includes a new three-story Dignity Health medical office building being constructed in place of the old city hall at the corner of Fountain Square Drive and Greenback Lane. The new hall will be constructed nearby on a 10.9-acre parcel next to the Post Office, just a block away from the original hall on Fountain Square Drive.

    [From March: Council votes 5-0 for new city hall & MOB; lawsuit threatened]

    The new city hall will feature a single-story, 35,000-square-feet design, with an adjacent 4,000-square-feet utility yard.

    Demolition of the old city hall property will likely begin in mid-August, according to the city manager’s office.

  • Daytime road paving closes Sunrise Blvd lanes, Thursday

    Sunrise Blvd, Sungarden Dr. to get new stoplight. Photo credit: Luke Otterstad
    Drivers were alerted to expect additional delays due to daytime paving this week on Sunrise Boulevard.

    Updated Apr. 11, 10:39 p.m.–
    The City of Citrus Heights alerted drivers to expect additional delays along a section of Sunrise Boulevard near Sungarden Drive this week in order to allow for road paving associated with a new signalized intersection project, according to a general services news release on Wednesday.

    “The contractor will begin setting up traffic control at 7 a.m. and will be shifting lanes throughout the day,” the news release stated, adding that traffic would be reduced to one lane in each direction on Thursday until 5 p.m.

    The paving work was part of a larger project to add a new signalized intersection at Sunrise Boulevard and Sungarden Drive, and has caused lane closures and traffic delays for the past few months.

    [Related: City gives ‘green light’ for new $2M stoplight on Sunrise Blvd]

    The City gave final approval on the multi-million dollar “Sunrise/Sungarden Intersection Improvements Project” last October, with the goal of improving traffic safety at a location where the city manager says people have been hit and killed in the past. The project was awarded to Teichert Construction and includes gutter, curb, sidewalk and bus stop improvements along a 1500 foot section of Sunrise Boulevard.

    City Management Analyst Regina Cave said scheduling of the April 9th paving during commute hours was necessary due to “temperature restrictions,” and estimates the full Sunrise Boulevard intersection project will “wrap up” by next month.

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    The City directs requests for additional information about the project to Regina Cave at (916) 727-4770 or rcave@citrusheights.net.