Mayor: Community involvement needed in trying times
by Sarah Cooper
Mar 02, 2009 | 672 views | 0 0 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Tribune/Dan McGee - An almost full house was on hand Monday to hear Mayor Geno Martini give his annual State of the City Speech.
Tribune/Dan McGee - An almost full house was on hand Monday to hear Mayor Geno Martini give his annual State of the City Speech.
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Maurice Holmes came in from the rain Monday to watch Sparks Mayor Geno Martini give his State of the City speech.

After Martini pled with the crowd for patience and participation as the city operates on a leaner budget, Holmes, a city public works utility worker, said he didn’t really hear anything new.

“It was about what I expected,” Holmes said.

Since January, the public works department has been operating on a leaner staff after the city was forced to eliminate 11 positions.

“We do what we can … with fewer people,” Holmes said. “They are re-engineering some stuff right now on that.”

As Martini addressed the city’s faltering budget in his morning speech, he asked citizens to lend the city their volunteer hours and their patience.

“I am making a plea to all our citizens to please understand if it takes a little while longer to repair our streets or approve building plans and building inspections or cut the grass and trim the landscaping at our parks,” Martini said. “These are not easy times. In fact, they are unprecedented times in the modern-day history of our state and nation. We need your help. If you care about Sparks, if you care about the future of your city, we need your input and you must get involved.”

Martini said that the police department needs 54 new officers today in order to fall in line with national law enforcement coverage averages. He encouraged residents to volunteer to patrol the Sparks Marina and downtown Victorian Square as well as start their own Neighborhood Watch programs.

He also urged residents to take greater responsibility for their neighborhood parks by picking up trash and cleaning up graffiti.

“It is imperative that our citizens work together to clean up graffiti on private property,” Martini said. “I encourage civic and volunteer groups to help us tackle this problem.”

Martini’s discussion of the city’s budget woes over the past year began by pointing a finger at a faltering housing market. According to Martini, one out of every 134 homes was in the foreclosure process last year in Washoe County.

“It will be a great year if we hit an economic bottom,” Martini said, while in the next breath anticipating possible economic recovery sometime in 2010.
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