Stockton faces end of mediation, weighs bankruptcy
Topics: From the Wires, News
FILE - In this Feb. 29, 2012 file photo, a Stockton city worker walks away from city hall in Stockton, Calif. Stockton, the California city with the second-highest foreclosure rate in the nation, is facing a moment of decision on whether to become the biggest American city to file for bankruptcy, as the deadline for talks between the city and its creditors approaches late Monday. (AP Photo/Ben Margot, file)(Credit: AP)FRESNO, Calif. (AP) — Stockton officials continued to grapple with the city’s financial plight, struggling to restructure millions of dollars of debt threatening to turn the city with the nation’s second-highest foreclosure rate into the largest U.S. city to file for bankruptcy.
Council members met Tuesday to discuss the financial plight. The city had until 11:59 p.m.to reach a deal with its creditors under a new state mediation law designed to help municipalities avoid bankruptcy.
Stockton spokeswoman Connie Cochran said those negotiations were confidential and that nothing would be announced at the deadline.
“Nothing is going to happen,” until the City Council meeting, Cochran said.
Previous negotiating sessions with the 18 creditors have stretched past midnight and remained confidential.
To avoid bankruptcy, any deal would have to result in sufficient savings to make the city solvent.
Officials have made preparations in case mediation efforts fail. The Stockton City Council is scheduled to decide Tuesday night whether to adopt a special budget to close the city’s projected $26 million deficit in case bankruptcy protection is sought.
California cities are required by law to adopt a balanced budget by July 1 of each year.
If mediation fails and council members adopt the special budget, Stockton’s lawyers could file for Chapter 9 protection in court as early as Wednesday, City Manager Bob Deis said.
City officials say this river port city of 290,000 in the Central Valley has run out of options. In recent years, thousands of new homes mushroomed in Stockton, part of a suburban housing boom that attracted buyers from the San Francisco Bay area and beyond.
When the economy crashed and the construction bubble burst, Stockton was battered by foreclosures and lost income from property taxes and other fees.
Multi-year labor contracts for city workers with escalating costs and generous retirement plans added to the burden. And expensive city investments — a promenade, a sports arena and a hotel — failed to produce an economic boon.
The city also has high crime and unemployment rates. It has twice topped Forbes magazine’s list of “America’s most miserable cities.”
In the past three years, officials addressed $90 million in deficits through a series of drastic cuts. They eliminated one-fourth of the city’s police officers, one-third of the fire staff and 40 percent of all other employees. They also cut wages and medical benefits.




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