The Lansing city council may soon face a critical test to see if it might be able to override the mayor’s plans for how to spend property tax money earmarked for public safety.
The Lansing city council is expected to vote in two weeks on the city’s budget for next year. But one major point of contention between the council and mayor Virg Bernero remains.
Voters last year approved a special public safety property tax. The mayor wants to spend part of the revenue next year on hiring back more than a half dozen laid off police officers and renovate a city owned building for police operations.
But Council President Brian Jeffries and other council members would rather all the money be spent on hiring laid off police officers. But in the end, he says it’s a question of numbers.
"It takes five votes to amend the budget on the floor," says Jeffries, "and once its passed it takes six votes to override a veto."
Jeffries says he hasn’t polled his fellow council members on how they will vote on the mayor’s public safety budget.
The council has until the middle of this month to act on the mayor’s budget plan.