Ten years into an era of reduced state aid, many metro cities have trimmed down, wised up and stopped expecting any of the funding that used to help them pay for plowing, police, parks and other services.
The regrouping is remarkable given the sky-is-falling reaction when the cuts to local government aid (LGA) first hit in 2003 to help close a state budget gap.
In the years since, cities spent reserves, raised property taxes, cut services and reduced staff to make ends meet and become less dependent on aid from St. Paul.
As they prepare this month to certify 2013 budgets, more than 60 percent of metro cities have stopped getting LGA entirely, and others have stopped counting on it for operating cash.
"As far as LGA is concerned, we don't expect it anymore," said Heidi Tumberg, finance officer for Excelsior. After raising property taxes to make up for the $130,000 it once counted on in state aid, "We have kind of weaned ourselves off of that and we are not ever going to put it back in our budget because it's so unreliable," she said.
South St. Paul has made a similar move. The city received almost $3.3 million in LGA in 2002, but in 2012 that was down to $1.6 million.
After spending years scrambling to make up for the erosion of LGA dollars, the city has stopped counting on a specific amount; it now sets aside any aid that does come through for park and street improvements or equipment purchases, which can be delayed if necessary so "the precipitous change of local government aid doesn't cripple us as it did in the past," said City Administrator Stephen King.
Many municipalities have taken the same approach, said Gary Carlson, director of intergovernmental relations at the League of Minnesota Cities. "What South St. Paul is doing has become commonplace."