Mayor John Cooper Proposes a $3 Billion Budget for Fiscal Year 2024

Metro Nashville Mayor John Cooper has introduced his proposal for next fiscal year’s budget to Metro Council for review. The budget reflects over $3.2 billion in revenue, a 6.2 percent increase from fiscal year 2023. Areas of emphasis in the plan include nearly $100 million in new operating spending for Metro Nashville Public Schools (MNPS), an increase in first responder pay, and $50 million to increase Metro employees’ wages.

Mayor Cooper touted the financial successes of his term in his State of the Metro Address, in which he argued that public investments must keep up with private sector growth in the city. He listed four metrics by which a “great city” should be measured: police recruit classes, school funding per student, neighborhood infrastructure investments, and affordable housing units created.

Cooper’s proposed budget seeks to improve those metrics and more.

To increase public safety, the Mayor proposed $15 million in raises for police officers, hiring more officers to fully staff the 9th precinct, and over $10 million in increased fireman pay. Also proposed in the public safety section of the budget is $50,000 for a mail-in gun lock program, which would provide free gun locks for residents. First-year police officers will now make $65,000 per year, a 32 percent increase from four years ago.

While investments in policing are a line item in the budget, Cooper reminds Nashvillians that “there’s more to public safety than law enforcement.”

For school funding, Cooper proposed $99,970,300 in new operating spending for MNPS for fiscal year 2024. Additionally proposed was a pay increase for principals and associate principles, nearly $11 million to fix a “broken” substitute teacher system, and $8 million for a school lunch program which ensures that every Metro student gets a free lunch.

Over the last four years, Metro has added nearly $300 million in new recurring spending, which is, the mayor said in his address, “the largest increase over a four-year period in the history of Metro. By far.”

Yes, Every Kid

For neighborhood infrastructure investments, the budget proposal included $7.3 million in capital funding for Nashville General Hospital, capital investment in traffic calming, and a $10 million increase to the Metro and Regional Transit Authorities.

Finally, the mayor emphasized the need for affordable housing and solutions to homelessness. The new budget allows for $30 million towards the Barnes Fund for affordable housing, a $750,000 Community Partnership Fund, and a $500,000 Housing and Support Services Fund. The city looks to continue clearing large homeless encampments and rehousing their residents. The new Office of Homelessness will launch this July. Mayor Cooper claims that “[a]t our current pace, we will house all of Nashville’s chronically homeless population in the next three years.”

Mayor Cooper was bullish about how his budget will set up Nashville for future success: “If we responsibly manage our finances, invest in what works, and innovate to meet the challenges of tomorrow – we can be the best city in the United States.”

Metro Council vote on whether to approve the proposed budget at an upcoming meeting.

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Mac Roberts is a reporter at The Tennessee StarEmail tips to [email protected].
Photo “John Cooper” by John Cooper. Background Photo “Davidson County Courthouse” by euthman. CC BY-SA 2.0.

 

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4 Thoughts to “Mayor John Cooper Proposes a $3 Billion Budget for Fiscal Year 2024”

  1. Tom Richardson

    Typical Leftist “metric”. How much money are we throwing at it? How about measuring the output? Are we educating mindless drones or contributing citizens?

  2. SAD NASHVILLIAN

    This Mayor taking credit for additional revenue is typical of clueless Dems. People all over the country moved to “HOT” Nashville because they thought it would be better than the blue cities/states they moved from. Once they find out Nashville is a Woke, Blue city, they just might move elsewhere.
    Thanks to our State Legislators, Tennessee has no State Income tax much to the chagrin of the Democrats.
    Thanks to Mandatory Term Limits on our Metro Council, the voters lost their power in making local laws. The Council Members are Lame Ducks from the moment they get sworn in. As soon as Mandatory Term Limits were codified, the Voters lost Power. All the Power shifted to the Executive Branch (aka Mayor).
    Apparently Cooper hasn’t visited the destruction he has caused to the Nashille suburbs with his Gentrification Program, which is nothing more than a gift to his donors, so they can get rich building ugly cheap houses ( dont worry about those pesky codes) & apartments in the middle of what used to be long established beautiful, safe neighborhoods.
    Surprisingly, the Gentrification didn’t make into the Belle Meade area where the Mayor & his brother live.
    Davidson County Roads are a disgrace. Do we still have a Public Works Dept? Or do we have to donate to someone’s campaign in order to get driveable roads in our community? Maybe the mayor could take some of that new revenue to pave our roads.
    It’s a joke that more money going to MNPS. But the Dems love FAIL UP.
    If there this huge Revenue Increase, has the Mayor considered a refund to taxpayers?
    That would be an awesome GOOD BYE GIFT.

  3. Joe Blow

    Nothing like throwing millions down the rathole called homelessness with no objective goals. But I guess it makes the liberals feel good about themselves. And of course there is the bottomless money pit called MNPS. The operation that indoctrinates our children then dumps them onto society without the ability to read or add 2+2.

  4. Randall Davidson

    neighborhood infrastructure?? How is giving metro general hospital more money going to help my neighborhood??

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