Augusta, GA
Tax more or cut more? Augusta leaders face tough budget questions
AUGUSTA, Ga. (WRDW/WAGT) – The budget was among the matters discussed Tuesday by Augusta Commission members during a work session ahead of the official commission meeting.
The city is facing what it considers a roughly $8 million “shortfall” due to the conclusion of American Rescue Fund money that the city has come to count on in recent years.
That may be why City Administrator Tameka Allen said there will be “tough conversations to come.” She called the budget a “living document” subject to change.
Among the discussions were how many vacancies each department has.
There are 109 vacancies across the city that when filled would account for $4.9 million. That’s 4% of the 2025 general fund budget.
The vacancies – many of which are fairly recent – include:
- Administrator – 5 (valued at a minimum of $373,026)
- Animal services – 3 (valued at a minimum of $135,073)
- Central services – 6 (valued at a minimum of $216,735
- Civil and magistrate court- 7 (valued at a minimum of $228,338)
- Clerk of commission – 1 (valued at a minimum of $31,212)
- Clerk of superior court- 2 (valued at a minimum of $81,798)
- District attorney- 5 (valued at a minimum of $235,845)
- Emergency management- 1 (valued at a minimum of $59,820)
- Engineering– 19 (valued at a minimum of $863,051)
- Finance- 5 (valued at a minimum of 256,854)
- Human resources – 1 (valued at a minimum of $87,566)
- Juvenile court – 4 (valued at a minimum of $255,248)
- Law – 4 (valued at a minimum of $235,554)
- Marshal- 4 (valued at a minimum of $140,430)
- Mayor- 1 (valued at a minimum of $40,162)
- Parks and Recreation – 15 (valued at a minimum of $542,434)
- Planning and Development – 4 (valued at a minimum of $142,629)
- Procurement – 2 (valued at a minimum of $142,450)
- Public Defender- 3 (valued at a minimum of $154,113)
- RCCI – 3 (valued at a minimum of $114, 566)
- State Court Solicitor – 2 (valued at a minimum of $64, 896)
- Superior Court – 6 (valued at a minimum of $247,900)
- Tax assessor – 3 (valued at a minimum of $128,211)
- Tax commissioner – 3 (valued at a minimum of $102,860)
There are 428 other city vacancies funded through other sources, totaling $17.3 million. Those include:
- 911 (12 vacancies, valued at a minimum of $390,202, 7% of fund)
- Building inspections (5 vacancies, valued at a minimum of $300,352, 8% of fund)
- Grants (6 vacancies, valued at a minimum of $341,091, 3% of fund)
- Housing and Community Development (4 vacancies, valued at a minimum of $180, 306, 1% of fund)
- Law enforcement (sheriff) (167 vacancies, valued at a minimum of $8,193,769, 10% of fund)
- Fire protection (66 vacancies, valued at a minimum of $2,770,475, 7% of fund)
- Street lights (1 vacancy, valued at a minimum of $45,738, 1% of fund)
- SPLOST 8 engineering admininstration (2 vacancies, valued at a minimum of $85,055, 6%)
- Water and sewage utilities (84 vacancies, valued at a minimum of $3,617,257, 2% of fund)
- Waste management (11 vacancies, valued at a minimum of $577,415 , 3% of fund)
- Garbage collection (3 vacancies, valued at a minimum of $220,358, 1% of fund)
- Augusta Regional Airport (18 vacancies, valued at a minimum of $812,176 , 1% of fund)
- Stormwater utility (9 vacancies, valued at a minimum of469,773 , 3% of fund)
- Risk management (1 vacancy valued at a minimum of $38,866 – 1% of fund)
Regarding the Richmond County Sheriff’s Office and criminal justice, the administrator recommends reviewing pay structures in detail with a human resources analyst and bringing back a proposal in February for mid-year implementation. She said they’ll need to bring back proposals for funding their requests.
Allen says care must be taken to avoid inequities between the public defender and the district attorney’s staff.
She says she has spoken to the public defender’s, district attorney’s and sheriff’s offices and that their requests would create inequities.

She said she’s looked at the budget and identified some potential cuts and reallocation of resources to pay for staffing.
The administrator opened the floor to commissioners for questions.
Bobby Williams suggested a tax increase.
“We always say that we’re the second largest city in Georgia, but we act like we’re a much smaller entity,” he said.
Williams says commissioners always talk about what Columbia and Aiken counties are doing, but “never consider the fact that in many of those areas when they do a tax increase, people just pay up.. We sit up and all we do is complain.”

Williams mentioned that the school district raised taxes and that the commission needs to add maybe 1%-1.5%.
Williams says with that money, they could fund the sheriff’s, DA’s and public defender’s offices.
“We need to stop thinking like a second-tier city and start thinking like a first-tier city,” he said.
“We’re never going to reach where we need to go if all we do is sit in place. And that’s all we’ve been doing for the last four or five years because all we do every year is roll back taxes,” he said. “Well, if you roll back enough, you don’t get enough.”

Tony Lewis said he agree with Williams, that when it comes to public safety, “I don’t think there is a price that we can put on keeping our citizens in Augusta-Richmond County safe.”
Lewis says the sheriff’s office can arrest and have as many inmates as the jail can hold, but added: “If we don’t have a DA’s office that is handling the caseloads, dealing with those criminals that are locked up, then we’re going to still be doing the same thing repeating over and over.”
He mentioned concerns about jail overcrowding, saying the last thing officials want is for the Justice Department to come in and have to tell them what they need to do when it comes to making the current jail situation better.
“Sometimes we have to resolve to relying on the citizens by way of a tax increase,” he said.

Jordan Johnson asked Allen about finding money elsewhere by specifically cutting services.
Johnson said: “There are some areas where we can cut government spending to apply to some places where we feel like the money could be better spent.”
Allen became frustrated, saying she and her team are doing “everthing we possible could be doing in less than 60 days to provide a balanced budget.”
Allen said: “These decisions and where we are today didn’t just start today. This has been ongoing for a couple of years, a few years. You’re asking us to come back in less than 60 days and have the magic pill. There is no magic pill at this point.”
She said: “I can go back in the room right now in 30 minutes and say I’m cutting this, this and this, but it is not going to be the right solution that I feel I’m comfortable with doing just to make a certain group happy. You need to make all the employees happy. Everybody needs to be considered, not just a certain group.”

Catherine Smith McKnight said she agreed with her colleagues about “not being able to put a price on public safety.”
She said to Allen: “You’re saying to come back in February and if that’s where we are, I want to make sure that we do this, we get them some money in February. And if it means pulling some unused positions or money from other positions, then we might have to do that in order to help them out.”
Francine Scott said: “When it comes to criminal justice, there are not if ands or buts, but as soon as possible. I don’t know about 60 days, I’m still not committed to the 60 days.”
She mentioned the problems of the Fulton County Jail and said: “If we don’t fix the problems by increasing the sheriff’s budget and increasing the DA and public defender’s office, then we are going to be just like they are right now.”
Sean Frantom acknowledged that no one can agree on anything and says if they are going to get a six-person majority, then they have to cut something, and have those “tough decisions before the end of the year.”
He said: “I’m also going to challenge the colleagues up here that if you’re that passionate about sheriff, DA, and public defenders, then you’ve got to be ready to cut the NGOs. I think that a tax increase is off the table. I think that we’ve got to get this government in line before we even talk about a tax increase.”
Frantom says there is some “fluff in this government,” mentioning the demolition program in the engineering department, a lobbyist the city sends to Atlanta and mosquito control as examples.
Allen said the meeting is technically not over until the budget is approved.
She said they are in “recess” right now. How long they are in recess, she says, is up to the clerk of commission. But she’s looking at Nov. 26.
Also in the news
- Commissioners failed to approve an audition of the Parks and Recreation Department. It will likely go back before commissioners next month.
- Commissioners approved the purchase of 808, 811, 819 and 825 Laney Walker Blvd. to the Land Bank Authority for $800,000 in connection with ongoing redevelopment efforts in the Laney Walker Bethlehem area.
- Commissions agreed to lease the municipal golf course to Land Bank Authority for 50 years.
- Commissioners voted to allow haulers to go into gated communities to pick up debris.
- Commissioners decided to close the nominations for Parks and Recreation Department director.
Copyright 2024 WRDW/WAGT. All rights reserved.
Augusta, GA
The Richmond County Sheriff’s Office is seeking the public’s assistance with locating Nia Hudson.
Posted:
Updated:
Augusta, Ga (WJBF)– The Richmond County Sheriff’s Office is seeking the public’s assistance with locating Nia Hudson.
According to RCSO, Hudson was last seen on the 3500 Block of Peach Orchard Road at 5:00pm this evening wearing a red shirt and black shorts.
Hudson suffers from Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorder.
Anyone that comes in contact with Nia Hudson or has any information as to their whereabouts is asked to contact any on call investigator at the Richmond County Sheriff’s Office at 706-821-1085 or 706-821-1020.
Nia Hudson: 27 years old, 216 pounds, 5’06”
Augusta, GA
Augusta man missing off Georgia coast as search continues
AUGUSTA, Ga. (WRDW/WAGT) – The Coast Guard and McIntosh County Fire Department continued searching Friday for an Augusta man who went missing off the Georgia coast, as a body was found Thursday.
Roman Waldera’s daughter spoke about the last conversation she had with her father before he disappeared while fishing.
“I actually spoke to my dad in the morning he went missing. We talked back and forth a little bit and then he told me, well, I’m on the boat. I’ve got to get going. We’re going to start fishing. And I was like, all right, we’ll be careful. I love you,” she said.
The Coast Guard called her after Waldera went missing.
“After we got the call, my first goal was to get down there and start searching the island of Blackbeard,” she said.
Community joins search efforts
Shellman’s Fish Camp and other local boat owners joined the search in Sapelo Sound.
“I mean, everybody in the area who had a boat, they were on the sound, and it ended up, I was coordinating with the Coast Guard this whole time,” Waldera’s daughter said.
She said her father’s teachings motivated her to take action.
“So my dad raised me and my grandparents to get it done. Don’t wait around. Don’t sit around. Don’t wait for someone else to do the work. If someone’s going to make it happen, it’s going to be you. And I just, I thought, what would my dad want? He’d want me down there and he would want me looking,” she said.
She described what she would do if reunited with her father.
“I think I just hugged him. I think he just hugged me because I think he knows that I was down there. I was all alone doing that, looking for him all day long. I slept in his room. I think he knows. I think he knows everything, and I don’t think there need to be any words. I think we just love each other,” she said.
The Coast Guard asks anyone with information about the disappearance to call 843-453-1261. Officials said crews not part of the official search can create unsafe conditions and hinder response efforts.
Copyright 2025 WRDW/WAGT. All rights reserved.
Augusta, GA
Former WWE stars involved in ‘Wrestling for a Cause’ event in Augusta
AUGUSTA, Ga. (WRDW/WAGT) – The community wrestled for a cause at the Georgia-Carolina fairgrounds Saturday night.
Famous wrestlers from the WWE came to the CSRA for the show.
Silent Fights raised money for a local family that lost their home to a fire, as well as former WWE star Toni Rose, who is battling cancer.
Former WWE stars like Johnny Swinger and Heath Slater made appearances.
We spoke with these headliners and CSRA Championship Wrestling about the event.
This is definitely the biggest card of the year. WWE star here, Heat Slater, myself, TNA, WWE, all the major organizations. And we got some good young up and coming talent here that’s going to go out there and tear it up and do the best that we can,” said Swinger.
Copyright 2025 WRDW/WAGT. All rights reserved.
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