Cleveland proposes $105 million wish list for street repairs, park and recreation upgrades and buildings

Cleveland regularly borrows money to fix up streets, repair recreation centers, buy new vehicles and make other brick-and-mortar upgrades to property the city owns.

This year, City Hall is doing things differently. It is paying up front in cash, a move Finance Director Paul Barrett said will launch projects faster and save on borrowing costs.

The source of that cash: the General Fund’s $91 million surplus from last year. Cleveland will borrow money at the end of the year to reimburse itself for the cash it spent on capital projects…

Story continues

TRENDING NOW

LATEST LOCAL NEWS