Consent-Law & Justice Services # 38.
Board of Supervisors
Sheriff-Coroner/Public Administrator
- Meeting Date:
- 11/22/2022
- Brief Title
- Sheriff's Office Animal Control Service Agreement with the City of West Sacramento
From:
Tom Lopez, Sheriff-Coroner-Public Administrator, Sheriff's Office
Staff Contact:
Matthew Davis, Undersheriff, Sheriff's Office, x5395
Supervisorial District Impact:
District 1
Subject
Approve the revenue agreement for animal control services with the City of West Sacramento for the term of July 1, 2022 through June 30, 2023 in the amount of $824,011. (No general fund impact) (Lopez/Davis)
Recommended Action
Approve the revenue agreement for animal control services with the City of West Sacramento for the term of July 1, 2022 through June 30, 2023 in the amount of $824,011. (No general fund impact) (Lopez/Davis)
Strategic Plan Goal(s)
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Safe Communities |
Reason for Recommended Action/Background
Yolo County, through the Sheriff’s Office Animal Services Section, is contractually responsible for providing all cities, unincorporated areas, and the campus of UC Davis (UCD) with animal control ordinance enforcement, dog licensing, shelter operation and spay/neuter education services. In the past fiscal years, the Sheriff’s Office has contracted with the City of Davis, City of West Sacramento, City of Winters, City of Woodland, and UCD to receive reimbursement of such services. The term of the proposed five agreements with each jurisdiction is from July 1, 2022 through June 30, 2023 with all agreements totaling $2,630,829 as detailed in the table below.
| FY 22/23 | |
| Davis | $578,423 |
| West Sacramento | $824,011 |
| Winters | $74,431 |
| Woodland | $1,090,770 |
| University of California, Davis | $63,194 |
| Total | $2,630,829 |
The Sheriff’s Office will provide:
- The pickup of stray animals not in the presence of their owners that may be injured or sick and require the provision of medical care per Penal Code section 597(f).
- The provision of rabies control including quarantine of biting animals and the pickup of high risk rabies animals for testing, per Health and Safety Code sections 120210-121690.
- Assistance to the Yolo County Coroner, fire departments, or other law enforcement agencies.
- Response to vicious animals.
- Response to contained stray or free roaming dogs
- The receiving and forwarding of Animal Complaint Reports to the appropriate jurisdiction
Services shall be limited to 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday through Saturday. Services will be provided outside these specific hours only when authorized in advance by a representative of the requesting city, except for when required by Health and Safety Code section 121595 and 121600 or Penal Code section 597(f). In addition to the agreed compensation amounts, an additional hourly fee of $47.00 per hour will be reimbursed by the cities for any extraordinary incident defined as requiring a response time of more than ten County staff hours.
Total program cost to the cities and UCD is based on the Recommended Fiscal Year 2022-23 Animal Services budget. The total program cost is allocated between the cities of Davis, West Sacramento, Winters, Woodland, UCD, and Yolo County based on a three-year rolling average of the number of animals housed and number of calls for service in order to smooth out any drastic changes to patrol calls, animals housed, and/or licenses sold from year to year. As a result, net program costs are recovered through these revenue agreements, with Yolo County only responsible for the portion of costs associated with animal shelter and patrol services provided to the unincorporated areas of the county.
For Fiscal Year 2022-23, Sheriff’s Office fiscal staff presented the cities with their calculated contract amount, with the understanding that the quarterly amount to be billed per the contract would be reduced by the amount of licenses sold for that jurisdiction and other revenues received during the quarter. This ensures that the Animal Services budget will realize their full revenue appropriation of $3,424,116 while potentially reducing agreement amounts and increasing licensing compliance.
The one-year term revenue agreement allows for budgetary flexibility year over year. The Sheriff’s Office will continue to work with the participating agencies to look at every option possible to optimize the operating expenditures, increase revenues, and enhance the services provided by the Animal Services Section. The participating agencies have agreed to take a more active role in reducing service calls after hours, which has been in effect since 2015.
Because this agreement is between government entities, Board of Supervisors approval is now requested. The Sheriff’s Office will return to the Board with the remaining city contracts at a later date.
Total program cost to the cities and UCD is based on the Recommended Fiscal Year 2022-23 Animal Services budget. The total program cost is allocated between the cities of Davis, West Sacramento, Winters, Woodland, UCD, and Yolo County based on a three-year rolling average of the number of animals housed and number of calls for service in order to smooth out any drastic changes to patrol calls, animals housed, and/or licenses sold from year to year. As a result, net program costs are recovered through these revenue agreements, with Yolo County only responsible for the portion of costs associated with animal shelter and patrol services provided to the unincorporated areas of the county.
For Fiscal Year 2022-23, Sheriff’s Office fiscal staff presented the cities with their calculated contract amount, with the understanding that the quarterly amount to be billed per the contract would be reduced by the amount of licenses sold for that jurisdiction and other revenues received during the quarter. This ensures that the Animal Services budget will realize their full revenue appropriation of $3,424,116 while potentially reducing agreement amounts and increasing licensing compliance.
The one-year term revenue agreement allows for budgetary flexibility year over year. The Sheriff’s Office will continue to work with the participating agencies to look at every option possible to optimize the operating expenditures, increase revenues, and enhance the services provided by the Animal Services Section. The participating agencies have agreed to take a more active role in reducing service calls after hours, which has been in effect since 2015.
Because this agreement is between government entities, Board of Supervisors approval is now requested. The Sheriff’s Office will return to the Board with the remaining city contracts at a later date.
Collaborations (including Board advisory groups and external partner agencies)
County Counsel has approved the attached agreement and approved as to form. The County Administrator provides oversight in reaching concurrence with the participating cities and UCD on the calculation of each entity’s portioned cost of the program’s $3,424,116 Recommended budget. Sheriff’s Office staff has historically collaborated with each jurisdiction to prorate the program’s costs.
Competitive Bid Process/Vendor Performance
As this agreement is a revenue agreement, no competitive bid occurred.
Fiscal Impact
Fiscal impact (see budgetary detail below)
Fiscal Impact (Expenditure)
- Total cost of recommended action:
- $
- Amount budgeted for expenditure:
- $ 824,011
- Additional expenditure authority needed:
- $ 0
- One-time commitment:
- Yes
Source of Funds for this Expenditure
- Law Enforcement Services
- $716,626
- Animal Licenses
- $78,292
- Donations and Fees for Se
- $29,093
Further explanation as needed:
The Fiscal Year 2022-23 Animal Services current Recommended Budget appropriation includes $3,424,116 in total revenue. This includes the minimum cumulative amount of $2,162,862 in reimbursement revenue from the cities, $433,459 for licensing sales, and $119,000 from donations and other fees for service. The City of West Sacramento's portion is $824,011. The fiscal year 2022-23 contract amounts billed quarterly to the cities and UCD will be reduced by the amount of licenses sold for that jurisdiction and other revenues received during the quarter to ensure that the Animal Services budget will realize their full appropriation for revenue.
Attachments
Form Review
| Inbox | Reviewed By | Date |
|---|---|---|
| Matt Davis | Matt Davis | 11/03/2022 01:49 PM |
| Tom Lopez | Tom Lopez | 11/09/2022 10:28 AM |
| Financial Services | Tom Haynes | 11/09/2022 10:54 AM |
| County Counsel | Hope Welton | 11/09/2022 11:36 AM |
- Form Started By:
- Selena Hobbs
- Started On:
- 11/01/2022 01:52 PM
- Final Approval Date:
- 11/10/2022
