The latest Cobb County budget proposal suggests shutting the doors of most of the county's libraries by the end of the month in addition to other budget-slashing measures.

The Marietta Daily Journal is reporting that all but four library locations in the county would close by May 1 under Cobb County Board of Commissioners Chairman Tim Lee's budget-balancing plan. The MDJ says Lee's proposal to close a deficit in the current fiscal year estimated at more than $31 million would close 13 of 17 libraries countywide, three senior centers, two swimming pools and the Mable House amphitheater, as well as cutting back on other services. Each county department would be asked to cut its budget by 3.5 percent, and the millage rate would rise by 0.5 mil for the fire fund, costing the owner of a $200,000 home $40 a year.

The county commissioners plan to enact a plan Tuesday morning to eliminate the $31 million deficit projected for fiscal 2011, which runs through Sept. 30. Sinking property values, now expected to fall 7 percent on average in this year's assessments, have produced the budget gap. The tax increase would defy the consensus the commission reached March 22 after a budget work session, when only West Cobb Commissioner Helen Goreham spoke in favor of considering raising taxes.

East Cobb Commissioner Bob Ott held two town-hall meetings on the budget in the past week and a half and did not waver in his opposition to a tax increase. "What we have to do once again is make sure we are using our assets as efficiently as possible," Ott said Wednesday night in Smyrna. "You have to look at the cost of the services being provided and are we giving something away, because we just can't afford to do that anymore."

In both town-hall meetings, Ott floated the idea of alternating opening days for the East Cobb and East Marietta libraries, but he did not talk about closing branches.

He said he spent Wednesday going through the budget suggestions submitted by the public, "and by far the most comments are on libraries. I would say generally the comments are that during these hard economic times, it's where people can go look for jobs, get on the Internet. There are a lot of services and I think the board recognizes that."

Helen Poyer, the director of the Cobb County Public Library System, sent out an e-mail message Thursday to library supporters, urging them to lobby commissioners to protect the libraries. Two Marietta-based branches – Kemp Memorial and Hattie G. Wilson – are targeted for May 1 closure under Lee's proposal, although the main branch on Roswell Street will remain open. Regional libraries in East Cobb, South Cobb and West Cobb would also remain open.