On Monday, the Budget Committee will take up the mayor’s $7.8 billion budget — with 431 more “full-time-equivalent employees” even after 73 jobs are eliminated by privatizing Chicago’s 311 non-emergency system.

The Budget Committee will also vote on a catch-all management ordinance that includes a 66 percent increase in Chicago booting fees and a five-fold increase in the maximum penalty imposed against property owners who fail to remove snow and ice from the sidewalks abutting their building.

On Tuesday, the Finance Committee will take up the mayor’s $712 million revenue package.

To confront Chicago’s $30 billion pension crisis and eliminate the structural deficit he inherited, Emanuel’s lower-the-boom menu includes a four-year, $588 million property tax increase for police and fire pensions and school construction; a $9.50-a-month garbage collection fee to raise $62 million; $13 million in higher fees for building permits; a $1 million tax on e-cigarettes, and $48 million in fees and surcharges on taxicabs and ride-sharing services that have siphoned business away from them.

If any of the votes are going to be close, it’s the one for the garbage fee and Emanuel understands why.

It’s a new fee for a service many homeowners believe “is kind of baked in” to the normal property tax bill that would add $114 to the annual cost heaped on 613,000 Chicago owners of single-family homes, two-, three- and four-flats that still get city pickups. Senior citizens would get a 50 percent discount.

Ald. Howard Brookins (21st), former chairman of the City Council’s Black Caucus, is so dead set against the idea, he wants the mayor to cancel the garbage fee and raise the property tax even higher to make up for the lost revenue.

“The average property tax increase is $110. The average garbage fee is $120. If you have a two-flat, it’s $240. It’s a hard sell for our residents,” Brookins said.

“I would prefer the city fund basic operations out of the property tax, which is a more reliable tax going forward, and get away from fines and fees or come up with some other ideas.”