Title: Municipal Budget
1Municipal Budget Finance 101
- GFOAz Annual Conference 2003
- Doug Sandstrom, City of Surprise
- Byron Smith, League of Arizona Cities and Towns
2Revenue Sources
- Intergovernmental (State Shared Revenue)
- Local Taxes
- Sales (TPT)
- Property
- User Fees
3State Shared Revenues-General
- Category
- Urban Revenue Sharing (Income Tax)
- 14.8 of 2 Years Prior
- Population Distribution
- General Government Purposes
- 365,065,000
- History
- 1972 Initiative
- Preempted from Local Income and Luxury Tax
- 15 Originally
- Has Fluctuated Over Time
4State Shared Revenues-General
- Category
- Sales Tax
- 25 of Distribution Base
- Population Distribution
- General Government Purposes
- 318,000,000
- History
- 1942 Initiative
- 1960 Initiative
- Increased Share
5State Shared Revenues-General
- Category
- Highway User Revenue Fund (HURF)
- 27.5
- Population and County of Origin of Gas Sales
Distribution - Restricted to Streets and Roads
- 294,000,000
- History
- 1946 Initiative
- Originally just Gas Tax
- Now Includes Other Transportation Related Fees
6State Shared Revenues-General
- Category
- Vehicle License Tax
- About 20 of VLT
- Population Distribution within Counties
- General Government Purposes
- 140,000,000
- History
- Evolved from Personal Property Tax on Vehicles
7State Shared Revenues-General
- Category
- Local Transportation Assistance Fund (LTAF)
- First 23 million after operating costs are met
- Population Distribution
- Restricted to Transportation/Transit
- History
- First in Line after it Passed
8State Shared Revenues-Local
- City of Surprise
- 14 of general fund operating budget
- Not dedicated to any particular activity
- HURF funds are used exclusively for street
maintenance operations - General fund subsidizes 24 of total streets
budget - LTAF
- Entire amount funds our Transit division
- Dial-a-Ride
- Must live within this allocation
9Local Revenues Sales Tax
- Model City Tax Code
- Established in 1987 after attempt to preempt
local sales tax authority - Brought uniformity with continued local control
but with options and green pages - Only 1 of 5 states that have this much authority
over the tax base. - National effort to Streamline
10Local Revenues Sales Tax
- Sales Tax
- 51 of general fund operating budget
- Several Components
- Retail
- Restaurant Bar
- Hotel/Motel
- Construction Onetime Revenue
- Attempt to maximize ongoing components
11Local Revenue - Sales Tax
12Major Sales Tax Components
13Local Revenues - Fees
- Permits Fees
- 16 of total General Fund Revenue
- Cost recovery (including overhead)
- User fees
- Pay to Play
- Only participants pay
- Cost recovery Philosophy
- 1 of general fund revenue
- Political Implications
14Local Revenues Utility Fees
- Utility Fees
- Business like activities
- Type of User Fee
- Each activity should be self supporting
- Sewer
- Water
- Replenishment
- Sanitation
- Political Implications
- City of Surprise 3-Year Ramp-up
15Local Revenues - Utility Fees
16Local Revenues - Property Tax
- Primary Secondary
- Primary may be used for any general government
purpose - Secondary is directly tied to debt service
- Both Require Voter Approval
- Primary has 2 increase over maximum levy
- Truth-in-Taxation
- Notification
- Based on Levy not Rate
17Local Revenues Property Tax
- Must be adopted on or before the 3rd Monday in
August - At least 7-days after final budget
- Requires a Public Hearing
- Truth-in-Taxation
- Must be published twice in a local newspaper
- 1st Publication 14 20 Days
- 2nd Publication 7 10 Days
- Requires Roll Call vote of the council
- Requires a Public Hearing
18Truth in Taxation
19Local Revenues Property Tax
- 6 of City of Surprise General Fund operating
revenues
20Local Revenues - Property Tax Rates
21Local Revenue Property Taxes
22State Imposed Expenditure Limitation
- 1979-80 Base limit adjusted annually
- Population and Inflation
- Uniform Expenditure Reporting System
- Penalties for Non-Compliance
- Why 1979-80?
- Prop 13 in California
- City of Surprise FY2003 Budget
- State Limit 11,657,725
- Adopted Budget 141,175,000
23Alternative Expenditure Limitations
- Home Rule aka Alternative Expenditure Limitation
(AEL) - Permanent Base Adjustment
- Capital Projects Accumulation Fund
- One-Time Override
- Similar process for all
- Detailed and Summary Analysis
- Submission to Auditor General, etc.
- Dont fail unless other political turmoil exists
24COS Expenditure Limitation
25City of Surprise
- Home Rule Election on March 11, 2003
- Passage of an Alternative Expenditure limitation
is imperative - Process
- Publicity pamphlet
- Neighborhood Meetings/HOAs
- City Council District Meetings
- Council as Spokespeople
- Education is key
26COS Home Rule Analysis
27COS Permanent Base Adjustment
- Intend to Pursue PBA in 2005
- Mid-point of 4-year Home Rule
- Fail safe
28Budget/Tax Levy
- Process/calendar determined locally
- State Budget Forms
- Provided by Auditor General
- Tentative Budget must be adopted by the 3rd
Monday in July - Cant go above this adopted amount in Final
- Final Budget Adoption
- 2nd Monday in August if Property Tax
- No Specific Date if No Property Tax
- Adoption can be by simple motion
29Surprise FY2004 Budget Calendar
- October 29 CIP Kick-off
- December 13 CIP Projects Due
- December 18 Budget Kick-off
- February 14 All Budget Requests Due
- March 17 21 Management Team Budget
Reviews - April 16 Tentative Budget presented to
City Manager - May Council Retreat
- June 12 Tentative Budget Adopted
30Other
- Accounting
- No expenditure may be made that is not authorized
in the budget - May not exceed amounts indicated in final budget
- Budget transfers that do not change the bottom
line - Audits
- Required Annually for Cities (Bi-annually for
Towns) - Outside CPA or Licensed Public Accountant
- Filed with Auditor General by October 31
- 120 day extension available
31Other
- Bonding
- General Obligation
- Voter Approval Required
- Revenue
- Voter Approval Required
- Non-Profit Corporation
- MPC Generally Revenue Producing projects
- No Voter Approval
- Investments
- Deposits in Excess of 100,000
- Local Government Investment Pool (LGIP)
32Federal Requirements
- Single Audit
- Required on federal grants if more than 300,000
is received in a given year - Generally contract with current Auditor
- Davis-Bacon Act
- All projects utilizing 25 or more federal funds
must pay prevailing wages
33Purchasing
- Bidding Requirements
- General Projects - 16,565 (Labor Only)
- Street Projects - 177,487 (Total Cost)
- Recreational Projects - 153,189 (Total Cost)
- Sale of Real or Personal Property
- Professional Service Alternatives
- Design/Build
- Architects
- Engineers
34Dates to remember
- Specific Dates are listed in the League Book
- Budget Adoption
- Tax Levy Adoption
- Truth-in-Taxation
- Audit Filing
- Public Notices
35Municipal Budget Finance 101
- GFOAz Annual Conference 2003
- Doug Sandstrom, City of Surprise
- Byron Smith, League of Arizona Cities and Towns