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30 results for “department budget” · other

  • ZONING DISTRICTS Updated October 18, 2024 Who to contact: Zoning

    Oct 18, 2024

    ·Madison, WI
    Other

    This document is a reference guide to Madison's zoning districts updated October 18, 2024, listing all residential, mixed-use, commercial, employment, special, overlay, and historic districts with their designations and codes. The guide provides contact information for the zoning department and references to the relevant ordinance chapters (Chapter 28 Zoning Code and Chapter 41 Historic Preservation), along with resources including an online zoning map. No budget figures, policy changes, or meeting decisions are discussed; the document serves as an informational resource for understanding the city's zoning classification system.

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  • Current Progress - 2025

    Tulsa, OK
Other

The City of Tulsa's Office of Financial Empowerment and Community Wealth (OFE), officially launched in January 2023 under the Department of Resilience and Equity, provides programs and resources to improve financial stability and reduce economic disparities. The OFE was formally added to the City's General Fund Budget for Fiscal Year 2026, including two positions: Director and Financial Empowerment Program Assistant, with $330,000 in American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funding secured for Financial Empowerment Center operations and $95,000 from private local foundations. For fiscal years 2026–2027, the office will receive an additional $150,000 in funding. The Tulsa Financial Empowerment Center, whose planning began in February 2020, operates as part of the city's broader resilience strategy and has leveraged Community Development Block Grant, ARPA, and private foundation grants to support its operations.

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  • Participatory Budgeting - City of Jersey City

    Jersey City, NJ
    Other

    In March 2022, Jersey City opened applications for participatory budgeting, inviting residents to submit and vote on community projects for funding up to $50,000 per ward. Approved projects across six wards total $295,000 and include tree-planting initiatives in Wards B, C, D, and F ($170,000 combined), water fountains in four parks ($28,000), family literacy workshops in Ward A ($32,000), playground improvements in Ward E ($15,000), a bus shelter in Ward D ($5,000), planters for downtown safety in Ward E ($30,000), and support for the Big Brother Big Sister Program in Ward F ($15,000). The program allows residents to propose ideas by answering how projects benefit their community and location, after which city departments consolidate similar submissions and develop scopes, timelines, and costs for implementation.

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  • Wisconsin Public Meeting Notices and Minutes - Department of Administration

    Madison, WI
    Other

    This document is a homepage and index for Wisconsin's Public Meeting Notices & Minutes portal, a centralized website where state agencies post open meeting notices and minutes to increase government transparency. The page displays a searchable database of upcoming and past public meetings scheduled across various state departments, including the Department of Safety & Professional Services, Higher Educational Aids Board, and Department of Workforce Development, with meetings listed from May through September 2026. No specific budget figures, policy decisions, or meeting outcomes are discussed in this portal interface document.

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    government transparencypublic meetingsstate administration
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  • Fiscal Year 2023-25 Overview of the City Budget Process City of Oakland

    Oakland, CA
    Other

    The City of Oakland's fiscal year 2023-25 budget overview describes the city's biannual budget process, which runs from January to June and must result in a balanced budget by June 30. Oakland's total annual budget is approximately $1.7 billion, comprising 62 percent Restricted Funds (grants and voter-approved bonds designated for specific purposes) and 38 percent General Purpose Funds (primarily tax-supported and flexible). Revenue sources include taxes (51 percent), service charges, fines, licenses, and permits (15 percent), bonds and other sources (14 percent), transfers (12 percent), and grants and subsidies (8 percent). The largest departmental allocations are Non-Departmental (23.9 percent), Police Department (21.2 percent), Fire Department (11.5 percent), Oakland Public Works (10.3 percent), and Human Services (7 percent). Property taxes contribute less than 26 cents per dollar to the city, with the remaining amount distributed to other government agencies including Alameda County, Oakland Unified School District, AC Transit, and others.

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  • Budget Administration

    Allentown, PA
    Other

    The Budget Administration program guides departments in creating the City's annual budget, manages budget transfers and ordinance-based changes throughout the year, and oversees administration of the City's finances including pensions, borrowing, and debt structuring. The program ensures departments and the public receive timely and accurate financial information. Contact information is provided for pension questions, budget questions, and NIZ reporting, all accessible through phone (610) 437-7500 or designated email addresses.

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  • 2021 Municipal Directory Monroe County Planning Commission

    Pocono Township, PA
    Other

    This is a 2021 municipal directory for Monroe County Planning Commission that serves as a reference guide containing contact information, meeting schedules, and administrative details for the county's planning bodies and municipalities. The document is organized as a table of contents listing Monroe County departments, the Planning Commission and Conservation District boards and staff, and individual township and borough entries. No budget figures, policy decisions, or meeting discussions are presented in this directory document.

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    planning commissionmunicipal directorycontact information
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  • City of St. Petersburg to Seek Public Input at Annual Budget Open House on April 14

    St. Petersburg, FL
    Other

    The City of St. Petersburg will hold its annual Budget Open House on April 14, 2025, at 6 p.m. in Council Chambers to gather public input on the Fiscal Year 2026 budget priorities. The 2026 budget will emphasize resilience in response to back-to-back hurricanes in 2024, with city departments tying budget proposals to resilience efforts related to climate impacts including flooding and sea-level rise. Residents can participate in person, virtually via Zoom, or watch live on St. Pete TV, with each speaker given three minutes to address the mayor and city officials.

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    budgetclimate resiliencepublic inputhurricane recovery
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  • Common Council Meetings and Agendas – City of Syracuse

    Syracuse, NY
    Other

    This document is a webpage for the City of Syracuse Common Council that provides access to meeting schedules, agendas, and related information. The page lists the 2026 Common Council meeting schedule and notes that agendas are posted before Wednesday Study Sessions and updated after regular meetings to reflect actions taken. Common Council proceedings are streamed on the city's YouTube channel at youtube.com/cityofsyracuse. The document displays a May 2026 calendar and references upcoming meetings including Regular Meetings, Study Sessions, and budget hearings for various departments and entities scheduled between late April and June 2026.

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    city council meetingsmunicipal governmentbudget hearings
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  • Open Meetings (The Sunshine Act) - borough mayors of pa

    Pittsburgh, PA
    Other

    This is a government guidance document, not a meeting record. It is the Fifth Edition (July 2022) of Pennsylvania's "Open Meetings (The Sunshine Act)" guide published by the Department of Community and Economic Development for borough mayors and local officials. The document outlines legal requirements and procedures for public meetings under Pennsylvania's Sunshine Act, including sections on open meeting requirements, exceptions for executive sessions, and related regulations. It was prepared with input from the Pennsylvania State Association of Township Supervisors and serves as an informational resource rather than documenting any specific meeting decisions or budget figures.

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    open meetingssunshine actgovernment transparencypublic meetingsexecutive sessions
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  • Baltimore County, Maryland Public Records Lookup | BaltimoreRecords.us

    Baltimore, MD
    Other

    Baltimore County maintains public records pursuant to Maryland's Public Information Act § 4-101, which establishes presumptive public access to government documents created or received by county agencies. The county's records span ten categories: court records (civil, criminal, traffic, and family cases from the Circuit Court), property records (deeds, mortgages, liens, plats, and tax assessments), vital records (birth certificates from 1939-present, death certificates, marriage licenses, and divorce decrees), business records (licenses, permits, and fictitious business registrations), tax records, voting records from the Board of Elections, government proceedings (Council meeting minutes, agendas, and video recordings), financial documents (budgets, expenditure reports, and statements), law enforcement records (with restrictions), and land use records (zoning maps, building permits, and development plans). The Baltimore County Circuit Court Clerk's Office maintains court and land records, while the State Department of Assessments and Taxation and Maryland Department of Health Division of Vital Records hold respective property and vital records. Baltimore County complies with Maryland's Open Meetings Act and operates a public information portal and dedicated request process to provide digital access to commonly requested documents.

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    public recordsproperty recordsvital recordszoningbudget
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  • Oakland's Roadmap To A Sustainable Budget

    Oakland, CA
    Other

    Oakland's November 2024 roadmap document identifies structural budget deficits driven primarily by police department overspending and proposes that fiscal stability requires reforms beyond departmental cuts. Police and fire services consume 70% of the general fund—far higher than peer cities—with police overspending alone accounting for 56% of the 2024-2025 deficit, predominantly from overtime costs that have outpaced both general fund revenue growth and inflation. The document identifies accountability gaps, including 83% of sworn overtime approval records that could not be located or verified, and notes that the majority of city employees earning over $200,000 are sworn officers, with 64% of those earning over $300,000 in that category. The analysis, authored by Bob Brownstein (former Santa Clara County and San Jose budget official), argues that balancing the deficit through cuts to non-sworn services alone is not feasible and that deeper police operational reforms are necessary to protect critical services and achieve fiscal stability.

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  • Finance | Newark, NJ

    Newark, NJ
    Other

    The Newark Department of Finance oversees all fiscal operations and asset management for the city, including employee and vendor payments, revenue collection, tax billing, and financial reporting, under the leadership of the Director of Finance/Chief Financial Officer. The department comprises several divisions: the Director's Office maintains custody of city assets including cash, investments, and capital authorizations; the Employee's Retirement Systems manages pension enrollment and retiree payments; the Office of Tax Abatement and Special Taxes collects and enforces revenue from payroll taxes, parking, hotel occupancy, and business licenses and permits; Assessments determines real property and personal property taxability and maintains tax maps; Accounts and Control records financial transactions across all city funds; and Revenue Collections handles property tax billing and citywide revenue collection and reporting.

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    tax billingbudget managementrevenue collectionpension administrationfinancial reporting
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  • Virginia Beach Public Records (Virginia)

    Virginia Beach, VA
    Other

    NULL The document is a directory of links to Virginia Beach public records resources rather than a substantive policy document, budget, or action record. It contains no specific dollar amounts, budget line items, votes, dates, metrics, or formal actions to summarize. It serves as a navigation guide to various city and county departments and record-keeping systems without presenting any comparable facts or substantive content suitable for cross-document analysis.

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  • Lehigh County, Pennsylvania Public Records Lookup | LehighRecords.us

    Allentown, PA
    Other

    This document describes Lehigh County, Pennsylvania's public records system and compliance with state transparency laws. It defines public records according to Pennsylvania's Right-to-Know Law (RTKL) and outlines the major categories of accessible records, including court documents, property records, vital records, business licenses, tax information, and budget documents, with responsibility distributed among various county offices such as the Clerk of Judicial Records and Recorder of Deeds. The document confirms that Lehigh County operates as an open records jurisdiction, fully complying with the RTKL's presumption of openness and the Sunshine Act's public meeting requirements, with designated Open Records Officers in each department to facilitate citizen access to government information.

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    public recordstransparencyright to know law
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  • ANNUAL REPORT OF THE Town of Stamford VERMONT

    Stamford, CT
    Other

    The Town of Stamford, Vermont's Annual Report for the year ending December 31, 2022 provides a comprehensive overview of municipal operations, including town officers, voting information, vital records, and financial statements. The report covers revenue and expenses, tax information, delinquent taxes, and various departmental reports including the fire department, library, cemetery, and school operations. The document serves as an official record of the town's governance, budget allocations, and service delivery across municipal departments and facilities.

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  • Norfolk County, Virginia Public Records Lookup | NorfolkRecords.org

    Norfolk, VA
    Other

    Norfolk County, Virginia operates as an independent city and maintains public records under Virginia's Freedom of Information Act (§ 2.2-3700 et seq.), with all records defined as writings, papers, maps, photographs, and other documentary materials prepared or retained by public bodies in conducting public business. The city adheres to Virginia's open records framework, requiring all public bodies to respond to records requests within five working days of receipt under § 2.2-3704. Public records available include court filings (maintained by Norfolk Circuit Court Clerk and General District Court serving the 4th Judicial District), property records (deeds, mortgages, assessments via the Circuit Court Clerk and City Assessor), vital records (managed by Virginia Department of Health and Circuit Court Clerk), business licenses and permits (held by Commissioner of the Revenue and State Corporation Commission), tax records (maintained by City Treasurer and Commissioner of the Revenue), election data (Norfolk City Registrar), meeting minutes and agendas (City Clerk), budgets and audits (Department of Finance), law enforcement records (Police Department), and zoning permits (Department of Planning and Community Development). Public bodies must provide access during regular office hours without requiring requesters to state a reason for seeking records, except in limited circumstances.

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    public recordsfreedom of informationzoning permitstax recordsproperty records
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  • Budget Office

    San Jose, CA
    Other

    The City of San José Budget Office, serving a population of approximately 997,368 with 6,600 government employees, is responsible for developing and monitoring the city's operating and capital budgets. The office prepares key documents including budget requests, five-year forecasts, revenue projections, and bi-monthly financial reports, while also compiling performance measure data used throughout the annual budget process. The document lists leadership including Budget Director Jim Shannon and notes recent compliance achievements for the Actsoft Workforce Manager for Government system, which received Department of Homeland Security authorization in September 2024 and passed multiple security audits.

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    budgetfinancial planninggovernment operationsperformance metricsrevenue projections
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  • Public Records Requests | City of Worcester

    Worcester, MA
    Other

    On June 3, 2016, Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker signed An Act to Improve Public Records into law, with most provisions taking effect January 1, 2017. The City of Worcester provides public records requests through a Public Records Portal and requires Records Access Officers to deliver records in electronic format within 10 business days, with provisions for extensions and administrative appeals through the Massachusetts Supervisor of Records. The city has designated Michael Manning (Law Department) and Lisa Poske (Worcester Retirement) as Records Access Officers and maintains an open data portal called "Informing Worcester" with commonly requested records including budgets, permits, incident reports, and property records.

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    public recordsrecords managementopen datagovernment transparency
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  • PART I: THE CHARTER OF THE CITY OF FORT WORTH Chapter I.

    Fort Worth, TX
    Other

    This document is the table of contents and introductory sections of the Fort Worth City Charter, originally adopted by voters on December 11, 1924, with amendments through November 8, 1983. The charter establishes Fort Worth as a municipal corporation in Tarrant County, Texas, and outlines its organizational structure across 28 chapters covering city council, departments (police, fire, public works, finance, etc.), budgeting, taxation, and administrative procedures. The document indicates the charter has been amended multiple times between 1928 and 1983, with subsequent amendments noted in individual sections.

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    city chartermunicipal governmentbudget and financepublic safetyadministrative procedures
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  • Budget & Management | City of Cleveland Ohio

    Cleveland, OH
    Other

    The Division of Budget and Management in Cleveland's Department of Finance prepares, implements, and monitors annual operating budgets and financial plans to fund City services. The General Fund Operating Budget, funded primarily by a 2.5% City Income Tax on all workers in Cleveland, supports Safety Forces (Police, Fire, and EMS), Waste and Recycling Pick Up, City Parks, and Neighborhood Resource and Recreation Centers. Enterprise Funds operate as self-supporting services including Water, Water Pollution Control, Cleveland Public Power, the Airport, Cemeteries, Golf Courses, City Parking Facilities, Public Auditorium, and West Side Market. The City also funds capital improvements and infrastructure through debt, restricted funds, and grants, including Community Development Block Grants (CDBG) from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development that must support projects eliminating blight and assisting low- and moderate-income residents in housing, public improvements, and land use areas. Budget documents are available for fiscal years 2023 through 2026, along with an interactive budget portal and comprehensive financial reports.

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    municipal budgetpublic safetywater infrastructurecommunity developmentcity services
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  • Finance | Portland, ME - Official Website

    Portland, ME
    Other

    The City of Portland, Maine received $46,290,625 in American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funding in two equal tranches (May 2021 and May 2022) to address COVID-19 pandemic impacts and replace lost revenues. The Finance Department oversees multiple functions including budget management, capital improvement planning, the Finance Committee's budget review process, municipal purchasing, and treasury services such as tax collection and vehicle registration. This webpage serves as a navigation hub providing access to Portland's financial documents, policies, and related government services.

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  • Budget Hearing Schedule 2022

    Lansford, PA
    Other

    The Pennsylvania Senate Appropriations Committee, chaired by Senator Pat Browne, scheduled budget hearings for fiscal year 2022-23 to be held in Hearing Room 1 of the North Office Building from February 22 through March 17, 2022. The hearings included presentations from major state agencies and departments, with two sessions per day (10:00 a.m. and 2:30 p.m.) covering agencies such as the Department of Human Services, Department of Education, Department of Corrections, Pennsylvania Treasury, and various other state offices. No specific budget figures or policy decisions were included in this scheduling document.

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    budget hearingfiscal year 2022-23state appropriationsstate agencies
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  • Township Information for Des Moines County, Iowa

    Des Moines, IA
    Other

    This informational document describes the structure and responsibilities of townships in Des Moines County, Iowa. Township trustees and clerks are predominantly appointed, except in Richland and Washington Townships where officials are elected to four-year terms. Trustees annually prepare budgets and oversee services including fire and rescue, cemetery maintenance, township hall repairs, and tort liability insurance, while clerks maintain official records and prepare annual financial statements. Budget information and lists of current officials are available through the Iowa Department of Management website and the Auditor's Office.

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  • Finance Department | Greenville, SC - Official Website

    Greenville, SC
    Other

    NULL This document is a website navigation and informational page for the Greenville, SC Finance Department that describes available resources and services without providing specific budgets, dollar amounts, programs with details, votes, dates, or quantitative metrics. It lists categories of information (Annual Financial Reports, Annual Operating Budget, Capital Improvement Program, etc.) but does not contain the comparable facts needed for meaningful cross-document analysis.

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  • Public Meetings, Boards, Committees & Commissions City of Tucson

    Tucson, AZ
    Other

    This document is a directory listing of public meetings, boards, committees, and commissions within the City of Tucson's Planning & Development Services Department. It provides brief descriptions of 13 different advisory and review bodies, including historic zone advisory boards for multiple districts, the Board of Adjustment, Design Review Board, Planning Commission, and specialized committees addressing topics such as stormwater management, outdoor lighting codes, and building standards. No specific meeting dates, budget figures, or policy decisions are included in this informational reference page.

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    public meetingsboards and commissionsplanning and developmenthistoric preservationdesign review
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  • East Baton Rouge County, Louisiana Public Records Lookup | EastBatonRougeParishRecords.us

    Baton Rouge, LA
    Other

    This document describes the public records system in East Baton Rouge Parish, Louisiana, outlining the types of records maintained and their custodians under Louisiana Revised Statutes § 44:1-41. Public records encompass court records (civil, criminal, probate, and family), property records (deeds, mortgages, liens), vital records (birth and death certificates), business licenses, tax records, voting records, meeting minutes, budgets, law enforcement records, and land use documents maintained by the Parish Clerk of Court and specialized departments. East Baton Rouge Parish complies fully with Louisiana Public Records Law, which under Louisiana Revised Statutes § 44:31 grants any adult the right to inspect, copy, and obtain public records during regular business hours.

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  • Annual Budget Process and Timeline | City of Boise

    Boise, ID
    Other

    The City of Boise follows an annual budget development process that runs from January through early fall, with the fiscal year operating from October 1st through September 30th. The budget funds essential services including police and fire departments, emergency medical services, libraries, parks, and utilities, as well as major capital investments like water line replacement and airport expansion. The process involves multiple stages: early planning (December–February), department budget requests and public input (March–May), department presentations (May–June), draft budget release and public workshops (June), public hearings and final adoption (July–September), and publication of the final budget before the fiscal year begins.

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    budgetpublic safetywater infrastructureparks and recreationcapital projects
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  • Borough Government

    Carlisle, PA
    Other

    The Borough of Carlisle operates under a Home Rule Charter with a Council-Manager form of government, allowing the municipality greater autonomy in crafting local ordinances and policies. The Borough is governed by seven elected Council members serving staggered four-year terms, along with an elected Mayor, who set policy and approve budgets, while an appointed Borough Manager handles day-to-day operations and department supervision. The Borough holds two public meetings monthly—a workshop meeting and a regular Council meeting—and encourages citizen participation through board and commission volunteer opportunities.

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  • Appendix R Structure of Municipal Funds

    Anchorage, AK
    Other

    Appendix R outlines the Municipality of Anchorage's fund accounting structure, which uses Governmental, Proprietary, and Fiduciary Fund types to track resources and ensure compliance with finance-related legal requirements. Governmental funds are grouped into general, special revenue, capital projects, debt service, and permanent funds, with the Anchorage Assembly approving operating budgets at the department level and revenues/expenditures appropriated at the fund level. The document explains that governmental funds use modified accrual accounting, recognizing revenues when measurable and available, and recording expenditures when liabilities are incurred, with exceptions for debt service and compensated absences paid only when due.

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