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30 results for “fiscal approvals” · budget

  • City of Charleston MUNICIPAL BUDGET July 1, 2025 - June 30, 2026

    Jul 1, 2025

    ·Charleston, WV
    Budget

    The City of Charleston approved its municipal budget for the fiscal year July 1, 2025 through June 30, 2026 on March 17, 2025, under Mayor Amy Shuler Goodwin. The budget document outlines revenue sources including property taxes ($18.2 million), business and occupation taxes ($54.1 million), utility taxes ($3 million), and hotel occupancy taxes ($3.35 million), along with departmental expenditures, capital projects, staffing levels, and pay grade schedules across city departments. The general fund includes a fund balance of $4 million, with revenues and expenditures detailed across multiple sections covering departmental budgets, capital expenditure schedules, and levy rates.

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  • City of Charleston MUNICIPAL BUDGET July 1, 2024 - June 30, 2025 General Fund

    Jul 1, 2024

    ·Charleston, WV
    Budget

    The City of Charleston approved its Municipal Budget for fiscal year 2025 (July 1, 2024 – June 30, 2025) on March 18, 2024, with the Coliseum and Parking Funds approved separately on May 20, 2024. The budget projects total revenues of approximately $50.4 million in business and occupation taxes, $18.2 million in property taxes, and $7.1 million in city service fees, along with an estimated fund balance of $4 million in amendments. The comprehensive 177-page budget document includes detailed sections on departmental staffing, capital expenditures, levy rates, and individual department budgets under Mayor Amy Shuler Goodwin's administration.

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  • City of Charleston MUNICIPAL BUDGET July 1, 2023 - June 30, 2024 General Fund

    Jul 1, 2023

    ·Charleston, WV
    Budget

    The City of Charleston approved its municipal budget for fiscal year 2024 (July 1, 2023 – June 30, 2024) on March 20, 2023, with estimated General Fund revenues of approximately $47.8 million from business and occupation taxes, $17.7 million from property taxes, and $3 million from hotel occupancy tax, among other sources. The budget document outlines detailed revenue projections, expenditure schedules across multiple departments, pay grade classifications, capital projects, and fund allocations including the Coal Severance Fund, Coliseum and Convention Center Revenue Fund, and Parking System Revenue Fund.

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  • City of Charleston MUNICIPAL BUDGET July 1, 2022 - June 30, 2023 General Fund

    Jul 1, 2022

    ·Charleston, WV
    Budget

    The City of Charleston's Municipal Budget for fiscal year 2023 (July 1, 2022 – June 30, 2023) was approved by City Council on March 21, 2022, with separate approvals for the Parking System (June 6, 2022) and Coliseum and Convention Center (June 21, 2022). The budget document outlines revenues, expenditures, departmental staffing, capital projects, and levy rates across nine sections, with an estimated fund balance of $4,000,000 and major revenue sources including property taxes ($17.3 million), business and occupation taxes ($45.16 million), and utility taxes ($2.7 million). The comprehensive 179-page document includes detailed departmental budgets, pay grade schedules, authorized positions, and capital expenditure schedules for the General Fund and related revenue funds.

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  • City of Charleston MUNICIPAL BUDGET July 1, 2021 - June 30, 2022 General Fund

    Jul 1, 2021

    ·Charleston, WV
    Budget

    The City of Charleston adopted its Fiscal Year 2022 municipal budget (July 1, 2021 – June 30, 2022) covering the General Fund, Coal Severance Fund, Coliseum & Parking Funds, and capital projects. The budget was approved by Council on March 15, 2021 (with Coliseum and Parking Funds approved June 22, 2021) and projects major revenue sources including property taxes ($17 million), business and occupation taxes ($42.5 million), utility taxes ($2.7 million), and hotel occupancy taxes ($2.25 million). The document contains detailed sections on revenues, expenditures, departmental budgets, staffing, capital projects, pay grades, and levy rates across 179 pages.

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  • Resolution Index 1980-2007 4922 12/12/2007

    Dec 12, 2007

    ·Eugene, OR
    Budget

    This document is a resolution index from the City of Eugene covering resolutions from 1980-2007, with the primary entry being Resolution 4922 (adopted 12/12/2007) approving a supplemental budget for fiscal year 2007-2008, which initially failed on 12/10/2007 but was reconsidered and adopted two days later. The index also lists related resolutions including the main budget adoption (Resolution 4912, 6/11/2007), a $7,895,000 HUD Section 108 loan authorization, multiple property tax exemptions for residential housing developments, and voter referral measures including a proposed increase to motor vehicle fuel dealer's license tax of $0.03 per gallon and an amended downtown urban renewal plan.

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  • CINCINNATI, OHIO FY 2025 APPROVED ALL FUNDS BUDGET UPDATE

    Cincinnati, OH
    Budget

    The document is the City of Cincinnati's Approved Fiscal Year 2025 All Funds Budget Update, a comprehensive budget presentation that received the Government Finance Officers Association Distinguished Budget Presentation Award. The document provides a detailed accounting of the city's budget across all departments and funds, organized by multiple city agencies including Fire, Police, Public Services, Water Works, Parks, and various administrative offices. The budget update was prepared under the leadership of Mayor Aftab Pureval and City Manager Sheryl M. M. Long, with detailed budget information available through the city's website and local libraries.

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  • 2024 County of Allegheny Comprehensive Fiscal Plan RICH FITZGERALD

    Pocono Township, PA
    Budget

    The 2024 Allegheny County Comprehensive Fiscal Plan presents a balanced operating budget of $1,054.6 million and includes seven sections covering the 2024 operating budget, forward-looking forecasts for 2025-2026, a $116.3 million capital budget supporting 66 infrastructure projects, and a $1.7 billion grants budget requiring $14.9 million in county matching funds. The plan is submitted by County Executive Rich Fitzgerald to County Council for review and approval pursuant to the Home Rule Charter, with details provided at the character level for all operating departments and revenue sources.

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  • 0 Fiscal Year 2024 ALL FUNDS APPROVED BUDGET IN BRIEF CINCINNATI, OHIO

    Cincinnati, OH
    Budget
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  • FY-2022-Approved-Budget-Book-WITH-PDF-PAGE- ...

    Atlanta, GA
    Budget

    The Atlanta Housing Authority's FY 2022 Approved Budget document outlines the agency's financial plan across operating and development/revitalization budgets, with sections covering organizational priorities, a three-year budget comparison, HUD funding processes, and budget risk analysis. The document includes a GFOA Award Certificate for the FY 2020 budget, indicating recognition for financial reporting excellence. The budget book provides comprehensive information on fund structures, financial policies, departmental operations, and strategic contracts to guide the Housing Authority's activities for fiscal year 2022.

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  • CITY OF HOUSTON FISCAL YEAR 2023 BUDGET ...

    Houston, TX
    Budget

    The document presents written budget questions submitted by Houston City Council Member Sallie Alcorn for Fiscal Year 2023, with departmental responses addressing specific line-item inquiries. In Administrative & Regulatory Affairs, the Director's Office "miscellaneous other services and charges" increased from $26,864 (FY22 estimate) to $40,689 (FY23 budget) due to a document scanning and retention archival project for the City Secretary's office. For the BARC special revenue fund, "miscellaneous other services and charges" rose from $106,834 (FY22 estimate) to $256,402 (FY23 budget), attributed to pandemic-related staffing challenges and the need to contract five cleaning employees to work seven days per week from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m., approved in January 2022. The submission covers 17 city departments and was released for public transparency on May 10.

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  • City of Wilmington Delaware Proposed Budget Fiscal Year 2026 John Carney Mayor

    Wilmington, DE
    Budget

    The City of Wilmington, Delaware proposed its Fiscal Year 2026 budget on March 20, 2025, under Mayor John Carney's administration, prepared by the Office of Management and Budget. The budget document outlines the city's financial plan across multiple fund categories including the General Fund, Special Funds, and Water/Sewer Fund, with detailed budget highlights and revenue/expenditure summaries. The proposal was submitted to City Council for review and approval, with city leadership and departmental officials identified for budget oversight and implementation.

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  • City of Wilmington Delaware

    Wilmington, DE
    Budget

    This document is the City of Wilmington, Delaware's Approved Budget for Fiscal Year 2022, approved by City Council on May 20, 2021. The budget was prepared by the Office of Management and Budget under Mayor Michael S. Purzycki and received the Government Finance Officers Association's Distinguished Budget Presentation Award for meeting criteria as a policy document, operations guide, financial plan, and communication device. The document includes listings of city administration, council members, and city officials, with the detailed budget information appearing in subsequent sections referenced in the table of contents.

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  • Fiscal Year 2023-2024 Approved Budget (PDF)

    Dearborn, MI
    Budget
    Source
  • Budget Highlights City Overview

    Tucson, AZ
    Budget

    For Fiscal Year 2025, the Tucson City Manager submitted the recommended budget on April 9, 2024, and the Mayor and Council adopted a balanced budget on June 4, 2024. The city's largest revenue sources are Business Privilege tax (19.6% of total revenues) and Public Utility tax (17.4%), with Business Privilege tax recently increased from 2% to 2.6% following voter-approved propositions, and a multi-year rate plan for Public Utility tax approved in January 2023 providing annual 5.5% increases through Fiscal Year 2027. Arizona's 2022 implementation of a flat income tax rate has significantly reduced state-shared revenues to Tucson, creating budgetary pressure on the General Fund and prompting the city to propose fee adjustments for Parks and Recreation, Reid Park Zoo, Tucson City Golf, and other services beginning in Fiscal Year 2025.

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  • Fiscal Year 2024/2025 Approved Budget

    Columbia, SC
    Budget

    The FY 2024/2025 Approved Budget, approved in August 2024, totals $444.9 million in operating funds across multiple categories, with the General Fund at $188.8 million (43%) and Water & Sewer Fund at $202 million (45%) representing the largest allocations. The Capital Improvement Program dedicates $97.1 million, primarily for wastewater infrastructure ($63 million) and water systems ($30 million). Strategic priorities outlined in the budget include economic growth initiatives focused on real estate development and small business support, enhanced public safety through technology and partnerships, and organizational effectiveness through employee retention and professional development.

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  • CITY OF NORTH CHARLESTON ANNUAL BUDGET JULY ...

    Charleston, SC
    Budget

    The City of North Charleston adopted Ordinance #2025-036 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2026, amending Budget Ordinance #2025-021 to adjust the millage rate due to the 2025 Charleston County reassessment. The millage rate was rolled back from 95 mills to 91.5 mills total, comprising 81.5 mills for General Purpose and 10 mills for Debt Service, representing a 3.5-mill reduction. The Finance Committee voted unanimously 10-0-0 on September 18, 2025, to approve the amendment, followed by City Council approval via roll call vote 9-0-0 on the same date, with first and second readings held on September 11 and September 18, 2025, respectively.

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  • City of Toledo2016 Approved Annual Operating Budget

    Toledo, OH
    Budget

    The City of Toledo's 2016 Approved Annual Operating Budget document provides an overview of the city's fiscal framework as of March 29, 2016. Toledo, Ohio's fourth-largest city with a 2010 census population of 287,208, presented its budget alongside demographic and economic context, including a median household income of $34,170 and an unemployment rate that had improved to 4.9% by September 2015 following the 2008 recession. The budget document covers revenues and expenditures across the general fund and all funds, with departmental expenditure breakdowns, reflecting the city's diverse economy anchored by manufacturing, healthcare, and education sectors.

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  • 2020 Approved Annual Operating Budget - City of Toledo

    Toledo, OH
    Budget

    The City of Toledo's 2020 Approved Annual Operating Budget document outlines the fiscal framework for fiscal year 2020, including the city's organizational structure, departmental overviews, and financial plans. The budget document contains comprehensive sections covering budget policies, departmental operating budgets across divisions including police, fire, public utilities, and parks, five-year budget projections, and appendices detailing capital improvement projects, labor contracts, and pension information. Strategic priorities and key performance indicators are identified as part of the city's planning framework, though specific budget figures and policy details are not provided in the table of contents excerpt.

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  • City of Wilmington Delaware Annual Budget James M. Baker Mayor Prepared by the

    Wilmington, DE
    Budget

    This is the City of Wilmington, Delaware's Fiscal Year 2011 Annual Budget, approved by City Council on May 13, 2010, under Mayor James M. Baker. The document is a comprehensive 298-page budget prepared by the Office of Management and Budget that includes budget highlights, financial policies, departmental information, and the city's strategic plan, though specific budget figures and policy changes are not visible in the provided excerpt.

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  • phoenix - community budget guide

    Phoenix, AZ
    Budget

    The Phoenix Community Budget Guide outlines the city's fiscal structure and challenges. Phoenix's 2025-26 General Fund faced a baseline deficit of $36 million, with projected shortfalls of $83 million in 2026-27 and $6 million in 2027-28, primarily caused by state legislative actions eliminating residential rental sales tax (SB 1131) and reducing the individual income tax rate to 2.5 percent (SB 1828). On March 18, 2025, the City Council approved budget balancing strategies including an increase to the Transaction Privilege Tax and Use Tax rate from 2.3 percent to 2.8 percent, effective July 1, 2025, resulting in a projected one-time General Fund surplus of $17 million for 2025-26. The document describes the city's budget structure, revenue sources, operating costs for public safety and community services, and the budget process including a planned City Council adoption in June 2026 with community input opportunities at phoenix.gov/budget.

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  • CITY OF BUFFALO

    Buffalo, NY
    Budget

    The Buffalo Fiscal Stability Authority analyzed the City of Buffalo's 2025-26 adopted budget totaling $622.1 million, which was approved by Common Council on May 27, 2025, with modifications that resulted in a net zero impact on total appropriations. The budget represents a 3.3 percent increase in revenues and 0.8 percent increase in appropriations compared to the prior year, with no unrestricted fund balance available for use. The Council made line-item changes totaling $1.3 million across departments, including a net $1.1 million reduction in personal service costs through elimination of three positions offset by creation of a new Director of Data Management position.

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  • COUNTY OF LEXINGTON GENERAL FUND Appropriation Summary Fiscal Year 2016-17

    Lexington, KY
    Budget

    The County of Lexington's Fiscal Year 2016-17 General Fund approved budget totaled approximately $67.4 million across administrative, general services, public works, public safety, and judicial departments. The largest expenditures were in Public Safety ($34.7 million, primarily for Fire Service and Emergency Medical Services) and Public Works ($14.4 million, mainly for transportation), with significant allocations also for Administrative functions ($14.4 million) and Judicial services ($9.9 million). The budget breakdown shows personnel costs constituting the largest component across most departments, with capital expenditures allocated for infrastructure, equipment, and facility improvements.

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  • Dallas County Fiscal Year 2021-2022 Budget Cover Page

    Dallas, TX
    Budget

    Dallas County's Fiscal Year 2021-2022 budget raises property tax revenue of $29,394,729 more than the prior year, representing a 5.13 percent increase, with $13,637,722.62 from new properties added to the tax roll. The governing body voted 5–0 in favor, with County Judge Clay Jenkins, Commissioners Dr. Theresa Daniel, JJ Koch, John Wiley Price, and Dr. Elba Garcia supporting approval. The property tax rate decreased to $0.227946 per $100 of valuation from $0.239740 in the prior year, while total debt obligation secured by property taxes is $116,665,000. The budget was developed in response to ongoing COVID-19 pandemic challenges affecting service delivery, employee hiring and retention, and economic conditions including a June 2021 unemployment rate of 6.0% and a 29.06 percent increase in single-unit residential housing sales year-over-year.

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  • Municipality of Anchorage 2019 Approved General Government Operating Budget

    Anchorage, AK
    Budget

    The Municipality of Anchorage's 2019 Approved General Government Operating Budget document presents the adopted budget framework for the fiscal year under Mayor Ethan Berkowitz's administration, including organizational structure and governance oversight through the Anchorage Assembly and Budget Advisory Commission. The document outlines municipal departments and services across multiple areas including public safety (police and fire), utilities (water, wastewater, and power), transportation, parks and recreation, planning, and development services. The budget includes Assembly ordinances for both the operating and capital improvement budgets, along with a six-year fiscal program covering 2019-2024.

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  • Budget Book Breakdown | City of OKC

    Oklahoma City, OK
    Budget

    The City of Oklahoma City adopted its Fiscal Year 2026 Budget for July 1, 2025, through June 30, 2026, following presentations by various departments across multiple City Council meetings in April and May. City Manager Craig Freeman's proposed budget was presented on April 29, with subsequent presentations from Public Transportation and Parking, Development Services, and Fire and Parks and Recreation on that date, followed by Public Works, Utilities, and Fire on May 13, and Planning, Airports, and Police on May 27. The OKC City Council approved the budget on June 3, ahead of the state's statutory deadline. The complete FY2026 Budget Book and individual departmental budgets and performance reports are available as downloadable PDFs, covering 19 city departments and offices.

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  • Fresno

    Fresno, CA
    Budget

    The Fresno County Board of Retirement presents the Fiscal Year 2023-24 Recommended Budget totaling $20,561,144, a 1.0% increase of $207,620 from FY 2022-23. The Administrative Budget is proposed at $6,823,295, representing a 1.4% increase of $93,029, with primary increases in Salaries and Benefits due to negotiated wage increases and planned information technology upgrades. The Administrative Budget operates at 9.9 basis points, remaining 11.1 basis points below the state-mandated 21-basis-point cap under Government Code section 31580.2(a). The recommended budget includes funding for a student Investment Analyst position and incorporates cost savings from a digital newsletter launch and reduced Investment Management Expenses. The Board agenda dated June 7, 2023, seeks approval of the budget or directs staff to present revisions at the June 21, 2023 meeting.

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  • FY24 Budget in Brief

    St. Petersburg, FL
    Budget

    The City of St. Petersburg approved its Fiscal Year 2024 budget on September 14, 2023, with a second public hearing scheduled for September 28, 2023, for final adoption. The budget was developed through community engagement including a mayoral open house meeting and multiple City Hall listening sessions, with resource allocation decisions guided by five strategic pillars: Housing Opportunities for All, Environment/Infrastructure/Resilience, Equitable Development/Arts/Business, Education/Youth, and Neighborhood Health/Safety. The Budget in Brief document serves as a condensed overview of the FY24 budget (October 1, 2023 – September 30, 2024) with the full budget details available online at www.stpete.org.

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  • 0 Fiscal Year 2023 APPROVED ALL FUNDS BUDGET UPDATE BUDGET IN BRIEF

    Cincinnati, OH
    Budget
    Source
  • City of Toledo 2021 Approved Annual Operating Budget Detail Schedules I.

    Toledo, OH
    Budget

    The City of Toledo's 2021 Approved Annual Operating Budget includes detailed schedules for revenues and expenditures across multiple funds and cost centers, with comparative data from 2018–2020. Key revenue sources include withheld income taxes ($154.0 million), business income taxes ($16.4 million), and real estate and public utilities taxes ($11.0 million), reflecting a general decline in income tax collections from prior years. The budget document provides multi-year financial reports organized by account and cost center, along with a 2021 position control schedule, establishing the city's financial plan for the fiscal year beginning January 19, 2021.

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