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30 results for “fund balances” · budget

  • 2026 Adopted Budget 1/1/2026 (Document Updated 01/21/2026)

    Jan 1, 2026

    ·Evanston, IL
    Budget

    The 2026 Adopted Budget for the City of Evanston, effective January 1, 2026, is a comprehensive 420-page document outlining all revenue sources, expenditures, and fund structures. The document includes updates to revenue and expenditure schedules, fund balance projections with explanations of significant changes, and corrected pension funding policy language. The budget encompasses multiple funds including the General Fund, Parks and Recreation, various Tax Increment Financing (TIF) districts, utility funds (Water, Sewer, Solid Waste), and special purpose funds such as the American Rescue Plan Act Fund and Reparations Fund.

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  • Moore Township 2026 BUDGET Proposed: November 10, 2025

Nov 10, 2025

·Moore Township, XX
Budget

Moore Township's 2026 budget was proposed on November 10, 2025, and adopted via Resolution 2025-28 on December 19, 2025. The budget projects total fund equity of $11,104,500 as of January 1, 2026, distributed across nine funds including the General Fund ($1,174,500), Highway Aid Fund ($210,500), Land Preservation Referendum Fund ($7,938,100), and Capital Improvement Reserve Fund ($1,500,000). Revenue sources include Real Property Taxes of $2,105,000, Local Enabling Act (Act 511) Taxes of $2,945,800, Intergovernmental Revenue of $851,700, and Licenses & Permits of $123,800. The budget document shows beginning balances and fund transfers totaling $4,486,900 across all funds.

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  • Moore Township 2026 BUDGET Proposed: November 10, 2025

    Nov 10, 2025

    ·Moore Township, PA
    Budget

    Moore Township adopted its 2026 budget on December 19, 2025, via Resolution 2025-28, with a total fund equity of $11,104,500.00 as of January 1, 2026. The budget encompasses nine funds including the General Fund ($1,174,500.00 beginning balance), Highway Aid Fund ($210,500.00), Land Preservation Referendum Fund ($7,938,100.00), Recreation Enterprise Fund ($55,400.00), Capital Improvement Reserve Fund ($1,500,000.00), and specialized recreation funds. Revenue sources include real property taxes of $2,105,000.00, Act 511 taxes of $2,945,800.00, intergovernmental revenue of $851,700.00, and charges for services totaling $208,700.00.

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  • 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 SAN JOSÉ BUDGET OVERVIEW San José Youth Commission November 25, 2024

    Nov 25, 2024

    ·San Jose, CA
    Budget

    The San José Youth Commission received a budget overview on November 25, 2024, from Deputy Budget Director Claudia Chang presenting the adopted 2024-2025 city budget of $6.1 billion, comprised of $4.5 billion in operating budget and $1.6 billion in capital budget across 137 funds and 6,994 positions. The General Fund ($1.8 billion) is primarily funded by property tax (23.2%), fund balance carryover (27.1%), and sales tax (16.5%), with major operating expenditures directed to Environmental and Utility Services ($1.06 billion), Neighborhood Services ($900.6 million), and Public Safety ($900.6 million). The budget development process incorporates the Mayor's March Budget Message, City Council priorities, and principles focused on budgeting for equity.

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  • 11/19/2024 2025 PROPOSED Budget The Honorable Michael Helfrich, Mayor

    Nov 19, 2024

    ·York, PA
    Budget

    On November 19, 2024, Mayor Michael Helfrich presented the FY2025 proposed budget totaling $143.4 million in expenses, funded by $108.0 million in revenue and $35.6 million in fund balance, with a projected surplus of $181,471. The General Fund comprises the largest portion at $70.3 million in expenses supported by $57.7 million in revenue and $12.6 million in fund balance, while significant allocations include American Rescue Plan Act funds ($21.4 million), capital projects ($6.8 million), and special projects ($4.3 million). The budget includes salary and wage adjustments for city employees and council members, along with various departmental allocations for benefits and operational expenses across multiple specialized funds including recreation, liquid fuels, housing grants, and infrastructure projects.

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  • Final Budget Adopted: November 4, 2024 2025 Budget Photo by: Chloe Pauls

    Nov 4, 2024

    ·Nanticoke, PA
    Budget

    On November 4, 2024, North Whitehall Township adopted its 2025 budget with an opening General Fund balance of $8,250,000 and anticipated revenues of $6,425,000 against expenditures of $6,133,000, resulting in a $291,000 surplus. The Township made significant decisions to increase its property tax levy from 0.5 mills to 0.65 mills (a 0.15 mill increase) and introduced its first-ever Fire Tax of 0.45 mills, bringing the total 2025 property tax levy to 1.2 mills. Additionally, $275,000 of the budget surplus was allocated to the Equipment fund for fleet needs, and $900,000 was drawn from unrestricted cash reserves for capital improvements, while maintaining an estimated ending fund balance of $7,361,000.

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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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  • County of Jackson, Michigan For the Year Ended December 31, 2023 Annual

    Dec 31, 2023

    ·Jackson, MS
    Budget

    Jackson County, Michigan's Annual Comprehensive Financial Report for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2023, presents the county's complete financial position including government-wide and fund financial statements prepared by Administrator/Controller Michael R. Overton and Finance Director Cecilia Anderson. The report includes statements of net position, activities, revenues, expenditures, and changes in fund balances across governmental, proprietary, and fiduciary funds, along with required supplementary information on pension liabilities and other postemployment benefit obligations. The document encompasses detailed schedules for the General Fund and Road Fund with budget-to-actual comparisons, combining statements for nonmajor governmental funds, and notes to financial statements totaling 238 pages.

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  • CITY OF SAN JOSÉ ANNUAL BUDGET San José Youth Commission November 27, 2023 8

    Nov 27, 2023

    ·San Jose, CA
    Budget

    The City of San José adopted a $6.1 billion annual budget for 2023-2024, comprising a $4.5 billion operating budget and $1.6 billion capital budget across 137 funds. The General Fund ($1.9 billion) is primarily funded by property tax (22%), fund balance carryover (30.1%), and sales tax (16.1%), with major spending areas including Public Safety (24.3%), Environmental and Utility Services (28.1%), and Strategic Support (16.8%). The document was presented to the San José Youth Commission on November 27, 2023, and outlines the city's budget development process, departmental allocations, and capital projects across community services, infrastructure, and public safety.

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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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  • Annual Comprehensive Financial Report For the Year Ended June 30, 2021

    Jun 30, 2021

    ·Worcester, MA
    Budget

    The Annual Comprehensive Financial Report for the City of Worcester, Massachusetts for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2021 presents the city's complete financial position, including government-wide financial statements, fund financial statements, and required supplementary information on pensions and other post-employment benefits (OPEB). The report was prepared by the Office of the City Auditor, Robert V. Stearns, CPA, and includes detailed exhibits covering the Statement of Net Position, Statement of Activities, Balance Sheets, and various fund statements across 226 pages. The document covers governmental funds, proprietary funds, fiduciary accounts, and supplementary schedules related to the Worcester Retirement System (WRS) and Massachusetts Teachers' Retirement System (MTRS) pension obligations.

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  • City of Columbia FY 2021-2022 BUDGET OVERVIEW MAY 11, 2021 iStock.com/Kruck20

    May 11, 2021

    ·Columbia, SC
    Budget

    The City of Columbia presented its FY 2021-2022 budget overview on May 11, 2021, establishing a comprehensive plan for resource allocation across direct services (police, fire, parks, public works, water/sewer), supportive services (finance, HR, IT), and non-departmental functions. The budget is funded through multiple revenue sources including property taxes, licenses and permits, charges for services, intergovernmental revenue, and enterprise fund user fees, with all allocations requiring adoption by ordinance and adherence to South Carolina's constitutional requirement for a balanced budget. The budget supports the city's strategic vision focused on attracting talent, community planning, economic prosperity, neighborhood enhancement, and innovative municipal services aligned with Columbia's long-term 2036 vision.

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  • EAST NORRITON TOWNSHIP DECEMBER 31, 2018 BASIC FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

    Dec 31, 2018

    ·Norristown, PA
    Budget

    East Norriton Township's Basic Financial Statements for the year ended December 31, 2018, were audited by an independent auditor and issued on August 9, 2019. The document presents the Township's entity-wide and fund financial statements, including the Statement of Net Position, Statement of Activities, Balance Sheet for Governmental Funds, and budgetary comparison statements for the General Fund and other governmental funds. The financial statements include required supplementary information on pension liabilities and obligations for both the Police Pension Plan and Non-Uniformed Pension Plan, as well as schedules of employer contributions and other post-employment benefits (OPEB) liability and contributions. The statements were prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles in the United States.

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  • COMPREHENSIVE ANNUAL FINANCIAL REPORT FISCAL YEAR ENDED JUNE 30, 2003

    Jun 30, 2003

    ·Oakland, CA
    Budget

    This Comprehensive Annual Financial Report presents the audited financial statements for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2003, including government-wide and fund-level financial statements covering governmental, proprietary, and fiduciary funds. The report was prepared by the Finance and Management Agency's Accounting Division and audited by Macias, Gini & Company LLP. The document includes the Statement of Net Assets, Statement of Activities, Balance Sheet for Governmental Funds, and cash flow statements for Proprietary Funds, along with management's discussion and analysis of financial results.

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  • FY2026 Budget Presentation Dennis Rogero Chief Financial Officer

    Tampa, FL
    Budget

    The FY2026 budget presentation by Chief Financial Officer Dennis Rogero outlines a total recommended budget of $1,992.3 million across all funds, with the General Fund at $708.2 million and Enterprise Funds at $813.8 million. Major revenue increases include $26.2 million from property taxes and $15.6 million from judgments/fines, while expenditure increases of $53.8 million are driven primarily by $30 million in salary and benefits costs, reflecting the city's ongoing operations in public safety ($427.4 million), central government ($133.5 million), and parks and recreation ($71.6 million). The presentation also covers the General Fund balance, stormwater funding, capital improvements, and debt management, with the city maintaining a projected fund balance of 23 percent of expenditures for FY2026.

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  • City of Madison Tax Incremental District No. 45 Financial Statements and

    Madison, WI
    Budget

    The City of Madison Tax Incremental District No. 45 financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2022 received an unqualified audit opinion, indicating the district's financial position and sources and uses of funds are fairly presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. The document includes the district's balance sheet, historical summaries of project costs and revenues, and detailed schedules of capital expenditures and fund status as of the audit date. The financial statements present only the transactions of Tax Incremental District No. 45 and do not represent the broader financial position of the City of Madison.

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  • City of Allentown 2026 Organizational Chart Mayor Matthew Tuerk City Controller

    Allentown, PA
    Budget

    The document presents the City of Allentown's 2026 Organizational Chart and General Fund Summary Report. The organizational structure identifies Mayor Matthew Tuerk at the head, with key officials including City Controller Jeff Glazier, City Clerk Mike Hanlon, and City Council President Santo Napoli overseeing seven council members. The General Fund Summary shows total tax revenues projected at $107,598,514 for 2026, increasing from $104,772,200 in the 2025 budget, with earned income tax ($43,250,000), city real estate tax ($40,681,514), and business privilege tax ($13,072,000) as the largest revenue sources. Permits and licenses are budgeted at $2,211,000 for 2026, while charges for services include significant revenue from parking ($7,100,000 projected for 2026). The opening balance for 2026 reflects $41,861,325 from the 2025 revised budget.

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  • City of Dearborn Public Hearing 2025–2026 Budget List of Documents Page(s) A.

    Dearborn, MI
    Budget

    The City of Dearborn held a public hearing on its proposed 2025–2026 budget as of May 1, 2025, presenting a balanced General Fund budget expected to contribute $230,689 to the fund balance reserve. The budget faces financial challenges including revenue growth falling short of expenditure inflation, state taxation limitations, and rising retirement and debt service obligations, with personnel and non-discretionary spending comprising 79% of general fund uses. Revenue is projected to increase $3.6 million (2.5%), primarily from property tax gains of $1.7 million and increased charges for services of $1.1 million, while expenditures increase $3.6 million (2.4%), largely due to $5.7 million in additional wages and benefits; budget priorities allocate 70% of subsidies to Public Safety, followed by Administrative (11%), Public Works & Facilities (9%), Parks & Recreation (8%), and Economic Development (2%).

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  • Budget Brief - City of Madison

    Madison, WI
    Budget

    The City of Madison's 2025 proposed budget, released in October 2024, requires the city to balance spending primarily through local resources without significant state or federal support. The budget includes a $22 million referendum question for voters to decide on service levels and spending. Key issues affecting the budget include the outcome of the referendum, slow recovery in Metro Transit and room tax/parking revenues, potential workforce changes, and comparison of Madison's spending levels to other municipalities.

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  • City of Madison

    Madison, WI
    Budget

    The City of Madison's 2024 proposed budget brief, prepared in October 2023, examines how the city balanced its budget despite a historic state aid increase that ultimately provided limited benefit due to revised state funding formulas. Key budget issues include efforts to reroute Metro Transit, Metro receiving the most new positions with general workers receiving the largest raises, room tax revenue rebounding but still lagging costs, and parking fees remaining below 2019 levels. The document analyzes spending changes, general fund revenue, fees, enterprise funds, and the capital budget across 21 pages.

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  • 2026-27 Budget Document

    Pottsville, PA
    Budget

    Pennsylvania Governor presents a balanced 2026-27 budget proposal, emphasizing accomplishments from his first three years including historic education investments, seven tax cuts totaling $193 million in new credits for working families, and economic growth initiatives that created tens of thousands of jobs. The administration highlights fiscal responsibility through two credit rating upgrades, $200 million in borrowing cost savings, and streamlined permitting processes, while noting gun violence reductions and improved public safety outcomes. The budget document represents continued focus on delivering economic growth, supporting education and workers, and efficient government operations.

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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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  • acfr-2021-2022.pdf

    Tucson, AZ
    Budget

    The City of Tucson, Arizona's financial statements for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2022, prepared by the Finance Department, provide a comprehensive overview of the city's financial position including statements of net position, activities, revenues, expenditures, and fund balances across governmental, proprietary, and fiduciary funds. The document includes an independent auditor's report, management's discussion and analysis, and received a Certificate of Achievement for Excellence in Financial Reporting. This 233-page annual comprehensive financial report presents the city's complete financial activity and condition for the 2021-2022 fiscal year.

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  • Borough of State College - 2023 Adopted Budget

    State College, PA
    Budget

    The Borough of State College adopted its 2023 budget on December 19, 2022, which totals $80.6 million in expenditures funded by $63 million in recurring revenues and $17.6 million from fund balances. The budget includes rate increases for sewer and refuse services, a 1.5 mill increase in the real estate tax rate to address inflation, and covers all municipal departments and services including police, public works, planning, parking, and regional programs. The document serves as a comprehensive financial plan encompassing the General Fund, Capital Fund, Asset Replacement Fund, and various enterprise funds with detailed departmental budgets and fee schedules.

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  • 2026-27 Budget Document

    Coatesville, PA
    Budget

    Governor of Pennsylvania presents a balanced 2026-27 budget proposal following three years of what the administration characterizes as significant accomplishments, including historic education investments, seven tax cuts totaling $193 million in new credits for working Pennsylvanians, and two credit rating upgrades that saved over $200 million in borrowing costs. The proposal emphasizes continued focus on economic growth, public safety, education funding, and regulatory efficiency, with claims of eliminating permit backlogs and reducing licensing times by 75 percent while maintaining fiscal responsibility and reducing government waste.

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  • 2023-2024 Proposed Budget Summary Introduction

    Seattle, WA
    Budget

    Seattle's 2023-2024 Proposed Budget, the first under Mayor Bruce A. Harrell, totals approximately $7.4 billion in appropriations, including $1.6 billion in General Fund and $294 million from the JumpStart Payroll Expense Tax. This is the first biennial budget since the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted the city's normal budgeting cycle, and it addresses a significant General Fund deficit while prioritizing housing and homelessness, public safety, access to opportunity, healthy communities, climate and environment, transportation, and good government. Despite 40-year-high inflation, General Fund expenditure growth is held to effectively flat at 0.03% over 2022 levels, with the budget balanced partly through payroll tax revenue and conservative spending measures aimed at replenishing reserves.

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  • 2024 Proposed Budget

    Spokane, WA
    Budget

    Mayor Nadine Woodward's November 2, 2023 letter introducing Spokane's 2024 proposed budget emphasizes cautious economic optimism and a collaborative budgeting process that included community town halls and City Council meetings to identify priorities. The budget focuses on three main areas—public safety, housing and services, and supporting city workers—while implementing heightened spending scrutiny, organizational efficiencies, updated fee schedules, and strategic bridge funding. The proposal aims to balance immediate community needs with long-term fiscal sustainability and sets the foundation for continued efficiency improvements in future budgets.

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  • FY27 Executive Budget - Oklahoma.gov

    Oklahoma City, OK
    Budget

    Oklahoma Governor J. Kevin Stitt submitted the FY 2027 Executive Budget to the 60th Oklahoma Legislature on February 2, 2026, emphasizing stable state revenue and savings exceeding $2 billion. The budget prioritizes flat budgets to limit government growth, smart reforms for vulnerable populations, and year-over-year budget balance. Governor Stitt is calling for establishment of a Taxpayer Endowment Fund to invest state savings and reduce future tax reliance. The administration reports generating $1.8 billion in annual taxpayer savings through income and grocery tax cuts while maintaining core government operations.

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  • City of Wichita, Kansas

    Wichita, KS
    Budget

    The City of Wichita, Kansas' Comprehensive Annual Financial Report covers the fiscal year ended December 31, 2012, and presents the city's financial statements prepared by the Department of Finance under Director Shawn Henning. The report was issued under the city's council-manager form of government, adopted in 1917, with Mayor Carl Brewer and a seven-member city council led by Vice Mayor Pete Meitzner and City Manager Robert Layton. The financial section includes an independent audit report, management discussion and analysis, and government-wide and fund financial statements covering net position, activities, revenues, expenditures, and fund balances for governmental funds.

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