Town Crier
Request a township
All typesagendaminutesproposalbudgetother
All time30 days90 days1 year

4 results for “fund balances” · other

  • Memorandum DATE August 25, 2023 CITY OF DALLAS

    Aug 25, 2023

    ·Dallas, TX
    Other

    This memorandum from the City of Dallas outlines the remaining timeline and procedures for the FY 2023-24 budget adoption process. City Council Members must submit proposed amendments to the City Manager by 10:00 a.m. on September 1, 2023, with balanced amendments distributed by 5:00 p.m. that same day. Key dates include a Budget Workshop on September 6 for amendment consideration and first reading adoption, tax rate public hearing and final budget adoption on September 20, and the fiscal year beginning October 1. All amendments must be balanced with identified funding sources and sustainable over the two-year biennial budget period, with ongoing funds offsetting ongoing uses and one-time funds offsetting one-time uses.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • 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.

AI summary

View PDFSource
  • 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.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • Fiscal Year 2021-23 Overview of the City Budget Process City of Oakland

    Oakland, CA
    Other

    Oakland's Fiscal Year 2021-23 budget overview describes the city's biennial budget process conducted from February to June, requiring a balanced budget by June 30. The city's total annual budget is approximately $1.7 billion, funded through taxes (51%), service charges, fines, licenses and permits (15%), bonds and other sources (14%), transfers (12%), and grants and subsidies (8%). The budget is divided into Restricted Funds (62%), which must be used for specific purposes mandated by grants and voter-approved bonds, and General Purpose Funds (38%), which are tax-supported and flexible for various city services including public safety. Of every property tax dollar paid, the City of Oakland receives approximately 26 cents, with the remaining 74 percent distributed to other government agencies including Alameda County, OUSD, AC Transit, and BART.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource