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14 results for “police officer” · budget

  • TOWNSHIP OF BETHLEHEM 2026 BUDGET ASSUMPTIONS AS OF DECEMBER 15, 2025

    Dec 15, 2025

    ·Bangor, PA
    Budget

    The Township of Bethlehem presented its 2026 budget assumptions as of December 15, 2025, with key decisions including wage increases for bargaining units (3.00–4.00%) and non-bargaining employees (4.00%), a 20% medical insurance rate increase, and no proposed increases to the millage rate or sewer billing rate. Notable staffing changes include two open police officer positions and two open truck driver positions in Public Works, while a 10% stormwater fee increase was proposed. The township's total tax millage rate remained at 8.04 mills (9.80% of total tax burden), with a tentative budget hearing schedule spanning October through December 2025 and formal adoption scheduled for December 15th.

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    budgetwage increasetax millagestormwater feestaffing
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  • Annual Budget 2024 Adopted Annual BUDGET October 1, 2023

    Oct 1, 2023

    ·Tampa, FL
    Budget

    The City of Largo, Florida adopted its Fiscal Year 2024 Annual Budget for Operating and Capital Improvements, effective October 1, 2023. The budget document includes organizational structure for 992.52 full-time equivalent employees across departments including Police (220.06 FTE), Fire Rescue (169.00 FTE), Public Works (152.33 FTE), and Recreation, Parks & Arts (145.65 FTE). The City received a Distinguished Budget Presentation Award from the Government Finance Officers Association for the prior fiscal year.

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    budget adoptionmunicipal operationsemployee staffingcapital improvements
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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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    budgetmunicipal spendingfiscal planning
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  • ADOPTED 2021 BUDGET

    Indianapolis, IN
    Budget

    The Consolidated City of Indianapolis-Marion County adopted its 2021 balanced budget, the fourth consecutive balanced budget since 2010, which eliminates the structural budget deficit while maintaining conservative spending due to COVID-19. The budget prioritizes public safety funding for 1,743 police officers and 1,220 firefighters, including technology investments such as body cameras and an updated computer-aided dispatch system, along with criminal justice reform, infrastructure investment exceeding $500 million, and community development initiatives including crime prevention programs, homelessness and food insecurity support, and economic development projects. The budget honors all collective bargaining commitments and continues funding for the Community Justice Campus construction.

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    budget adoptionpublic safetyinfrastructure investmentcriminal justicecommunity development
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  • Budget Review 2023-24 City of Portland BUDGET HIGHLIGHTS •

    Portland, OR
    Budget

    The City of Portland's FY 2023-24 budget totals $7.1 billion, a 1% decrease from the prior year driven largely by a $391 million reduction in debt proceeds, though the expenditure-only portion increased 2% to $4.2 billion with significant growth in personnel services and capital projects. The city identified three budget priorities: public safety (including 43 new police officers and $5.3 million in funding), charter change implementation ($2.5 million), and economic recovery and livability ($43.3 million for shelter beds and services for unhoused residents, plus $15.8 million for trash and graffiti removal). The budget office characterized FY 2024 as a "pinch year" for the General Fund due to expiring pandemic relief funds, with an estimated $66 million in ongoing programs currently funded through one-time dollars that will require alternative funding sources in future years.

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  • 2025-2026 APPROVED EXECUTIVE BUDGET

    Louisville, KY
    Budget

    Louisville Metro Mayor Craig Greenberg presented the 2025-2026 Approved Executive Budget on April 24, 2025, emphasizing investments in public safety, housing, job creation, and community services. The budget includes funding for additional police officer and firefighter recruit classes, the addition of nurses to the 911 call center to improve emergency response efficiency, AI programs to enhance government operations, and a five percent across-the-board raise for all non-union employees. The mayor highlighted significant violent crime reductions and proposed continued support for education initiatives including Thrive by 5 and early childhood learning programs.

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    budgetpublic safetyhousingjob creationeducation funding
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  • Budget Review 2023-24 City of Portland BUDGET HIGHLIGHTS •

    Portland, ME
    Budget

    The City of Portland adopted a $7.1 billion budget for FY 2023-24, representing a 1% decrease from the previous year, with the expenditure-only portion increasing 2% to $4.2 billion due to growth in personnel services and capital projects, particularly in the Water and Sewer funds. The budget prioritizes public safety (45 new FTE including 43 police officers), charter implementation ($2.5 million), and economic recovery and livability ($59.1 million combined for trash removal, small business support, and homeless services). The city characterized FY 2023-24 as a "pinch year" for the General Fund, with expiration of one-time pandemic relief funds and American Rescue Plan dollars creating budgetary pressure, while utility rate increases are held to 4.9% for water/sewer and parking fees increase 20 cents.

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    budgetpublic safetywater infrastructurehomelessness serviceseconomic recovery
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  • 2022-2023 RECOMMENDED EXECUTIVE BUDGET LOUISVILLE METRO GOVERNMENT

    Louisville, KY
    Budget

    The 2022-2023 Recommended Executive Budget for Louisville Metro Government, presented by Mayor Greg Fischer, proposes total expenditures of $1.3 billion, including $715 million in General Fund dollars, reflecting strong economic recovery. The budget funds an additional 170 officers for the Louisville Metro Police Department to reach 1,100 by June 30, 2023, and allocates resources for public safety, affordable housing, technology systems, and critical infrastructure through a "whole-of-government" approach. The budget also leverages federal American Rescue Plan Act funds and Bipartisan Infrastructure Law funding opportunities to support community development.

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    budgetpublic safetypolice fundingaffordable housinginfrastructure
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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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  • FY2025 Budget Presentation Dennis Rogero Chief Financial Officer

    Tampa, FL
    Budget

    The FY2025 recommended budget totals $1,827.3 million across all funds, with the General Fund at $652.9 million (35.7%) and Enterprise Fund at $735.9 million (40.3%). Major revenue increases include $20.3 million from property taxes, $18.6 million from other taxes, and $15.0 million from miscellaneous revenues, while expenditure increases are driven by $36.5 million in salary and benefits adjustments, including negotiated raises of 4.5% for police, fire, and transit unions and 3% for non-collective bargaining employees. The budget includes five new full-time positions and maintains a general fund balance target of 23-28%, with fire and police expenditures totaling $388.9 million and $53.9 million allocated to tax increment financing revenues for Community Redevelopment Agencies.

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    budgetproperty taxsalary and benefitspublic safetycommunity redevelopment
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  • Ne

    Lincoln, NE
    Budget

    The City of Lincoln, Nebraska submitted its annual budget beginning September 1, 2020 to the Government Finance Officers Association (GFOA) for a Distinguished Budget Presentation Award, which the city had previously received for meeting program criteria as a policy document, operations guide, financial plan, and communication device. The budget document includes comprehensive sections on budget highlights, city profile, goals, tax information, financial policies, departmental budgets for 16 city departments, and a capital improvement program with multiple funding mechanisms including general obligation bonds, revenue bonds, and state revolving loan financing. The city also received "Special Performance Measures Recognition" in addition to the budget award. The document serves as both a financial plan detailing sources and uses of funds across multiple funds including the General Fund, Water Fund, Wastewater Fund, Police and Fire Pension Fund, and others, and as a policy guide referencing the City Charter and Nebraska Statutes.

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    budgetmunicipal financecapital improvement
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  • Comprehensive Annual Financial Report

    Baton Rouge, LA
    Budget

    This Comprehensive Annual Financial Report documents the financial condition of the Employees' Retirement System of the City of Baton Rouge and Parish of East Baton Rouge for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2016. The system is administered by Jeffrey R. Yates and operates as a component unit of the consolidated government, maintaining offices at 209 St. Ferdinand Street in Baton Rouge. The report includes audited financial statements covering fiduciary net position and changes in fiduciary net position, supplemented by schedules detailing net pension liabilities, employer contributions, and investment returns for both the CPERS Trust and Police Guarantee Trust. Supporting materials include administrative and investment expense schedules, investment policies, asset allocation information, and actuarial certification documentation.

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  • Operating Budget Short Overview 2025

    Akron, OH
    Budget

    The City of Akron proposed a $798 million operating budget for 2025, representing a 2.0% decrease from 2024, with 71% of general fund expenditures dedicated to staffing for approximately 2,000 employees. The budget prioritizes public safety as the top initiative, maintaining current staffing levels of 488 police officers and 402 firefighter/medics, while also investing in core city services including fleet upgrades and permit processing efficiency, and targeted strategic investments in gun violence prevention, youth opportunity, and education programs. The budget was presented to Akron City Council amid revenue constraints and includes a forecasted 2% cost-of-living adjustment that had not yet been finalized.

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    budgetpublic safetystaffingeducation programsgun violence prevention
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  • CITY OF PROVIDENCE FY23 BUDGET

    Providence, RI
    Budget

    The FY23 City of Providence budget totals $567,341,359, representing a 5.15% increase, and is structured as a balanced budget emphasizing investments in youth, city services, and infrastructure. Key allocations include $100,323,373 for pension fund payments, $498.8 million for major infrastructure improvements over FY23-27, $1,526,715 for police and fire training academies to recruit up to 50 new officers and firefighters, and $721,176 for a behavioral health crisis response program. The budget also reflects tax rate adjustments across residential, commercial, tangible, and motor vehicle categories, with residential tax rates decreasing by $6.06 per $1,000 valuation, and the city achieved its first rainy day fund reserve goal of 5% since 2008 with a current balance of $28,818,000.

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    budgetinfrastructurepublic safetypension fundingtax rate
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