An Easy Solution To This Financial Problem Is A Balanced Budget Ordinance
By City Council member Stephanie Brinkerhoff-Riley
It would place the onus on the Administration. They would be obligated to review expenditures and revenue as of June 30th and make a forecast as to expenditures and revenue through December 31st. If expenditures are outpacing revenue, the Administration would be obligated to reduce spending and divide it as evenly as possible over August through December. And do so with the inclusion of City Council or at least the Finance Chair.
What they do now is close the books on all nonessential vendors in October or November. Bills submitted in these months aren’t paid unless essential, like Vectren, until January or February. They had so many bills in 2014 that they couldn’t pay them all in January and some got pushed to February of 2015. A friend of mine sold a trailer to the City in October and was not paid until February. The contract employee who runs the Rental Registry went 4 months without getting paid last winter.
Forcing an analysis and forecast would theoretically pull spending in line with revenue and potentially get vendors paid sooner, while pushing fewer bills into the next budget cycle.
As of June 30th of 2015, expenditures were outpacing revenue by about 5 million. We know that revenue in the second half of the year is less than revenue in the first half. Property tax collections in June run about 55% of the total collected, and the bulk of the City’s other revenue sources wind down in the coldest months- zoo admissions, pool receipts, permit applications, etc.
Revenue was 43 million and expenditures were 48 million as of June 30th this year. The blue book for June doesn’t accurately reflect this, as Russ invested property tax receipts in the Hoosier Fund for 21 days, so selling those investments shows up as revenue- it’s a double entry. He and I went over actual numbers at the August town hall meeting. He said revenue for the year would be 79 million. So we have 36 million in revenue to collect and 31 million that can be spent. That’s a bit over $5 million a month for July through December. We could with the right ordinance, pace that out over the rest of the year.
I don’t think I’m having an original thought, but I have not looked at other cities to see if they have an ordinance that can be modeled. What do you think?
Stephanie Brinkerhoff-Riley
3rd Ward City Council Member
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