HomeMy WebLinkAboutSECTION 2-BUDGET PROCESS
2004 Final Budaet
Capitol
Improvement
Program
Final Work
Program
SECTION II: BUDGET PROCESS
City of Auburn Budget Process
Program
Improvements
Council/Mayor
Goal Setting
Baseline
Budget
Preliminary Budget
Budget Message
Budget Initiatives
Final Budget
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Section II: Budaet Process
Financial Analysis
Budget
Policies
2004 Final Budaet
2004 Budget Calendar
JULY
1 Technology Memo to
Departments
18 Information Systems &
Technology Items requests
due
22 Finance pre-budget
meeting with Mayor
23-24 Budget packages
distributed to department
directors
AUGUST
15 Department Directors return
to the Finance Department
completed line item budget
requests, departmental
2003 accomplishments and
2004 goals
23 Finance prepares
preliminary revenue
forecasts
Aug. 29- Notice of initial budget
Sept. 5 hearing
Aug. 20- Department directors
Aug. 29 review departmental
budgets and goals with
Mayor and Finance Director
SEPTEMBER
15 Initial public budget hearing
#1
September Budget requests reviewed
committee by Council Committees
meetings
11 Finalize revenue forecast
and property tax levy
27 Finance department adjusts
budget requests based on
the Mayor's
recommendation
Section II: Budaet Process
OCTOBER
Oct. 24 & Notice of filing preliminary
Oct. 31 budget and notice of public
hearings to finalize budget
(Published once a week for
two consecutive weeks)
24 Preliminary budget, including
budget message, published
and filed with the City Clerk
and made available to the
public. Distribute copies to
the City Council.
NOVEMBER
Nov3 Formal public hearing #2 on
final budget and property
tax levy. Presentation of
revenue estimates and
property taxes.
(RCW 84.52.020 & 84.52.070)
(RCW 84.55.120)
4 Property tax levy set by
Ordinance (Pierce and King
Counties)
14 Council work session to
present the Mayor's 2004
budget recommendations
4:00-6:00
DECEMBER
1 Adoption of budget by
Ordinance
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2004 Final Budaet
A. Budget Purpose
The City of Auburn's budget seeks to achieve
four basic purposes:
1. A policy tool: The City's budget process is
conducted in a manner that allows the City's
policy officials to comprehensively review the
direction of the City and to redirect its
activities by means of the allocation of
financial resources. On this basis, the budget
sets policies for the following year (see Budget
Policies Section III). This budget also facilitates
the evaluation of City programs by providing
a means to examine both the financial
activities and the progress towards yearly
performance objectives of City departments
over time.
2. An operations guide: This budget provides
financial control by setting forth both
legislative and administrative guidance to
City employees regarding the character and
scope of their activities. This direction is set
forth in both summary and detail form in the
various products of the budget process (see
Budget Process Section II).
3. A financial plan: This budget outlines the
manner in which the financial resources of
the City will be managed during the budget
process. This allocation of resources is based
on both the current year's needs and on a
longer-term view of the development of City
programs. The budget takes into account
unforeseen contingencies and provides for
periodic adjustments (see Financial Plan
Section IV).
4. As a communications medium: A budget
cannot be effective unless it communicates.
Since this budget has a diverse audience, it
seeks to communicate at several levels and
for several purposes. The budget seeks to
communicate clear policy at a usable level
of detail to City employees. It also seeks to
communicate significant policy issues and
options in a form that can be acted on by
policy officials. It also seeks to provide
information to the City's constituents that
enables meaningful dialog with elected
officials.
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Section II: Budaet Process
B. Budget Process
The City of Auburn's budget process meets these
purposes by integrating the planning and
implementation of City programs with the
allocation of financial resources necessary to
support those services.
The budget process starts in early spring with a
retreat for the City Council and the Mayor
meeting to review the Visions for the Future,
Mission Statement and the previous year's goals.
A t that retreat, Council and Mayor discuss such
issues as staffing, emerging topics and program
priorities. Then, during the summer of each year,
departments develop their budgets and work
plans that are described in the department
description for the following year (which is the
calendar year). These work plans include capital
projects scheduled for construction in the Capital
Facilities Plan (CFP). Generally, most
departments use a "bottom-up" approach to
budgeting, with divisions or other administrative
units developing their work objectives along with
identifying their fiscal requirements. These
divisional budgets are then modified for
integration into a department level work program
and budget proposal. Departments consult
during this period with various Council
committees while they are formulating their next
year's work programs and performance
objectives. This consultation may be either formal
or informal and is intended to include the
Council's desires in the work programs and
supporting budget proposals.
In late summer, these tentative budget proposals
are submitted to the Mayor. At the same time
the budget proposals are submitted to the
Mayor, the Finance Department develops a
tentative revenue projection for the following
budget year. A complete proposed budget is
presented to the Mayor by the end of
September. The budget and work programs are
reviewed by the Mayor and Finance Director in
detail with each department head. On the basis
of this process, the Mayor formulates his
recommended budget for the following year.
In September, the City Council holds a public
hearing to solicit comments from the general
public, regarding issues the City should be
2004 Final Budaet
considering during its review of the budget. This
hearing is held early in the process in order to
afford the public an opportunity to comment
before the budget takes a formal shape. At the
same time the Mayor is reviewing the
department proposals, the departments present
their budget proposals in detail to the
appropriate committee of the Council.
The Mayor's recommendations for the next fiscal
year are formally transmitted to the Council in the
form of the Preliminary Budget during the month
of October. During late October and early
November, the Council holds a formal hearing on
the preliminary budget and conducts a series of
workshops to examine the budget in detail. The
Council conducts a preliminary budget hearing
before acting formally on the budget as modified
during its workshop hearings. Final action on the
budget usually occurs in early December.
The entire process is coordinated, as needed, in
regular meetings of the City department heads,
chaired by the Mayor. Various Council
committees are consulted continually through
the year as potential issues surface and new
program ideas incubate.
C. Budget Structure
The budget process results in various budget
products at appropriate stages of the process.
1. Budget and Accounting System: The official
budget is maintained, both before and after
adoption, on the City's financial
management and accounting system at a
very detailed line item level. Computerized
reports can be generated at any time and at
various levels of detail. Departments can also
access these budgets at any time on a read-
only inquiry basis to compare actual revenue
and expenditures to their budgets. This
computerized budget becomes the
accounting system that controls expenditures
after adoption of the final budget.
2. Preliminary Budget: The Preliminary Budget is
prepared, pursuant to State law, as the
Mayor's budget recommendations to the City
Council. This public document contains a
summary of information at the fund level. and
for the General Fund at the department level.
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Section II: Budaet Process
It focuses on key policy issues, while still
providing a comprehensive overview of the
complete budget. Detailed information is
made available upon request from the full
computerized budget.
3. Budget Ordinance: The actual appropriations
implementing the budget are contained in
the budget ordinance adopted by the City
Council.
4. Final Budget: The Final Budget is issued as a
formal published document, in the same
format as the preliminary budget, but as
modified by the City Council. It is this
document, which is formally filed as the Final
Budget.
5. Operating Budget: The operating budget is
produced in notebook form and presents the
adopted budget in more detail. It includes
detailed information at the cost center level
for all funds. It is not accepted into
permanent record until the accounts of the
previous year's financial activity are
completed since incorporating such actual
expenditures creates a more usable
document as a permanent record.
6. Work Programs: While the budget proposals
of the administration are developed in
concert with the fiscal proposals in the
budget, the budget documents themselves
only summarize the individual work programs
and performance objectives. The actual
work programs are in a goal and
performance objective format maintained by
each department. Generally, these work
programs are not finalized until the budget is
in final form since the budget will determine
the actual activities undertaken by each
department. Finalized departmental work
programs include timetables and deadlines
for implementing budgeted performance
goals and activities.
D. Components of the Budget
The budget consists of two parts: baseline budget
and program improvements.
2004 Final Budaet
1. Baseline Budget: The baseline budget
consists of budget proposals, which would be
sufficient to maintain the operation of
programs, which had been previously
authorized, in earlier budgets.
2. Program Improvements: Program
improvements consist of new initiatives or
substantial changes to existing programs.
Separation of the budget into these two
components separates key policy issues in order
to facilitate their consideration. The policy
officials can examine more readily at what level
existing programs should be funded, what
budget initiatives should be made and at what
level of funding.
The Final Budget will consolidate the program
improvements into the appropriate line items.
E. Capital Planning
In 1998, the City Council approved a Capital
Facilities Plan (CFP) for capital facility planning
and programming. The CFP was originally
adopted as an element of the City
Comprehensive Plan that provides the City's
plans to finance capital facilities that will be
needed during the next 20 years. The CFP
includes both long-range strategy and a specific
six-year action plan of improvements. The CFP is
maintained and reports are published separately
from the budget. The CFP was updated for the
period 2003 through 2008 and adopted in 2003.
An update will be done annually and adopted
with the Final Budget. The Capital Program
Summary, section VIII. of this budget includes the
projects within that six-year plan appropriate for
funding during 2004. Also included in that section
is the capital financing policies and additional
financial information pertaining specifically to
capital projects.
F. Implementation, Monitoring and Amendment
The budget and its policies are implemented
through the work programs of individual
departments and accounting controls of the
Finance Department. Progress in the
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implementation of the budget program is
monitored by a monthly reporting system
consisting of monthly reports to the Mayor from
the department heads on the progress of
departmental work programs and performance
goals. The reports are then summarized into a
monthly report by the Mayor to Council. In
addition, each department prepares detailed
semi-annual and annual reports on their total
work program and performance goals.
Implementation of the budget is further
monitored by the oversight activities of various
City Council committees, which meet twice
monthly to not only consider proposals before the
City Council. but also to review the activities of
the various City departments. Both the report
function of the Finance Department and the
oversight function of the Finance Committee of
the Council include the status of the fiscal
management policies of the budget.
The financial aspects of the budget are
monitored in periodic reports issued by the
Finance Department comparing actual
expenditures and revenues with the budget. In
these reports, financial data is presented at the
same level of detail as the final budget. These
reports include an analysis of the City's financial
condition.
From time to time it becomes necessary to
modify the adopted budget. The procedure for
amending the budget depends upon the type of
change that is needed. One type of change
does not affect the "bottom line" total for a
department or a fund. These changes, mainly
transfers from one line-item to another within a
department's operating budget or changes
between divisions within a department, may be
effected by the Mayor and the Finance Director
with written request from the department
director.
The second type of budget amendment brings
about a change in the total appropriations for a
department or fund. Examples of these changes
include but are not limited to the following: the
acceptance of additional grant money, an
adjustment to reflect increased revenues such as
tax receipts, the appropriation of additional
funding if expenditures are projected to exceed
budgeted amounts, and re-appropriation of
2004 Final Budaet
monies from one fund to another when deemed
necessary. These changes require council
approval in the form of an ordinance. The status
of the budget is comprehensively reviewed twice
yearly to identify any needed adjustments. The
budget may be modified at other intervals during
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Section II: Budaet Process
the year if programs require unforeseen changes
that were not anticipated during the
comprehensive review periods. All requests for
amendments are first filed with the Finance
Department.