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HomeMy WebLinkAboutEconomic Advisory Board - Minutes - 05/17/2023Page | 1 05/17/23 – Minutes Economic Advisory Board REGULAR MEETING Wednesday, May 17, 2023 – 4:00 PM 300 LaPorte Avenue, Council Information Center 1. CALL TO ORDER: 4:00 PM 2. ROLL CALL a. Board Members Present – • Denny Coleman • Mike Colwell • Thierry Dossou • Erin Gray • Mistene Nugent • John Parks (Vice Chair) • Braulio Rojas • Richard Waal • Renee Walkup (Chair) b. Board Members Absent – c. Staff Members Present – • Jillian Fresa, Staff Liaison • Lawrence Pollack, Finance Department d. Guest(s) – • Kevin Jones, Chamber of Commerce 3. AGENDA REVIEW 4. APPROVAL OF MINUTES a. Board approved April Minutes 5. NEW BUSINESS a. Finance Update, Lawrence Pollack • Lawrence introduced himself and provided an update about the history of how Finance created the Budget for Outcomes (BFO) process as well as the system (JD Edwards) it adopted and continues to use. • Continue the BFO process every 2 years and have integrated this process which is not iterative by creating a performance management system adding in Page | 2 05/17/23 – Minutes metrics, etc. to measure how it’s working and continue to provide transparency for our community’s understanding. • City adopts its Strategic Plan in March à Creation and adoption of the refreshed Strategic Plan. • Council priorities are also included in the Strategic Plan – this year, because of a voting change, their priorities will be adopted at the same time. • Revenue forecasted in March à Sellers (staff) in departments create offers (budget requests) • Offers are created through April à sellers in departments create offers (budget requests) • Budget requests need to support the “how” – how these requests will support the Strategic Plan and community’s goals • Inputs / Environmental Scan include: - Resident Inputs/Priorities including community survey, focus groups/outreach, equity considerations and Boards and Commissions - Council Input / Priorities include: community concerns and adopted priorities - Organizational Input / Priorities include: City Plan, Master Plans, Economics and financials, emerging trends/issues and metrics • BFO Teams Review Offers (May-June) à Staff on BFO teams recommend which offers to buy based on their review prioritization. - What programs and services best fit our Strategic Plan (this last cycle they’re reviewing 680 requests) • From here BFO teams come up with 7 recommendations • Budget Leadership in July fine tunes the recommendations to develop the City Manager’s Recommended Budget • City Council then reviews the recommendations (Sept-Nov) and makes changes for the final adopted budget • Benefits of our process – you can see what you’re paying for • This transparency has been helpful for Council’s overall understanding however this process can also be very overwhelming when it comes to communicating with community members – covering the granularity can be complex • One thing we’re working on with CSU’s Center for Public Deliberation to understand how we become more effective with this process • Q (Thierry) I have a quick question – what tools do we use to create the priorities list? How do we decide what makes the budget cut and what doesn’t? • A (Lawrence) The priorities list comes from the Strategic Plan and for the specific budget request – all of those budget requests – the 680 that I mentioned that are created by staff, those are evaluated to support the overall plan. Then they are evaluated by staff teams with final decisions by the Executive team. Does that answer your question? • Comment (Thierry) Yes, it did. • Q (Richard) So does the City have a December/January fiscal year? • A (Lawrence) Yes • Comment (Lawrence) So at a high level, that is our budget. So what additional information can I provide that would be helpful? • A (Rene) So considering that we’ll have a new Council in January, is the City Page | 3 05/17/23 – Minutes considering changing the budget year to align better with new Council members? • Comment (Lawrence) Because the process is so intense, we would not want to do this on an annual basis. It would be a long conversation about shifting that and a future possibility. • A (Rene) So with the new Council, I’m assuming they’ll be training, do you have plan on how that training is going to occur? • Comment (Lawrence) One of the Assistant City Managers will be bringing them, in collaboration with Council, they’ll be working to on board prior new Council members prior to them being sworn in. They’ll even go as far back as before the election, providing information so Council members can go into the election with eyes more wide open. What does a day in the life of a Council member really look like and what are the expectations of Council? • Trying to provide more upfront information ahead of the elections and then after the election happens, more opportunities to help with that significant learning. There’s a lot to wrap your head around as a new Council member. • Q (Denny) I have a question about revenue that’s produced by individual departments, let’s say Economic Health comes up with a way to make $250,000 through innovation, is it likely that they get the opportunity to spend that or does it go into a pot that everybody gets a piece of it? Are they rewarded for their innovation or is it more like they’re just thanked and encouraged to keep doing innovative things to bring it more funding? I’ve been on the recipient of both and ones a heck of a lot better than the other. • Comment (Lawrence) That’s a great question and I’ll respond initially that not all funds are created equally. So Economic Health lives within the general fund which is a little different story than if the Streets Department which has separate funds, Transportation funds, if they came up with something in revenue, that would flow back into transportation. If that wanted to use that new revenue, they would still have to get Council approval on appropriation to spend that. But it would still most likely get funneled to Streets and so your example of Economic Health is good because it’s less cut and dry. So of the funds could potentially go back to support Economic Health – if there were excess funds from this revenue generation, then that could either go to the general fund or go back to Economic Health. • Q (Richard) Instead of revenue generation, what about cost savings? • A (Lawrence) Basically goes to the bottom line, this is just part of the standard operations. If you have $100 and you spend $90, the remaining $10 would go to the bottom line and the community would say that is for future Council to use as needed. • Q (Mistene) Are there tensions around this? • A (Lawrence) We try to avoid that – there is a tension within any organization to avoid that and we refer ourselves as the protectors of the general fund. This is because everyone wants to use the general fund before they use their own funds. If you have a cost savings, that area does not get to just use it, those funds go back to the general fund. • Q (Rene) Are there departments that straddle both general fund and their own funding? • A (Lawrence) Yes. Page | 4 05/17/23 – Minutes • Q (Rene) Which departments are general fund funded? • A (Lawrence) I can pull out a work chart if you want it? This is a lot – most departments are simplistically governmental funds vs. enterprise funds like Utilities. Does everyone get that distinction? An example of this is our benefits fund, our fleet fund – everyone has a fleet whether you’re on the general fund or Utilities side. Rene, can you ask the question again? • Q (Rene) I was asking with departments are funded through the general fund? • A (Lawrence) within the governmental almost all departments are funded through the general fund. • Q (Rene) So does the City BFO process cover the entire City budget whether it’s general funded or enterprise funded? • A (Lawrence) If we’re not in a cost-cutting environment where we’re intentionally looking for funds to cuts, and I’ll explain to you some of the cuts we’ve made to ongoing budgets, if we’re not looking for those cuts, then we’re assuming that as long as they’re performing, we’re going to limit growth to inflationary number. Any offer that involves an inflationary number, becomes an enhancement offer to make sure that the overall numbers are monitored and are not growing disproportionately. • For example with Recreation perse, they have an overall goal of using 70% of their fund and the other 30% is backfilled by the general fund. • Comment (Rene) So they’re 70% self-sustained. • Q (Braulio) I just want to make sure I have the right assumption, when the budget is created then it goes to City Council for approves, that this is going to be the budget? So moving forward, any savings are identifies and justified, they also need to be approved by City Council? • A (Lawrence) Not necessarily, so City Council has the role for authorizing the initial proposal but in our Charter there is actually no wording stating they have authorization to not approve it. We can do that internally. • Let’s say, I’ll give an example of the plastic bag fees, there were revenues we were forecasting and there were budget requests that were going to funded with that revenue. Our residents are not paying for bags, they’re using their own bags, so our projections were way off. And what we’ve done is okay, we’re not going to have that revenue, we need to reduce our expenses so we have an internal process that we call pros and appropriations where we freeze it and we take it away so you’re not allowed to spend it. Still it was authorized technically by Council but because we don’t have the revenue coming in, we’re not allowed to spend it. • If it was a different situation where it was a cost savings we were realizing and we wanted to freeze that, that would just go back to the fund balance. • So the budget itself has a mechanism to adjust depending on the circumstances. • Comment (Braulio) So my understanding is that then the budget itself has its mechanism to adjust down the road. • A (Lawrence) We manage those very tightly and that’s why we have monthly, what we call is a monthly financial report where we review and analyze how city operations both governmental and the utilities side is doing from our actuals compare it to what we have in the budget and we look at both revenue and expenses. Page | 5 05/17/23 – Minutes • Q (Braulio) I have another one and this is the last, how do you prevent units from over-budgeting? • A (Lawrence) so for over-budgeting, the most simplistic way to think of our budget requests is our current level of service for our ongoing offers, we manage those by beforehand, making sure we have an agreement that of this total amount, it can only grow by an assumed inflationary rate. - Match the inflationary increases both on the revenue and the expense sides - We manage the current level of service by those agreements. Then anything else that is net new has to compete for approval and how it compares to anything else that is being suggested in the budget. - A department itself can’t just have significant growth because of some change, even the City Manager ones, we tightly manage those levels of service because we always have a tension of not having enough resources for everything that would be desired, that natural tension just like we all have in our own personal budgets. We have to manage those tightly and any modifications to the budget are getting an overall modifications to the budget are getting approval from the City Manager. • Q (Braulio) Okay. • Q (Denny) Flip that a little and say someone comes to Jillian and says “we have a great idea for a revenue enhancement” – does she have to a year and 9 months to add it to the budget or is there a way to take advantage of some new, really significant idea? • A (Lawrence) so I’ll go back to disposable bags again, that’s an example of something that after the budget was approved in 2022, that was not included, that was net new. That was approved by Council sometime in 2022 with the expenses being justified by the anticipated revenue. So there are options through supplemental – let’s backup, how many ways can we approve spending at the City? We really have 2 ways we can modify the budget 1 way is through what are called supplementals, an idea that becomes its own revenue. A significant departure from that, an example would be most recently with the rental housing, and the extra expectations that it was going to be put on landlords. That would have been a program that would have been “net new”, not coming with any revenue. A program that would have been funded out of the general fund. - There are mechanisms where Council has the flexibility where they don’t have to wait for such a long period of time. • Also in the second year of our budget, the Council adopts a 2-year budget, they adopted a 2023 and a 2024 but in our charter they are only authorized to spend on the one year at a time. This fall we’ll come back with the second year of the budget as they adopted (2024) with modifications – these are things that are specifically asked for by Council or the City Manager. And those requests are smaller – something like 20 vs. 680+. There typically aren’t a lot of surprises that come up – conversely this is a time when if revenues aren’t coming in to our forecast, we can reduce the second year of that 2-year budget to align with the unfortunate decrease. The important point here is to right size as needed based on shortfalls, etc. • Q (Braulio) How is the mechanism to cover general budget, if you have a Page | 6 05/17/23 – Minutes general budget • A (Lawrence) By charter, we have to have a balanced budget – a combination of revenue and/or reserves. We cannot deficit spend. • Q (Braulio) This has not happened in your time? • A (Lawrence) No, there may be from an accounting perspective, these are things that accountants and auditors are looking for areas where we have gone over per our budget balance. - Technically, we manage budgets at the department level. So for example with Economic Health we evaluate their budget throughout the year. - Legally EHO could go over budget and they’re all within the General Fund. The charter says we cannot go over at the fund level. We manage at a department level. - If Economic Health got approval to go over their budget, before that authorization is approved, we’d need to evaluate the entire general fund, do we have vacancy savings. • Q (Braulio) I remember that during Covid, after Covid, I remember that we looked at how long the City could exist if revenues didn’t approve – that was the objective of my question and I’m glad you asked. • Q (Erin) So you mentioned 680 programs, I’m curious as a new budget comes up to be improved, how many of these programs can go over, what are impacts, what are they meeting our goals, how is that put into the budgetary process? • A (Lawrence) So we have the current level of service and just because Council has approved what we call and we call an enhancement, and that doesn’t necessarily go into the new level of service. So our executive team, City Manager and Executive Directors, evaluate our enhancements and the question comes during the evaluation, is this performing at the level we expected. For the enhancements we don’t have all of the information needed so all of these decisions are City Manager decisions. - We are looking at the overall goals and if we’re meeting those budgetary goals. • Comment (Lawrence) Let me go over the cost savings but before we do I want to orient you to our website – we have some information that’s at your fingertips including Budget 101 (Spanish and English), www.fcgov.com/citymanger/budget.php • Will be adding some additional budget information later this year. • There is also a summary of the City’s 2023-2024 budget (24 pages) located on this website. • Quick facts – the city operates on a very low percentage of property taxes vs. other cities in other states • When the budget narrative was created, it includes all of the latest numbers Page | 7 05/17/23 – Minutes and there’s another document that dives deeper into the details for those who are interested. - Performance metrics - Organized in numerical order according to each budget offer - Will eventually include a budget user guide video • Q (Denny) Does the City focus at all on making additional revenue, revenue enhancements? • A (Lawrence) Actually we tend to focus more on saving money – this is something I also wanted to point out. • From a cost saving perspective, in 2017 we implemented a process improvement program called FC Lean. This is to reduce waste – and in 3 years our soft cost savings was 10,000 hours which is around $395,000 in soft cost savings. • One place you can see this – you can view www.fcgov.com/kfcg and view our cost savings over the years after FC Lean was implemented. • Another comparison for cost savings – in 2021, we had cut $12.6 million in budget cuts and in 2022 we only added back $4.9 million so in the 2023-2024 budget cycle, although there were enhancements, we took another $2 million out of the budget based on monies that weren’t being used. The combination of these is just under $9 million in cuts. • There was a renewed focus on asset management – people, parks, and technology – taking care of what we have. Big shift in our focus. • We have another pressure of the ARPA monies that will be going away - $28 million. We need to review of those funds spent, what was the most impactful. • 2025-2028 will become a lot leaner • Comment (Rene) – This has been very informative, lots of resources – we I’m delighted how the City is finding new ways to save money and avoid duplication. Are there any other questions? • Comment (Mistene) – Lawrence, if the increased tax isn’t approved by voters, what’s the process at that point? • A (Lawrence) It would got back to staff and we’d also be revisiting the “stop doing” list – no one wants to stop services but this will need to be discussed. • Comment (John) – Is there a website where we can find the tax information – • A (Lawrence) No, there’s not a formal website it would just be through Council discussions and Council Finance. • Comment (John) – Do you know if there’s been any changes in the last 30 days? • A (Lawrence) April 25 was the last discussion – Council went around and they each spoke about the different options of revenue generation they’d be interested in. • Comment (Mistene) Did anyone go to the last Council session? I did and it was helpful – these are recorded if folks want to go back and watch it. • Q (Denny) Is there a presentation coming up on enhancements? What’s the City calling that? Up in Issues – all boards and committees. --10-minute break-- • Comment (John) – Reviewed previous meeting discuss regarding the proposed new taxes for sustainability measures – there’s a $31 million funding gap, there’s $8-12 million for Parks maintenance, $14 million for equity and climate Page | 8 05/17/23 – Minutes priorities for City Council, $2.5 million for buildings, $1.5 million for zero waste and EVs – in general, there were a suite of subsidy taxes including alcohol, nicotine, marijuana, large GHG emitters tax (Anheuser Busch and Broadcom), • Comment (John) We decided at the last meeting to write some sort of a memo to Council – understand how much savings are happening to offset – how much savings are there to offset the spending? I heard $9 million in savings – Mistene or maybe Jillian could give us an update on what was discussed at the last Council meeting? • Comment (Mistene) They did a roundtable discussion and they solely focused on the topic of raising taxes and the areas that would cover. - Shared Ginny’s presentation from the previous meeting with the summary of the proposed funding areas. • For follow-up: Jillian will resend the presentation from Ginny with more details of what was shared • The issue at hand is the timeframe for these proposed funding options – there isn’t much time for public outreach so that’s the main concern. • Comment (Braulio) Overall there is a need as a board to get into alignment with what’s being proposed – if we agree they should have taxes, do we write a memo to City Council and if so, what should we propose that Council should take into consideration? - What do we take into consideration? What are the scenarios we could propose with our memo? Going into details will be difficult so it’s my recommendation we keep our memo high level. • Comment (Richard) Unfortunately where he’s sitting in the room, the audio isn’t picking up his voice and what he shared. • Comment (Braulio) Overall how the information is presented to voters is very important – helping folks understand what the priorities mean. If you appeal to the voter’s values, I feel that there’s a chance of getting these initiatives Page | 9 05/17/23 – Minutes passed. • Comment (Mistene) In my opinion, I’d like to see what the discussion would look like from City Council not to raise taxes – so far, I haven’t heard this perspective but I think it’s an important topic to address. Priorities are priorities but it’s really important how we get there. - Where I’m struggling in my head as a board, should we not send a memo based on the point that we don’t have consensus - I also feel like this discussion should have happened many months ago. • Comment (John) I agree that we don’t have consensus – I would invite everyone to take a look at the Council agenda and send a note to the group with your recommendation on the top 2-3 priorities. • Comment (Mistene) Before we go there are 2 things – 1) FYI to the group in case you didn’t see, the minimum wage proposed increase didn’t pass and 2) I recommend this group watches the Council session • Comment (Jillian) Jillian – I can share that video out for folks to watch • Comment (Denny) What if we send a memo to Council to let them know we’re here and ready to engage in the future, when there’s more time to provide input? • Comment (Mistene) Also if we’re more proactive in our agenda, we would have also covered this. - It would be helpful if we had an advocate who’s on City Council • Comment (Rene) Yes – could we invite Shirley Peel? Maybe it would be helpful to have her join on a quarterly basis. 6. OTHER BUSINESS NA 7. ADJOURNMENT a. (5:58pm) Minutes approved by a vote of the Board on XX/XX/XX