1 / 13

State-Shared Revenues: Coping with the Reductions

State-Shared Revenues: Coping with the Reductions. ACMA Luncheon February 19, 2003. The Role of State-Shared Revenues. Arizona has one of the most generous revenue sharing systems in the nation Cities rely heavily on state-shared revenues to provide on-going services

Ava
Download Presentation

State-Shared Revenues: Coping with the Reductions

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. State-Shared Revenues:Coping with the Reductions ACMA Luncheon February 19, 2003

  2. The Role of State-Shared Revenues • Arizona has one of the most generous revenue sharing systems in the nation • Cities rely heavily on state-shared revenues to provide on-going services • The laws that created shared revenues also pre-empt cities from certain revenues • Forces the state and cities into a partnership of necessity

  3. The Advantages of the System • Evens out tax base disparities among the cities • Lessens the need for competition among the cities • Can smooth out economic cycles somewhat • Historically has produced a stable revenue source for local jurisdictions

  4. Disadvantages of the System • Cities reliant on circumstances outside their control • State legislature controls our destiny year after year • Can produce a reluctance to raise required revenues locally • Lag in recognizing population growth

  5. The Extent of Local Reliance on Shared Revenues Percentage of Total General Fund Revenues • Avondale 27% • Glendale 40% • Phoenix 38% • Tempe 27% • Gilbert 33%

  6. Extent of the Problem • Income Tax Reductions for FY04 • Avondale - $626,259 • Peoria - $1,891,256 • Phoenix - $23,055,946 • Scottsdale - $3,537,772 • Mesa - $6,917,857

  7. Causes of the Problem • Economic Recession • Legislative Formula Changes • Income Tax Pool reduced from 15% to 14.8% for FY 02-03 and 03-04 • Follows a reduction from 15.8% • Legislative Tax Cutting

  8. Coping with the Problem • Short Term Fixes • Delay or defer equipment purchases • Slow down filling of vacant positions • Push purchases into the next fiscal period • Spend down contingency reserves • Use administratively designated funds • Spend locally campaigns • Hiring freezes

  9. Coping with the Problem • On-going Expenditure Reductions • Across the board cuts • Travel and training reductions • Eliminate programs and services • Seek efficiencies, reorganize services • Eliminate vacant positions • Reassess policies on vehicles, cell phones, etc. • Combine divisions or departments

  10. Coping with the Problem • Increase Local Revenues • Local sales taxes • Fines • Permit fees • User charges • Employee contributions for benefits • Property taxes • Non-resident taxes

  11. What’s Different this Time • Economy will eventually recover • Formula will return to 15% (MAYBE) • The tax cuts of the 1990’s probably won’t ever fully come back • Citizen service expectations will probably continue to grow

  12. The Solution • Long-term on-going expenditure reductions • Finding better ways to do business • Keep investing in technology – but capture the savings • Explore local revenue options • Maintain vigilance at the legislature • Keep faith in your ability to manage

  13. State-Shared Revenues:Coping with the Reductions ACMA Luncheon February 19, 2003

More Related