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2012-12-31 Management Ltr.
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2012-12-31 Management Ltr.
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City of Centerville <br />March 20, 2013 <br />Page 4 <br />Financial Position and Results of Operations <br />Our principal observations and recommendations are summarized on the following pages. These recommendations resulted from our <br />December 31, 2012. <br />General Fund <br />The General fund is used to account for resources traditionally associated with government, which are not required legally or by <br />sound principal management to be accounted for in another fund. The General fund balance increased $63,499 from 2011. The <br />fund balance of $1,205,820 is 58 percent of the 2013 budgeted expenditures. The total General fund budget is $2,083,300 for <br />2013. We recommend the fund balance be maintained at a level sufficient to fund operations until the major revenue sources are <br />received in June. We feel a reserve of approximately 40 to 50 percent of planned expenditures and transfers out is adequate to <br />meet working capital and small emergency needs. At the current level, the fund balance is above the minimum but City Council <br />has acknowledged the amount. The City Council adopted a fund balance resolution and the City is in compliance with this <br />resolution. <br />The Office of the State Auditor (the OSA) has issued a Statement of Position <br />should identify fund balance separately between reserved and unreserved fund balance. The local government may assign and <br />report some or all of the fund <br />on the level of unreserved fund balance that should be maintained in the General and special revenue funds. This helps address <br />citizen concerns as to the use of fund balance and tax levels. <br />The purposes and benefits of an adequate fund balance are as follows: <br /> <br />Expenditures are incurred somewhat evenly throughout the year. However, property tax and state aid revenues are not <br />received until the second half of the year. An adequate fund balance will provide the cash flow required to finance the <br />governmental fund expenditures. <br /> <br />The City is vulnerable to legislative actions at the State and Federal level. The State continually adjusts the local <br />government aid formulas. We also have seen the State mandate levy limits for cities over 2,500 in population. An <br />adequate fund balance will provide a temporary buffer against those aid adjustments and levy limits. <br /> <br />Expenditures not anticipated at the time the annual budget was adopted may need immediate City Council action. These <br />would include capital outlay replacement, lawsuits and other items. An adequate fund balance will provide the financing <br />needed for such expenditures. <br /> <br />A strong fund balance will assist the City in obtaining, maintaining or improving its bond rating. The result will be better <br />interest rates in future bond sales. <br /> <br /> <br />
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