File #: 2016-2874   
Type: Joint Consent Item
Body: City Council
On agenda: 6/7/2016
Title: Recommendation to Accept the Third Quarter Financial Report for the Period Ending March 31, 2016. [City Council and SACIC] (Finance 2410)
Attachments: 1. Exhibit 1 - Third Quarter Financial Report

Title

Recommendation to Accept the Third Quarter Financial Report for the Period Ending March 31, 2016. [City Council and SACIC] (Finance 2410)

 

Body

To:  Honorable Mayor and Members of the City Council

 

From:  Jill Keimach, City Manager

 

Re:  Accept the Third Quarter Financial Report for the Period Ending March 31, 2016

 

BACKGROUND

 

The third quarter’s financial report on all City’s funds is based upon actual revenues and expenditures through March 31, 2016.  The Quarterly Financial Report attached as Exhibit 1 to this document includes the following:

                     General Fund actual revenues by major category through March 31, 2016;

                     General Fund actual expenditures by major department through March 31, 2016;

                     Actual expenditures for the City’s capital and maintenance projects through March 31, 2016; and

                     All Funds revenues, expenditures and changes in current available fund balances as of March 31, 2016.

 

DISCUSSION

 

Quarterly reports provide the City Council with updates on the financial status of the City’s funds by comparing budget projections for revenues and expenditures to actual receipts and expenses. Any budget amendments that have been approved as of March 31, 2016 by the City Council have been included in this report.

 

General Fund

 

The Fiscal Year (FY) 2015-16 annual budget for the General Fund projected revenues isof $81.9 million.  Actual revenues as of March 31, 2016 were about $52.6 million, or 64% of the FY 2015-16 budget.  The FY 2015-16 expenditure appropriations for the General Fund are $89 million.  As of March 31, 2016, actual expenses total approximately $59 million, or 66% of the FY 2015-16 budget.

 

General Fund major revenue categories are summarized on Page 1 of Exhibit 1.  The City derives a significant portion of its General Fund revenues from economically sensitive sources such as property taxes, sales taxes (Bradley Burns), and utility user taxes. When one or more of these key revenue sources deviates from projections, funding for future programs and services may be affected. 

 

As of March 31, 2016, the City received over $18 million in property tax revenue, which is about a 1% decrease over the same time period for FY 2014-15.  The majority of this revenue is the first installment of secured property taxes at over $11.3 million that are collected and distributed in December of 2015.  The second installment of secured property taxes were collected and distributed in April 2016 and will be included in the fourth quarter report.  Revenues from Sales Taxes at March 31, 2016 was $4.2 million, which is 46% of the FY 2015-16 budget.  This amount is based on actual sales through the 4th quarter of 2015 and an advance on estimated sales taxes earned in the 1st quarter of 2016 from the Board of Equalization.  Sales tax revenues have improved over the past year due to new businesses opening, some of which are in the Alameda Landing Shopping Center.

 

Transfer taxes received as of the third quarter of FY 2015-16 are about $6.5 million, which is 93% of the budget.  This is a 22% increase over transfer taxes received during the same time period of FY 2014-15.  The increase is due to sales of new homes from Tri Pointe and Lennar Homes as well as sales of large properties to Alameda Center Owner LLC, Taycon Properties Two LLC, Tri Pointe Homes Inc., CCD Ballena LLC, and Sierra Vista Tower Reno LLC.

 

Business license revenue was over $1.8 million, or 93% of the FY 2015-16 budget, as of March 31, 2016.   This was a 5% reduction over the same time period during FY 2014-15.  The term of business licenses correspond with the City’s fiscal year, so business license renewals are due at the beginning of the fiscal year.  Therefore, the majority of the business license tax revenue is received during the first quarter of the fiscal year.  Transient occupancy taxes for FY 2015-16 have increase by 21% over the same time period of FY 2014-15.  As of March 31, the City has received over $1.4 million in transient occupancy taxes, which is almost 86% of the FY 2015-16 budget.  With a robust economy and low gas prices, business and personal travel remains strong.

 

The FY 2015-16 budget for the General Fund expenditures is $89 million as summarized on Page 2 or Exhibit 1.  As of March 31, actual expenditures were over $59 million, or 66% of the annual budget.  These expenditures include General Fund transfers to compensated absences liabilities, the Police/Fire pensions, post-employment benefits, facilities maintenance, and Library and Recreation funds.  The expenditures of most of the departments in the General Fund range from 57% to 77% of their annual budgets for the third quarter of the fiscal year.

 

Special Revenue Funds

 

The Special Revenue Funds group includes funds accounting for the City’s community development activities, streets improvements, library operations, recreation operations, and various assessment districts.  The FY 2015-16 actual receipts at March 31, 2016 for all the funds in this fund group totaled over $31 million (64% of budget).  The actual expenses for the same time period was over $25 million (43% of budget).  The fund with the single largest actual revenues and expenditures during the period was the Alameda Reuse and Redevelopment Fund. The fund received about $9.6 million in revenues from leases and had over $8.8 million in expenditures mostly for professional services.

 

These funds are driven by grants or other specific finding sources and are used for specific purposes, such as transportation, public safety and library related programs.  Such funding sources require revenues and expenditures to be tracked differently from the City’s main operating fund, the General Fund.  There is sufficient funding for the completion of current projects or programs but the addition of any new programs or projects are dependent on availability of future funding sources.

 

Capital Project Funds

 

The Capital Projects Funds group, which includes such individual funds as the Capital Improvement Projects Fund, construction funds, assessment districts, development impact fee funds and the Urban Runoff Fund, had an aggregate actual revenue of $5.2 million and expenditures of over $13 million at March 31, 2016.  The largest expenditures in these funds consists of $1.5 million for street resurfacing projects, $1.2 million for the Emergency Response center, $1.6 million for construction of Fire Station 3, and $1.5 million for cyclic sewer maintenance, as can be seen on page 4 of Exhibit 1.  Many funds derive their revenues from the collection of impact fees from new development, which generate revenues and expenditures in different patterns from the City’s other operating funds.

 

Debt Service Funds

 

The Debt Service Funds group accounts for the long-term debt of the City, including Base Reuse.  As of March 31, 2016, the available fund balances of all debt service funds was approximately $1.3 million.  Additional funds are transferred in from a variety of sources to meet debt service obligations as they come due.  The funding source is dependent upon the purpose of the debt.

 

Enterprise Fund

 

The Enterprise Funds group, consisting of the City’s Sewer Fund, requires proprietary fund balance reporting that includes cash, reserves, fixed assets, and related long-term debt of the fund.  Page 13 of Exhibit 1 includes the available balances (excluding fixed assets and related long-term debt) for the sewer fund.  The aggregate available balance at March 31, for the Sewer Fund was almost $71.6 million. Sufficient reserves are maintained to ensure completion of current projects and programs.

 

Internal Service Funds

 

The Internal Service Funds group includes those funds created for the accumulation of reserves for insurance claims, vehicles, technology and equipment replacement, facility maintenance, compensated absences liabilities and retiree medical and dental costs.  Revenue for these funds is derived from administrative (cost recovery) charges to other funds, primarily the General Fund.  The fund balance of the Internal Service Funds group was over $18 million at March 31, 2016.

 

The fund balance reflects the long-term liabilities for workers’ compensation claims (approximately $6.9 million at 6/30/2015), risk management claims (approximately $2 million at 6/30/2015) but not the unfunded portion of Other Post-Employment Benefits (OPEB), which was valued at $113 million as of January 1, 2015.

 

Trust and Agency Funds

 

The Trust and Agency Funds group includes bond funds for several bond issues that are not obligations of the City, and a fund established for the payment of the City’s 1079 and 1082 Pension Plans.  The available balance for these funds group was over $4 million at March 31, 2016.

 

Successor Agency

 

The Successor Agency is an entity separate from the City and is accounted for in special trust funds that track the tax increment monies received and payment of items approved by the Oversight Board in the Required Obligation Payment Schedule (ROPS).  Governmental accounting standards require that the full amount of debt outstanding be recorded as a part of these funds.  The deficit balance at March 31, 2016 was over $57 million.  This reflects bonded debt outstanding of $59 million to be paid from future Redevelopment Property Tax Trust Fund (RPTTF) revenue.

 

FINANCIAL IMPACT

 

The FY 2015-16 third quarter report includes information detailing the variances between budgets and actuals for revenues, expenditures, capital and maintenance projects, as well as changes in fund balances through March 31, 2016.  Exhibit 1 was created to present the City’s actual results and status of available reserves for each fund through the third quarter of the fiscal year.

 

MUNICIPAL CODE/POLICY DOCUMENT CROSS REFERENCE

 

This action is in conformance with the Alameda Municipal Code and all policy documents.

 

ENVIRONMENTAL REVIEW

 

This activity is not a project and is exempt from the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) pursuant to section 15378 (b) (4) of the CEQA Guidelines, because it involves governmental fiscal activities (acceptance of the third quarter financial report), which does not involve any commitment to any specific project which may result in a potentially significant physical impact on the environment.

 

RECOMMENDATION

 

Accept the third quarter Financial Report for the period ending March 31, 2016.

 

Respectfully submitted,

Elena Adair, Finance Director

 

Exhibit:

1.                         Third Quarter Financial Report.