"Priority-driven-budgeting is a common sense, strategic alternative to budgeting." - South Jordan City Mayor David Alvord
ELGL and CPBB are proud to partner in an innovative webinar
training series, "I Want to be Your Analyst." This series,
consisting of a monthly blog and training webinar, is intended to provide case
studies, introductions to unique analytic tools, and expertise into the hands
of all local government (emerging) leaders.
This ten part series will pair proven CPBB concepts and tools with one of our partner local government communities who are actively implementing (or have implemented) our innovative trends. This will provide key insights into how communities actually utilize these tools.
This ten part series will pair proven CPBB concepts and tools with one of our partner local government communities who are actively implementing (or have implemented) our innovative trends. This will provide key insights into how communities actually utilize these tools.
The January Training Webinar
With I Want to be Your Analyst, local government professionals will gain an introduction and key
insights into the CPBB war chest of cutting-edge online tools. On January 13th at noon PST, join ELGL, CPBB and South Jordan City Executive Leadership, including City Manager Gary Whatcott, CFO Sunil Naidu and Budget Director Don Tingey as we explore and discuss Priority Based Budgeting (PBB). In this training webinar, we'll specifically discuss:
- What is Priority Based Budgeting
- How to implement PBB
- Advanced implementation (Online Priority Based Budgeting)
- Successes and challenges in how South Jordan City implemented PBB
Message from South Jordan City Mayor David Alvord
Some of you may know that in
preparing for the 2015-2016 fiscal year budget the City Council, City
Manager, senior staff and I engaged in a new priorities based budgeting
format. Priority-driven-budgeting is a common sense, strategic
alternative to budgeting. The philosophy of priority driven budgeting is
that resources should be allocated according to how effectively a
program or service achieves the goals and objectives that are of
greatest value to the community. As those needs are identified and
prioritized through discussion, a very clear picture of where to
allocate resources emerges. As a result the City will once again have a
balanced budget in 2015-2016.
One of the budget priorities for me since I became interested in local government has been seeing that taxes reflect our actual needs. I am pleased to announce that after working with our City Council and city staff, that the 2015-2016 budget will include further reductions in tax revenue, meaning that the City will be taking less taxes. This accomplishment could not have happened without the cooperation of our excellent staff and employees.
Priority-based budgeting also requires elected officials to make fiscal decisions which benefit the long term financial health of the City. To that end, the City will be paying off $4,000,000 in debt from the bond used to purchase the Mulligan’s property. Reducing our debts improves our already well regarded credit ratings and improves the overall fiscal health of South Jordan.
Purpose of Priority Based Budgeting
South Jordan’s residents and elected officials disagree about a wide variety of political positions. That’s part of the political freedoms we share in the United States. Our shared commitment to efficient governance, however, will focus all of us on working together to find solutions that benefit our common good. Thank you for the privilege of serving as your Mayor. It’s great to live in South Jordan!Webinar Training Prep
Priority
Based Budgeting is a unique and innovative approach being used by local
governments across the Country to match available resources with community
priorities, provide information to elected officials that lead to better
informed decisions, meaningfully engage citizens in the budgeting process and,
finally, escape the traditional routine of basing "new" budgets on
revisions to the "old" budget. This holistic approach helps to
provide elected officials and other decision-makers with a "new lens"
through which to frame better-informed financial and budgeting decisions and
helps ensure that a community is able to identify and preserve those programs
and services that are most highly valued.
The underlying philosophy of priority based budgeting is about how a government entity should invest resources to meet its stated objectives. It helps us to better articulate why the services we offer exist, what price we pay for them, and, consequently, what value they offer citizens. The principles associated with this philosophy of priority based budgeting are:
• Prioritize Services. Priority based
budgeting evaluates the relative importance of individual programs and services
rather than entire departments. It is distinguished by prioritizing the
services a government provides, one versus another.
• Do the Important Things Well. Cut Back
on the Rest. In a time of revenue decline, a traditional budget
process often attempts to continue funding all the same programs it funded last
year, albeit at a reduced level (e.g. across-the-board budget cuts).
Priority based budgeting identifies the services that offer the highest value
and continues to provide funding for them, while reducing service levels,
divesting, or potentially eliminating lower value services.
• Question Past Patterns of Spending. An
incremental budget process doesn’t seriously question the spending decisions
made in years past. Priority based budgeting puts all the money on the table
to encourage more creative conversations about services.
• Spend Within the Organization’s Means. Priority based
budgeting starts with the revenue available to the government, rather than last
year’s expenditures, as the basis for decision making.
• Know the True Cost of Doing Business. Focusing
on the full costs of programs ensures that funding decisions are based on the
true cost of providing a service.
• Provide Transparency of Community Priorities. When
budget decisions are based on a well-defined set of community priorities, the
government’s aims are not left open to interpretation.
• Provide Transparency of Service Impact. In
traditional budgets, it is often not entirely clear how funded services make a
real difference in the lives of citizens. Under priority based budgeting, the
focus is on the results the service produces for achieving community
priorities.
• Demand Accountability for Results. Traditional
budgets focus on accountability for staying within spending limits. Beyond
this, priority based budgeting demands accountability for results that were
the basis for a service’s budget allocation.
Priority Based Budgeting has now been successfully implemented in over 100 local government
communities coast-to-coast. We take pride in our partnership with these CPBB communities in an effort to improve a community's fiscal health for the benefit of the entire community.
communities coast-to-coast. We take pride in our partnership with these CPBB communities in an effort to improve a community's fiscal health for the benefit of the entire community.
The core CPBB concepts of Fiscal Health and Wellness through Priority Based Budgeting are truly inspiring a new wave of municipal fiscal stewardship. A complete revolution in how local governments utilize their limited resources to the benefit of the communities they serve.
This "New Wave," the fundamental paradigm shift in municipal financial stewardship, must be accepted if local governments are to be financially viable and able to create the types of communities their citizens are proud to call home.
Local government communities must consider a completely different perspective. In order to achieve success and accept the challenges that are ahead, we must see more clearly how to manage, use, and optimize resources in a much different way than has been done in the past.
This new environment demands a new (economic) vision of the future. And that vision is created through priority based budgeting.
Register here! January 13th at noon PST, join ELGL, CPBB
and South Jordan City Executive Leadership
as we explore and discuss priority based budgeting, the power of the online priority based budgeting tools and a case study of PBB implementation from South Jordan City, Utah!
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