HomeMy WebLinkAbout2013May13_FinanceCommittee_AgendaItem_Comments_JimMosherMay 13, 2013 Finance Committee Agenda Item Comments
These comments on items on the May 13, 2013 Newport Beach City Council Finance Committee agenda
are submitted by: Jim Mosher ( jimmosher@yahoo.com ), 2210 Private Road, Newport Beach 92660
(949-548-6229)
Item 3. Public Comments on Non-agenda Items
1. What happened to the review of the Fire [Department] Fee Schedule?
a. Item E (“Finance Committee 2013 Work Plan”) on the April 22 agenda indicated it
would be discussed at this meeting, with all Master Fee Schedule changes to be
considered by the full Council on “March 26th" (possibly a typo for May 28?).
b. Is there, or does there need to be, a clearer schedule for systematic review of
sections of the Master Fee Schedule?
2. In connection with the discussion at the April Finance Committee meeting about the
distinction between “Restricted” and “Committed” funds, I wanted to call the attention of staff
and the Committee to a section of the California Government Code I noticed in researching
the proposed changes to the Development Agreement review procedures to be presented
on the Consent Calendar at this Tuesday’s Council Meeting. That section is the “Mitigation
Fee Act” (“MFA” : Government Code Sections 66000-66008), which imposes detailed
restrictions and annual reporting requirements on fees collected as a requirement for
approval of developments. Quimby and Development Agreement related fees were
originally exempted by the definition of “fee” in Section 66000(b), but I would assume such
things as our Fair Share Traffic Contributions (NMBC Chapter 15.38) would be included. In
addition, Government Code Section 65865(e), inserted by AB 1347 in 2003, appears to
have removed the exemption for Development Agreement related fees collected after
January 1, 2004, at least with respect to the annual reporting requirements of Government
Code Section 66006. I believe the consequences of this are that:
a. Some funds thought of by staff as merely “committed” (that is, having a possibility
that Council could change their use), are actually “restricted” by the MFA.
b. A number of existing fee-holding funds are probably subject to the detailed public
reporting requirements of the MFA, which we do not seem to have been observing.
Item 4. Approval of April 22, 2013, Minutes
It is good to see the April minutes are back to the Committee’s usual high standard. Although a
few points have been left unrecorded (such as what happened to the demonstration of the
“Excel-based fiscal forecast modeling tool known as MuniCast” announced under Item D in the
previous agenda), I found them much more readable than the previous minutes, which seemed
to attempt to list every comment, but in language such that the substance of the comment was
often undecipherable.
May 13, 2013 Finance Committee agenda comments - Jim Mosher Page 2 of 3
That said, the promise to post, on the Committee pages, the final approved minutes and other
materials distributed or agreed to at the meetings (such as these comments and the finalized
Work Plan), does not yet seem to have been fulfilled (or at least I was unable to find them).
Some minor suggested changes to italicized passages from the draft minutes are shown below
in strike-out and underline.
Suggested corrections:
Page 1:
Under “1. CALL TO ORDER”: “The meeting was called to order at 4:05 p.m. in the
Council Conference Room, 3300 Newport Blvd. 100 Civic Center Drive, Newport
Beach, California 92663 92660 (?).”
Under “2. ROLL CALL”: “Present: Council Member Mike Henn (Chair), Mayor Pro Tem
Keith Curry and Council Member Tony Petros”
Page 2, paragraph 4: “Council Member Petros reviewed the Municipal Code and Charter, and
confirmed that the City Council has authority to direct funds to out of the Off Street Parking
fund.” [I believe this is what was said on April 22, but I would respectfully suggest Council Member
Petros read City Charter Section 1113 (under which the Off Street Parking funds in question were set up)
more carefully. I believe Section 1113 gives the Council the authority to redirect the balances in those
funds to another use only with respect to a surplus that remains after the original purpose for which the
fund was created has been completely accomplished, and even then, the surplus can be redirected only
into the Charter-created (and restricted) general capital improvements fund. Other than that, a redirection
of money from a Section 1113 fund requires a vote of the people. Hence I continue to think these funds
are not merely “committed,” but “restricted.”]
Page 3:
Paragraph 3: “The formerly named Facilities Replacement Plan shall be named the
Facilities Financial Planning Reserve fund.”
Under Item D: “Council Member ??? reviewed the outline proposed for the Quarterly
Financial Report (QFR) for the quarter ended March 30, 2013, which will be going to the
Council with the Quarterly Business Report on May 28, 2013.” [I believe either Director
Matusiewicz or Deputy Director Montano (or both?) presented the review of the QFR]
Last line: “...they will request the Finance Director to convene a meeting of the
Committee.”
Item 5.A. Budget Review
To check just one number in detail, in the table of revenues on page 4, I am puzzled by
how the amended General Fund “Other Revenue” for 2012-13 could be as low as the
reported $2,414,969 if it indeed includes “the one-time receipt of $2.5 million in FY 2012-
13 from the sale of helicopter equipment following the dissolution of the Joint Powers
Airborne Law Enforcement program” as it says it does at the top of the page. ABLE’s
own audited financial report lists $5,103,630 as the final amount payable to the joint
May 13, 2013 Finance Committee agenda comments - Jim Mosher Page 3 of 3
powers members upon dissolution. Half of that item alone would be $2,551,815, or
$137k more than the total “Other Revenue” reported. Did Newport Beach receive less
than half the ABLE payout?
Further down in the same table, I suspect “All Other Revenue” is supposed to include
Tidelands, Water and Wastewater revenues (corresponding to the non-General Fund
expenses highlighted in the paragraph following the table), but I’m not sure.
In the table on page 5, I suspect “Debt service/Non Departmental” does not include debt
service on the City’s Certificates of Participation, but if not, it is unclear to me where in
the overall budget (as presented) the money to pay them is shown.
The explanation of “internal service charges” at the bottom of page 5 makes them sound
like they are used to pay charges for real outside expenses, but I think they are actually
internal transfers between the listed departments (and to the department actually paying
the expense?), making them not part of the City’s interaction with the outside world, and
hence subtracted from both tables.
The “explanation” of changes to the City Workforce, and their significance, on pages 6-7
leaves me completely in the dark as to whether this is a report on changes that took
place in the fiscal year currently ending, that are planned for the upcoming year, or a
combination of the two. Have all these changes been reviewed and approved by the
City Council as required by the last sentence of City Charter Section 601?