01 February 2018

Mesa State-Of-The-City 2018: TRUTH IN ACCOUNTING

Calling on "Spoon-fed" reporters from mainstream media - The Arizona Republic and The East Valley Tribune - the City of Mesa was fast to respond to a report on January 24, 2018 from what they called "a national watchdog group" that monitors the finances of state and city governments.
Mesa City Manager Chris Brady appeared nervously relieved last week at a City Council Study Session 22 Jan that a final budget audit became what he wanted to call "A Non-Issue".
At Truth in Accounting (TIA), we believe that taxpayers and citizens deserve easy-to-understand, truthful, and transparent financial information from their governments.
Because government financial statements do not report all liabilities, elected officials and citizens are making financial decisions without knowing the true financial condition of their government. The lack of accuracy and transparency in government accounting prevents even an experienced user of government financial documents from understanding and evaluating a public-sector entity’s financial health.
TIA believes it is imperative to provide an honest accounting of each city's financial condition.
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Admittedly your MesaZona blogger is not a wizard on the intricacies of the city's budget planning and accounting principles, but many questions tend to linger over time to bite-back over how the city's finances get managed in one or another when they fall far short of good governance practices for openness, transparency and accountability.
Time-and-time again, city officials don't appear to rise to the challenges of shining some sunlight on what they do behind-the-scenes resorting to tactics creating confusion in a fog to deter scrutiny of any kind whatsoever - disclosure is denied.
And that's so easy-to-do when the public is dis-engaged.
Locally the city can jigger and juggle and scrub-the-books all they want when hardly anyone asks any questions at all, but when state, national or federal organizations take a look it can get dodgy when the city circles-the-wagons to defend and protect the entrenched political machine from what they interpret as an attack: instead of Mesa City Manager Chris Brady, the Chief Executive of city government - taking "the heat" for questionable budget practices, Brady passes it on to Michael Pennington to deflect any heat from himself in two reporting quickly published days after this public report [see below].
Blogger's Note: The issue of unfunded municipal debt was one of the main platform issues in Jeremy Whittaker's 2106 election campaign to unseat the incumbent representing District 2 on the Mesa City Council.
Financial State of the Cities 2016
January 24, 2018
You can view a PDF of the report HERE. 
On January 24, Truth in Accounting released its second Financial State of the Cities report, a comprehensive analysis of the fiscal health of the nation's most populous cities based on fiscal year 2016 comprehensive annual financial reports. This year, we have expanded our study to include the 75 most populated cities.
The study found that 64 cities do not have enough money to pay all of their bills, and in total, the cities have racked up $335.4 billion in unfunded municipal debt. The study ranks the cities according to their Taxpayer Burden or Surplus™, which is each taxpayer's share of city bills after available assets have been tapped. Check out the data for your city at the State Data Lab.
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Government reports are lengthy, cumbersome, and sometimes misleading documents. At Truth in Accounting (TIA), we believe that taxpayers and citizens deserve easy-to-understand, truthful, and transparent financial information from their governments.
This is our second Financial State of the Cities (FSOC) report, a comprehensive analysis of the fiscal health of the nation's most populous cities based on fiscal year 2016 comprehensive annual financial reports. This year, we have expanded our study to include the 75 most populated cities.
Here's a brief  upload announcing the release of the report on 25 January 

Report findings 
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Phoenix, Mesa earn 'D' grades in financial-health review due to pension debt
Jessica Boehm, The Republic |            

Published 5:01 p.m. MT Jan. 24, 2018 | Updated 2:06 p.m. MT Jan. 25, 2018
https://www.azcentral.com/story
"The Valley's two largest cities earned "D" grades in an annual review of government financial health because they don't have enough money to pay their bills.
Truth in Accounting, a national fiscal watchdog non-profit, released its "Financial State of the Cities" report this week, which analyzes the financial audits of the 75 most populous cities in the country . . "
'Phony government accounting'
Cities often consider their budgets "balanced" even though they have millions — and sometimes billions — of dollars in unfunded pension and retiree healthcare liabilities, because they consider it a debt that can be paid down the road.
That's "phony government accounting," Weinberg said.


Report slams Mesa’s pensions liability as city says it’s coping
According to the TIA analysis -          -
Mesa’s unfunded debt burden of $784.6 million works out to $5,900 for each taxpayer largely because of pension obligations.
 



 

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