While next year鈥檚 budget is more than six months from completion, Fort Worth City Council members met to discuss next year鈥檚 goals as the city implements a new strategy for forming its annual budget.
At their annual goal-setting retreat Tuesday, council members said they were focused on improving residents鈥 quality of life through:
- Encouraging economic development
- Investing in communities and their safety
- Improving infrastructure and growing responsibly
All of these goals are bolstered by a commitment to fiscal responsibility, according to council members. More specific action items fall underneath those umbrella terms. For example, one of the goals related to economic development is attracting and retaining corporations and jobs.
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City leadership plans to use a new method to form its annual budget. The process began, when three departments started implementing a strategy that aims to take the priorities identified by council members and use them as a framework for the upcoming budget. Every expenditure will be tied back to those priorities.
Council members heard from Chris Fabian, senior director of product strategy at . He has worked with other cities including Pittsburg that have used priority-based budgeting and illustrated how city leaders make decisions on which programs to fund based on how closely they align with council priorities.
Council members also discussed past accomplishments in several priority categories from the previous budget cycle, including economic development and community investment, community safety, infrastructure, responsible growth and fiscal responsibility.
Timely news items made their way into the council鈥檚 discussion of public safety, including concerns about pedestrian safety in school zones and an uptick in dog bites caused by loose dogs.
鈥淲hatever resources we need to have to make sure our public is safe, I think that鈥檚 important,鈥 Macy Hill, who represents parts of northwest Fort Worth, said.
Council members also heard a presentation on the fiscal health of the city. In addition to discussing the fiscal year 2025 budget, they will consider which larger projects will be funded by the
Fort Worth residents vote on bond programs every four years. Municipal bonds are debt securities issued by cities and the primary way Fort Worth funds capital improvements, separate from its annual budgeting process.
Next year鈥檚 budget could be affected by the city鈥檚 decisions on its , cast-iron pipe replacements and adjustments in employee salaries.
The city of Fort Worth generally receives high credit ratings from rating agencies, City Manager David Cooke said.
The final priorities used to form the budget will include district-specific priorities outside of the citywide goals adopted by the full council.
Still to be determined is how the city plans to measure the success of using these priorities, said Hilary Shine, a senior vice president at a consulting firm based in Keller.
Rachel Behrndt is a government accountability reporter for the Fort Worth Report. Contact her at or via .
This first appeared on and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.