All City employees, agents, boards, commissions and authorities shall
comply with all General Laws, Special Acts of the Commonwealth, and
City ordinances that relate to finance and financial management.
By September 30 of each year, the Finance Department shall provide
to all departments an update regarding the financial policies and
ordinances of the City of Springfield. By November 1 of each year,
the Law Department shall provide to all departments an annual update
regarding changes to municipal finance law and regulations that may
impact departmental operations.
The Mayor shall propose to the City Council and the City Council
shall adopt balanced budgets in which non-one-time revenue equals
or exceeds expenditures.
The City will not balance the budget by using one-time or other nonrecurring
revenues to fund ongoing expenditures. Transfers from "free cash"
and a "stabilization reserve fund" shall be the only exception; appropriation
from free cash or a stabilization reserve fund to fund ongoing expenditures
shall require a written disclosure by the Chief Administrative and
Financial Officer of the size of the appropriation, the remaining
balance in reserve after said appropriation and a projection as to
how the City will finance these recurring expenses in upcoming fiscal
years.
The City will not use budgetary procedures that balance the budget
at the expense of future years, including postponing or deferring
payment of expenses already incurred, accruing future year revenues,
or rolling over short-term debt.
The annual budget shall include the following sections: the expenditure
budget, a summary of the City's financial condition, an analysis
of revenues used in the proposed budget, a proposed allotment schedule
for the budget as required by Chapter 656 of the Acts of 1989, an
analysis of outstanding debt and a summary of the City's capital
condition, including municipal buildings, infrastructure, equipment,
rolling stock and information technology.
The budget will provide for adequate maintenance and the replacement
of capital plant and equipment. In the event that the budget is not
able to provide for adequate maintenance and replacement of capital
plant and equipment, the City will identify and report on the funding
gap and the maintenance, equipment and capital which are not funded
in the proposed budget. All budgetary procedures will conform with
existing state and local regulations.
The Chief Administrative and Financial Officer shall produce and
issue a four-year financial plan for the City by March 30 of each
year. Said plan shall be comprised of reasonable revenue estimates
and all expenditures the City may reasonably experience during said
period. All assumptions contained in the forecasts shall be clearly
presented within the forecast document.
Within two weeks of the start of the fiscal year, the Comptroller
shall encumber all personnel service funds in all departments for
the entire fiscal year for each budgeted position then occupied by
an employee.
The Chief Administrative and Financial Officer shall review and propose
to the City Council an updated fee schedule for each of the City's
departments no less than every two years to ensure the cost of services
is being adequately recovered.
The City may build into its revenue base from one fiscal year to
the next an increase in each revenue line item of no more than 3%,
with the exception of:
Real and personal property taxes, the increase of which shall not
exceed the revenue permitted under law, with "new growth" set at a
level certified by the Assessors as reasonable;
Chapter 70 (school) aid and school building assistance payments from
the commonwealth, which shall be budgeted in an amount no greater
than the estimates provided by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts;
and
Certain fees and fines, which may increase more than 3% only if the
underlying cost of the fee or fine is increased. In such an instance,
the City may budget the entire increase associated with the fee and/or
fine so long as said revenue assumptions are certified as reasonable
by the Chief Administrative and Financial Officer.
Any revenue increase in excess of the three-percent limit established
herein shall be considered upwardly volatile revenue and may only
be expended to increase reserve fund levels or to fund nonrecurring
capital expenditures.
The City shall collect all revenue using fair and consistent methods,
exercising all powers provided to it under law. On or before May 30
of each year, the City shall commence tax title proceedings against
all properties that owe property taxes to the City.
The City shall annually adopt the rates and fees for all enterprise
fund activities, and the Chief Administrative and Financial Officer
shall propose no less than every two years the rates and fees for
all other rate- and fee-supported services in City government.
In the event that an enterprise fund requires General Fund or other
support because its revenue does not fully support its operations,
the Finance Director and relevant department head shall make a report
to City Council regarding the fund, its revenue and expenditure position
and the reason a deficit occurred.
For purposes of this article, the term "capital" shall refer to a
facility, object or asset costing more than $25,000 with an estimated
useful life of 10 years or more.
The capital improvement plan shall be issued by March 30 of each
year and shall be produced by and in the form designated by the Chief
Administrative and Financial Officer. At a minimum, the capital improvement
plan shall be a "rolling" five-year plan which shall be submitted
to the City Council for approval annually.
The capital improvement plan shall be reviewed by the Capital Improvement
Planning Committee and shall include all capital expenditures proposed
by the various departments. The Committee shall recommend in each
year of the plan the capital investments to be funded and how these
expenditures should be financed.
The Capital Improvement Planning Committee shall be comprised of
the City's Chief Administrative and Financial Officer or his/her
designee, the Finance Director, a representative from the City Council,
the Director of Parks, Buildings and Recreation Management, the Budget
Director, the Planning Director, the Director of Capital Asset Construction,
the Director of Public Works and the Director of Community and Economic
Development or other officials with different titles who perform the
duties of said positions. Any member with an interest in a capital
item before the Committee shall recuse him/herself from deliberations
regarding said items. The Committee shall provide its recommendations
in writing to the Mayor and City Council. Any capital funding request
that is at variance from the Committee's recommendation shall
be accompanied by a written justification of the variance, including
a comparison of cost-benefit analyses for the affected projects.
Except as required by an emergency, all approved capital projects
must be part of the adopted capital improvement plan. Capital projects
that were not included in the capital improvement plan may not be
conducted unless an emergency has occurred and a written report explaining
the emergency has been provided to the City Council.
All capital expenditure decisions shall analyze the potential use
of alternative energy and fuel-/energy-efficient technologies and
devices, and the use of recycled materials and environmentally preferable
products.
The capital improvement plan shall include a multiyear forecast of
annual debt service requirements for items in the plan to permit the
examination of the future implication of debt issuance.
Each capital item in the capital improvement plan shall be accompanied
by an analysis that includes the identification and cost estimation
of additional operational and personnel costs associated with that
capital improvement.
All proposals for capital improvements shall include a proposed source
of funding for each capital improvement. Pay-as-you-go capital funding
shall be considered as a financing source for each proposed capital
improvement.
As part of a comprehensive capital improvement program, the City
shall maintain net tax-financed capital improvement expenditures (pay-as-you-go)
at a level of 1 1/2% of local source revenue.
The Finance Director shall review the finances and status of all
capital projects no less than annually. For a nonconstruction capital
expenditure, the City shall conduct project close-out within six months
of project completion. For a construction-related capital expenditure,
the City shall conduct project close-out within nine months of the
end of construction. The City shall release unexpended bond proceeds
within six months of project close-out and may reuse said proceeds
consistent with the provisions of Massachusetts General Law.
In the event that the City's undesignated fund balance falls
below 5% of General Fund revenues, less debt exclusions, a plan for
specific expenditure reductions and/or revenue increases that will
bring the City into compliance with the minimum fund balance requirement
shall be submitted to the City Council during the next budget cycle.
Pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 656 of the Acts of 1989, the
City shall maintain a reserve for extraordinary expenses of at least
1% and not greater than 3% of the prior year's tax levy. No direct
drafts shall be permitted from this fund, but transfers may be made
from it in the same manner as required for other budgetary transfers.
The City shall maintain a primary stabilization reserve fund equal
to between 5% and 15% of General Fund operating revenues, less debt
exclusions. As prescribed by Massachusetts General Law, however, at
no time may an appropriation into this fund exceed 10% of the previous
year's property tax levy, nor can the fund balance exceed 10%
of the equalized value of the City.
Pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 169 of the Acts of 2004, the
City shall annually fund a capital reserve of at least 1.5% of the
committed property taxes from the prior fiscal year. Said fund may
be expended on capital projects for which the City may issue bonds
for a term of 10 years or longer as provided for in Chapter 44 of
the Massachusetts General Laws.
Whenever the City is self-insured for the purposes of property, liability
and/or workers' compensation insurance, it shall maintain a Self-Insurance
Reserve Fund that may be expended to pay for the loss of or damage
to municipal property, loss or damage to which would be covered by
property and liability insurance had the City purchased it. Said reserve
may also be used to pay justified damage, liability and workers'
compensation claims against the City and shall be in the amount of
5% of the aggregate assessed valuation of City Hall, Symphony Hall
and the Campanile.
Short-term debt, such as bond anticipation notes, tax anticipation
notes, or grant anticipation notes, may be used when it provides immediate
financing and an interest rate advantage, or if there is an advantage
to delaying long-term debt until market conditions are more favorable.
The City may use interfund and interaccount operating loans rather
than outside debt instruments to meet short-term cash flow needs.
Such loans may only occur if the affected fund or account has excess
funding available and the use of these funds will not impact the fund's
or account's current operations. All such loans shall be repaid
by June 30 of each year.
The City shall conduct debt financing on a competitive basis unless,
for reasons of market volatility, unusual financing structure or a
complex security structure the City would be better served through
negotiated financing.
In all instances in which the City issues bonds or notes of a term
exceeding 12 months, the City shall utilize the services of a financial
advisor firm to advise it on structuring the transaction, issues related
to the compensation paid to firms involved in the transaction and
other items. Said firm may not have served as underwriter for a City
debt transaction during the 36 months prior to the issuance of the
bonds or note then being financed.
The Finance Director shall annually conduct and release to the public
a report on the amount and affordability of debt issued by the City,
using established and generally accepted benchmarks as a basis for
comparison.
The City shall establish and maintain a debt schedule that avoids
large increases in debt service on a year-to-year basis, and shall
seek to use an "equal principal" repayment structure rather than a
level debt service structure.
The City may issue refunding bonds if the savings associated with
the refunding are at least twice the cost of issuing the refunding
bonds, there are positive savings in each year of the refunding bonds
so issued, the present value of the savings is at least 3% of the
par amount of the refinancing issuance, and the refunding bonds do
not extend the term of the debt to be refinanced.
The City may not use bond proceeds to finance operating expenses
other than those certified by the Chief Administrative and Financial
Officer as being specifically related to implementation of the project.
The City may not use bond accounts or bond proceeds as a source of
interfund or interaccount operating loans.
As part of the annual budget, the City shall maintain a net tax-financed
special pension account to be paid towards the City's Contribution
Retirement Pension Expense Account annually at a level of not less
than 15% of free cash certified by the Massachusetts Department of
Revenue for each fiscal year. Said special pension account shall be
separate from and in addition to the amount set for contribution by
the City towards the Contribution Retirement Pension Expense Account
by the Retirement Board.
The City shall manage its cash resources in a prudent and diligent
manner with an emphasis first on safety of principal, second on liquidity
and third on financial return on invested cash. The Treasurer/Collector
shall ensure that investment managers who invest municipal funds operate
in a manner consistent with these requirements.
Except when cash is invested in the Massachusetts Municipal Depository
Trust, the City shall not invest cash in instruments with a term exceeding
365 days. Cash invested outside of the Massachusetts Municipal Depository
Trust shall only be invested in cash, money market funds and certificates
of deposit, with a preference for insured certificates of deposit
where appropriate. The City shall not invest in derivatives of cash
products or any structured financial vehicle.
The Treasurer/Collector shall submit a written report with regard
to the City's cash investments to the Office of Internal Audit
no less than quarterly. Said report shall be in the form required
by the Director of Internal Audit and shall document the City's
cash investments in detail to ensure compliance with Massachusetts
General Law and relevant policies and ordinances.
Except as otherwise provided for in Massachusetts General Law, all
fees, fines and other revenue shall be collected by the Office of
the City Collector. The Finance Director may permit individual departments
to collect fees, fines and other revenue if, in his/her judgment,
said department has established proper policies, procedures and controls
and that said controls are followed at all times. All receipts collected
by any department shall be forwarded to the City Collector on a daily
basis or on another schedule as may be approved in writing by the
Finance Director.
The Finance Director shall develop, document and publish a system
of internal controls for cash management, including but not limited
to receipt of money, safeguarding of assets, verification of accuracy,
use of financial computer systems, promotion of operational efficiency,
proper segregation of duties and others.
All department heads shall notify the Chief Administrative and Financial
Officer in writing within one week of becoming aware of noncompliance
with any financial ordinance or policy of the City of Springfield.
The Chief Administrative and Financial Officer shall provide a written
report to the City Council when the City fails to comply with any
financial policy of the City of Springfield. Said report shall occur
within three weeks of the failure to comply, and shall be updated
no less than annually. This shall explicitly include instances of
intentional noncompliance, such as the use of nonrecurring revenue
(reserves) to support the operating budget, failure to maintain minimum
reserve fund levels, and others.
The Comptroller shall produce and present to the Mayor and Chief
Administrative and Financial Officer a statement of monthly revenues
and monthly expenditures, both of which shall be compared to budget
estimates and historical trends.
All departments authorized to collect receipts by the Finance Director
shall remit them to the City Collector on a daily basis, or on another
schedule approved by the Finance Director in writing on a case-by-case
basis.
No department shall open an account in any financial institution
or maintain a checkbook or other means of receiving or making payments
without the prior written approval of the Finance Director, and departments
may not make any payment outside of the City's central financial
system.
No department shall be permitted to overexpend a line item in its
budget unless authorized to do so by Massachusetts General Law, and
then only after following the procedures established in said laws.
Pursuant to Chapter 656 of the Acts of 1989, any department head who
overexpends his/her budget may be held individually and personally
liable and required to make payment to the City in the amount of the
overexpenditure, with determination of said liability made by the
Mayor.
No department may seek procurement for any capital project for which
funding is not legally available via appropriation, bond funding,
grant funding, gift or other legal source unless specifically permitted
by law. In instances where law permits procurement without a previously
identified funding source, said department must seek and receive the
approval of the Finance Director prior to initiating procurement activity.
All departments that issue fines and tickets under law and City ordinance
shall provide written monthly reports to the Finance Director of the
number and dollar value of tickets issued and paid. Said report shall
be reconciled prior to submission so as to provide an accurate accounting
of collections and outstanding unpaid balances to date.
The City shall commence and actively pursue collections activities
against properties which are delinquent on their property taxes and
personal property taxes at the earliest time frame permitted by law.
The Grant Director shall oversee all grants for the City of Springfield
and, to the extent permitted by law, for the Springfield Public School
Department. With the approval of the Chief Administrative and Financial
Officer, he/she shall establish policies and procedures regarding
the management and administration of grants, including the submission
of grant applications for funding.
Departments shall be encouraged to pursue all available grants funding
consistent with the mission and strategic direction of the department
and the City.
All grant applications shall be reviewed by the Grant Director prior
to submission. Departments shall provide all information requested
by the Grant Director in a timely manner to allow proper oversight
and reporting to grantors and others.
To the extent allowed by the granting entity, all grant applications
which seek to fund personnel costs shall request funding for fringe
benefit costs. A department applying for a grant which cannot pay
for fringe benefits shall stipulate to the Grant Director in advance
how the department will pay for the related fringe benefit costs.
Grant funds shall be expended prior to the expenditure of General
Fund operating budgets whenever possible. Grant reimbursements shall
be submitted in a timely manner; a schedule for submitting grant reimbursements,
which shall be binding on all parties, may be established by the Finance
Director if he/she finds that reimbursements are not taking place
in a timely manner.
Department heads shall notify the Finance Director no later than
three months prior to the expiration of a grant if they reasonably
believe grant funds may be returned unspent to the granting agency.
All employees, entities, boards, commissions or others which submit
grant applications requiring a City match shall identify an available
source of funding which shall serve as the matching funding for the
grant, prior to submitting the grant to the Grant Director for review.
No employee paid in whole or in part from the General Fund shall
be moved to being funded by a grant without the prior written approval
of the Finance Director. No employee who is paid in whole or in part
from a grant shall be moved to being funded by the General Fund without
the prior written approval of the Finance Director.
Under Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 40, all tax increment financing
agreements require City Council approval. As part of the City Council
agenda packet and prior to a scheduled meeting date, City Council
will be provided with a detailed project memo outlining project benefits
and analysis of job creation and tax benefits.
Upon receipt of a letter of project notification from an applicant,
the City will provide a copy to the office of the City Council. This
letter includes basic project information and informs the City of
Springfield that an applicant is interested in accessing the Massachusetts
Economic Development Incentive Program.