Section
1903 of the City Charter and Chapter 19.03 of the Stockton Municipal Code require that the City Council adopt a reserve policy that is intended to prudently protect the fiscal solvency of the City. The former City Council Policy was adopted in 2006 and had not been updated since the City entered the severe fiscal crisis. During the Bankruptcy, the City Council adopted Annual Budgets with reserves that were consistent with the Court approved Plan of Adjustment, which were based upon the Long-Range Financial Plan ("L-RFP"). In March 2016, an updated policy was adopted reflecting best practices, consistent with Council goals and the L-RFP.
While appropriate at the time, the City emerged from bankruptcy
and the previous current 10% reserve, as measured by the need to file
bankruptcy, was inadequate and needs to be increased based upon the
risks to ensure fiscal solvency. Additionally, the policy has been
developed to comply with the direction set forth in Government Accounting
Standards Board ("GASB") Statement No. 54 Fund Balance Reporting and
Governmental Fund Type Definitions which establishes a hierarchy of
fund balance classifications.
It is the purpose of this policy to establish reserve targets
and minimum levels of unassigned and committed fund balances to be
maintained in the General Fund based upon various contingencies and
risks faced by the City as determined by a review of the Government
Finance Officers Association ("GFOA") best practices, case studies
and other cities' policies to ensure that the City is able to respond
to the challenges presented by changing economic conditions.
There are almost always important limitations on the purpose
for which all or a portion of the resources of a governmental fund
can be used. The forces of these limitations can vary significantly,
depending upon their source. Therefore, the various components of
fund balance are designed to indicate "the extent to which the City
is bound to honor constraints on the specific purposes for which amounts
in the fund can be spent." Fund balance is categorized in five classifications,
depicting the relative strength of the spending constraints placed
on the purposes for which the resources can be used. In accordance
with GASB Statement No. 54 the following fund balance classifications
will be used in reporting activity in governmental funds:
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Non-spendable, amounts that are inherently non-spendable
either because they are not in spendable form (inventory, prepaid
items, endowment) or the portion of resources that cannot be spent
because they must remain intact (long term advances, notes and loans)
or are legally or contractually required to remain intact.
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Restricted, portions of fund balance represents
amounts that can only be used for specific purposes because of limitations
imposed by creditors, grantors, laws or regulations.
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Committed, amounts that are set-aside for specific
contingencies by the governing board of an agency and requires formal
action of the governing board to remove.
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Assigned, amounts intended to be used by the government
for specific purposes. Intent can be expressed by the governing board
or an official of the agency authorized by the governing board. In
funds other than the General Fund this classification represents the
amount that is not restricted or committed.
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Unassigned, (formerly called "unrestricted" or
"unreserved") is the residual classification of the General Fund and
includes all amounts not contained in other classifications. Unassigned
fund balance is technically available for any purpose.
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The following reserves will be maintained by the City. The reserves
will be categorized in two priorities. Priority 1 reserves will include
Working Capital and Known Contingencies. Priority 2 reserves will
include risk based reserves. The reserves are described below.
Working Capital. Two months or 16.67% of operating
expenditures and transfers-out of the unassigned fund balance shall
remain unspent and shall serve the working capital "reserve" in order
to accommodate normal fluctuations in the timing of revenues and unforeseen
operational costs. The two-month or 16.67% level is the GFOA recommended
minimum benchmark for working capital.
Committed (or Assigned) Fund Balance Priority I –
Known Contingencies. Priority I are Known Contingencies for
which fund balance must be set aside to address these contingencies.
Initial Known Contingencies are funding for the City Hall after the
eight-year lease expires, funding the increased obligations resulting
from the proposed change in CalPERS assumptions which would reduce
the earnings rate resulting in a one-time increase in the actuarial
liability, and a program to address market conditions that result
in the inability to Recruit and Retain staff.
Committed Fund Balance Priority II – Risk Based
Reserves. Additional fund balance will be setaside for four
additional risk based contingencies.
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Contingent Liabilities. The Contingent Liabilities
set-aside is to mitigate the impact of litigation expenses and other
unforeseen liabilities which are infrequent and non-routine in nature
and are of such magnitude that they would have a major impact upon
the City's budget. The calculation of the cost of mitigating the Contingent
Liabilities will be determined annually during the budget process.
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Revenue Volatility. The Revenue Liability set-aside
is to mitigate the impact of large swings in revenue resulting from
declines in the Property Tax, Sales Tax, and Utility User Taxes. The
calculation of the amount needed will be based upon the revenue volatility
in past recessions and will be determined annually during the budget
process.
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Infrastructure Failure. The Infrastructure Failure
set-aside is to mitigate the risk of major losses in Building and
Improvements, Machinery and Equipment, Infrastructure Government and
Construction in Progress. The calculation of the cost of mitigating
each of these categories will be determined annually during the budget
process.
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Extreme Events. The Extreme Events set-aside is
to mitigate the risk of catastrophic losses due to earthquakes, floods,
and fires, etc. which would require immediate funding to address and
without which the City would be unable to carry out its mission.
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Responsibilities are held with the Chief Financial Officer.
07/01/06 - Adopted by Resolution No. 06-0299
03/29/16 - Amended by Resolution No. 2016-03-29-1501
10/03/17 - Amended by Resolution No. 2017-10-03-1104