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Friday, December 12, 2014

Salt Lake County passes budget with no tax increase

Every year Salt Lake County’s budget is written and presented by the mayor in a public meeting. This year the state auditor required all taxing entities (state auditor alert 2014-3) to put all pass-through monies on their books. For example, Salt Lake County collects sales taxes that go directly to UTA, and now those taxes will be a part of the official budget. This means that $210,092,453 will be added to this year’s budget, making the total proposal $1.1 billion.

After the mayor made his presentation on October 28th, the county council considered changes during budget workshops over the past month. This year as the council scrutinized the budget proposal, I found some items worthy of note:

-This budget contains no tax increase and is fiscally conservative.

-The Dashboard Project: This will be a real-time platform where citizens can see data and progress that various departments within the county are making. We will be able to see real evidence of what works and what doesn’t. This project focuses on positive outcomes and making the best use of tax dollars.

-Pay for Success: This is performance-based contracting between government and social service providers, where government only pays providers if target outcomes are achieved.

-This budget provides $40 million in deferred maintenance.

-County employees will receive a 2.75% average merit increase.

-Nearly $20 million of new funding requests were cut.

You can view the budget that the mayor proposed.

Here is the article from the Salt Lake Tribune on the budget.

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