Get Full Government Meeting Transcripts, Videos, & Alerts Forever!
City finance consultants present 5-year forecast; VAR would preserve fund balance, no-new-revenue would deplete it
Summary
Consultants updated a 5-year financial model showing that adopting the voter-approval rate (VAR) keeps the city closer to policy fund-balance targets while the no-new-revenue rate would reduce working capital; consultant recommended blending approaches and further scenario work.
Plano’s finance consultant presented an updated five-year financial forecast and recommended council consider the tradeoffs between adopting a no-new-revenue rate and the voter-approval rate (VAR). Matthew Garrett of NewGen Strategies told council that under the current assumptions the no-new-revenue rate would produce roughly 2.2% annual revenue growth and would leave appropriations above projected revenues, gradually drawing down fund balance and putting the city below its 60-day working-capital target. By contrast, the VAR — shown in the model as producing about…
Already have an account? Log in
Subscribe to keep reading
Unlock the rest of this article — and every article on Citizen Portal.
- Unlimited articles
- AI-powered breakdowns of topics, speakers, decisions, and budgets
- Instant alerts when your location has a new meeting
- Follow topics and more locations
- 1,000 AI Insights / month, plus AI Chat

