Allentown committee studies other cities’ budget rules as it weighs changes after referendum

Allentown City Budget & Finance Committee · February 25, 2026

Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts

Sign Up Free
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

A staff presentation compared Allentown’s budget timeline and default rules with several Pennsylvania cities and counties; the review will feed a white paper and recommendations to be returned to committee on March 25.

The Allentown Budget & Finance Committee spent a substantial portion of its meeting reviewing how other Pennsylvania municipalities handle budget timelines, default clauses and veto authority as part of a council‑directed study.

Genesis, the presenter, summarized a January 21 resolution directing a targeted review of the city’s budget process. The presentation compared home-rule and statutory approaches in cities including Redding, Easton, Philadelphia, Bethlehem, Pittsburgh and Lancaster, and included Lehigh County for contrast.

Key differences highlighted: some cities (including Redding and Easton) retain default-budget clauses that make the mayor’s proposed budget effective if council fails to act by a deadline; others (Philadelphia, Bethlehem, Pittsburgh) lack default clauses and instead face legal limits on expenditures if a budget is not adopted. The presentation also noted variations in amendment cutoff dates, mayoral veto and line-item veto authority, and the presence or absence of a managing-director role to prepare budgets.

Genesis said next steps include analyzing survey and interview results, producing a white paper with council chairs Binder and Pungo, and meeting with the mayor and finance director; the committee expects findings to return on March 25 for further discussion and possible legal analysis if charter changes are pursued.

Committee members asked whether a managing-director model — recommended in model charter guidance — reduces politics in budget development. Genesis said the Model City Charter recommends a managing director and that some reviewed municipalities use that structure.

What happens next: staff will analyze collected input and present a white paper to the Budget & Finance Committee on March 25; council may then decide whether to seek legal analysis or pursue charter/ordinance changes.