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2019-COH - Comprehensive Annual Financial Report
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2019-COH - Comprehensive Annual Financial Report
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Business -type activities. Business -type activities increased the County's net position by <br />$170,448 versus an increase of $167,215 in the prior year. Expenses for health, education and <br />welfare account for all of the $609,486 of expenses which represents a 7 percent increase from <br />the prior year. Approximately $24,000 or 4% of the current year expenditures were incurred as a <br />result of additional cleaning and maintenance for one of the units. Charges for services were <br />$510,352 and investment earnings were $8,234, which were comparable to the prior year. <br />Operating grants and contributions increased by $36,927 (16 percent) to $261,848 as a result of <br />the County increasing the minimum rent which thereby increased the rent subsidies from the US <br />Department of Housing and Urban Development, <br />FINANCIAL ANALYSIS OF THE COUNTY'S FUNDS <br />As noted earlier, the County uses fund accounting to ensure and demonstrate compliance with <br />finance -related legal requirements. <br />Governmental funds. The focus of the County's governmental funds is to provide information <br />on near-term inflows, outflows, and balances of spendable resources. Such information is useful <br />in assessing the County's financing requirements. In particular, unrestricted fund balance may <br />serve as a useful measure of a government's net resources available for spending at the end of the <br />fiscal year. <br />As of the end of the current fiscal year, the County's governmental funds reported combined <br />ending fund balances of $224.4 million, an increase of $11.3 million (5 percent) in comparison <br />with prior year. Approximately 40 percent of this total amount ($89.1 million) constitutes <br />unrestricted fund balance. The unrestricted portion of the fund balance is comprised of (1) $50.4 <br />million in committed fund balance, (2) $25.7 million in assigned fund balance, and (3) $3.1 <br />million in unassigned fund balance. The remainder of the fund balance is divided between $7.3 <br />million in nonspendable fund balance for inventory and $128.0 million in restricted fund balance. <br />Approximately 62 percent of the total restricted fund balance is due to restrictions relating to <br />highways, streets and abandoned vehicles ($46.5 million) and debt service ($33.2 million). $6.0 <br />million of the fund balance restricted for highways, streets and abandoned vehicles was due to the <br />newly created General Excise Tax fund, which accounts for the general excise tax surcharge that <br />became effective in fiscal year 2014. <br />The general fund is the chief operating fund of the County. At the end of the current fiscal year, <br />unrestricted fund balance of the general fund was $42.4 million, while total fund balance <br />increased to $76.2 million. As a measure of the general fund's liquidity, it may be useful to <br />compare both unrestricted fund balance and total fund balance to total fund expenditures. <br />Unrestricted fund balance represents 13 percent of total general fund expenditures, while total <br />fund balance represents 24 percent of that same amount. <br />The fund balance of the County's general fund increased by $15.1 million during the current <br />fiscal year as compared to an increase of $13.3 million in the prior year. Key factors in this <br />increase ($1.8 million) over last year's increase are as follows: <br />• A positive increase of $11.9 million (4 percent) in real property tax revenues and $2.9 million <br />(5 percent) in intergovernmental revenues. As explained previously, the increase in real <br />property tax revenues is due to a slight increase (5%) in the value of net taxable real property <br />as evidenced in the accompanying statistical tables. <br />-22- <br />
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