My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Annual Comprehensive Financial Report 2021
PublicDocuments
>
Finance Department
>
Finance Administration
>
Audit Reports
>
Annual Comprehensive Financial Report 2021
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
2/28/2022 1:51:13 PM
Creation date
2/28/2022 1:49:46 PM
Metadata
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
179
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
Analysis of Net Position <br />As noted earlier, net position may serve over time as a useful indicator of a government's <br />financial position. In the case of the County, assets exceeded liabilities by $186.5 million at the <br />close of the most recent fiscal year. <br />By far the largest portion of the County's net position reflects its investment in capital assets <br />(e.g., land, buildings, infrastructure, and equipment) less any related debt used to acquire those <br />assets that is still outstanding. The County uses these capital assets to provide services to <br />citizens; consequently, these assets are not available for future spending. Although the County's <br />investment in its capital assets is reported net of related debt, it should be noted that the resources <br />needed to repay this debt must be provided from other sources, since the capital assets themselves <br />cannot be used to liquidate these liabilities. <br />An additional portion of the County's net position represents resources that are subject to external <br />restrictions on how they may be used. <br />At the end of the current fiscal year, the County is able to report positive balances in two of its <br />three categories of net position, both for the government as a whole, as well as for its separate <br />governmental activities. All three categories of net position are positive for its business -type <br />activities. <br />The County's net position increased by $31.2 million from the prior year, which was an increase <br />of $8.2 million (36%) from the increase that was experienced last fiscal year. The main reasons <br />for the large increase in the current year's increase over last year, was due to several increases in <br />revenue sources. Property taxes increased in the current fiscal year by $25.8 million due to a $1.8 <br />billion increase in the assessed value of the net taxable real property, with the majority stemming <br />from the category of taxable buildings. The residential class of property was also divided into <br />two tiers, with Tier 11 revenues having a 23% increase in real property tax rates. Revenues from <br />the general excise tax surcharge increased by $14.7 million from the prior year due to fact that the <br />surcharge was in effect for 12 months at the rate of 0.50%, whereas it was only in effect at this <br />rate for the last 6 months of the prior year. There was also an increase of $89.7 million in <br />operating grants and contributions received by the County, of which $77.0 million was from the <br />Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act). <br />The County's net capital assets increased by $23.2 million (2 percent) due to the large amount of <br />capital improvement projects done by the County during the current fiscal year and infrastructure <br />related assets that were contributed. See further discussion of the increase in capital assets on <br />page 24. <br />The County's long-term liabilities outstanding increased by $27.6 million (2 percent) due <br />primarily to the issuance of $62.1 million of new bond proceeds, of which approximately $14.4 <br />million, in addition to $15.6 million of premiums, were used to pay $30.0 million in bond <br />anticipation notes from the prior year. There were principal payments of bonds and SIZE loans <br />and amortization of related bond premiums totaling $33.0 million. There was a $34.3 million <br />decrease in the net other post -employment benefit obligation, which was offset by a $28.0 million <br />increase in the County's net pension liability. See further discussion of the increase in long-term <br />debt outstanding on page 25. <br />-19- <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.