General Fund Highlights <br />~ ~_ <br />Main Subfund Overview <br />The General Fund Main Subfund is the general operating fund for the City of Eugene and is used <br />to account for all financial resources except those required to be accounted for in another fund. <br />Principal sources of revenue are property taxes, charges for services and intergovernmental <br />revenues. <br />Budget discussions tend to focus on the General Fund Main Subfund because the revenue is non- <br />dedicated and can be spent for any government purpose. As such, the General Fund Main <br />Subfund is discussed in greater detail in the Budget Message and Budget Summary sections of <br />the Proposed Budget document. Additionally, a detailed discussion of the General Fund Main <br />Subfund revenue assumptions and analysis methodologies is in the Appendix of the Proposed <br />Budget document. <br />• Changes in the State of Oregon's property tax system in the 1990's placed constraints to <br />growth in property tax revenue. Ballot Measure 5 (1990) established constitutional limits <br />on local property tax rates for all taxing districts, which reduced the amount of revenue <br />collected by local governments. Ballot Measure 50 (1997) enacted permanent tax rates, <br />reduced assessed value to ninety percent of their 1995-19961evels, and capped assessed <br />value growth of existing properties at three percent per year. The City of Eugene <br />prioritized its service system in response to each of the ballot measures. <br />• The service system was prioritized again in 2002-2003 due to ongoing reductions in the <br />Main Subfund. Twenty seven services were assigned to four priority levels during the <br />FY04 budget process. <br />• The City of Eugene's permanent tax rate is $7.0058 per $1,000 of assessed value. <br />However, the effective tax rate is estimated at $6.88 per $1,000 of assessed value due to <br />the impact of the Urban Renewal Agency valuation and overlapping tax rates. The City <br />Council determines the amount of property taxes that need to be levied to meet <br />expenditures. <br />• Factors that cause total assessed value to increase more than three percent in a year are <br />new construction, site improvements, and expired enterprise zones. <br />• The annual budget building process includes asix-year forecast of revenues and <br />expenditures. The City's practice is to balance the Main Subfund for the first three years <br />of the six-year horizon. <br />• Changes to Current Service Levels in the General Fund are detailed in the Budget <br />Message and in the department and service views of the budget. <br />33 <br />