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A Citizen’s Guide to the 2009-2010 Budget
Designing a city budget is a mighty undertaking, one that requires a great deal of effort, a large allocation of time and – done right – careful ordering of priorities and considerable input from citizens.
In Seattle, the mayor has the responsibility for drawing up a proposed city budget. After hearing from city departments, the mayor refines department requests and delivers a proposed budget to the City Council in late September. The council then examines the mayor’s proposals in detail, measures expenditures against the council’s stated priorities and, finally, every two years brings forth a biennial budget.
The budget must balance – expenditures matching expected revenues – and it must be done by December 1.
The council approves the first year’s budget and endorses a second year’s budget. In so-called "little budget" years, the council reviews and makes adjustments to the budget drawn up in the prior "big budget" year.
It sounds daunting and it is. In fact, examining, considering, reordering, adjusting and overseeing the budget takes the better part of two months. Other council business is generally put on hold until the budget is approved.
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