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Would You Like a Receipt With That? Whitney Afonso, PhD NC City & County Communicators 2015
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Citizen Engagement: Budget Perspective 2 I work with budget officers. I start with: Why? How? Outcomes? The budget is a traditional point of access for citizen engagement. Why? What do you all do with the budget?
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Traditional Ways to Relay Budget Info 3 Traditional budget Hard to navigate Build a roadmap Fact sheets Hard to decide what to present Keep it in lay language with graphics Videos Public access Taken from Stephens (2011)
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“Phases” of Engagement 4 Phase 1: Information Phase 2: Consultation Phase 3: Active participation Where do most of our efforts fall?
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A Taxpayer Receipt 5 Examples Bulletin
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Taxpayer Receipts 6 History Third Way “Radical centrists” think tank 2010: Suggest federal receipt http://www.thirdway.org/publications/335 http://www.thirdway.org/publications/335 Idea picks up traction NPR- Planet Money 2010: Jacob Goldstein
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Taxpayer Receipts 7 2011 interview: Who knows how much of our tax dollar went to develop clean energy or reduce our dependence on foreign oil? You know, that’s just one of the reasons we feel disconnected from our government, and we think a tax receipt would help give people an idea where their tax dollars go.- David Kendall from Third Way White House Responds April 2011: Taxpayer Receipt is launched
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State & Local Examples 9 Still new Not common at state or local level yet Georgia Created by State Senator Doug Stoner http://dougstoner.com/taxpayer2013/ http://dougstoner.com/taxpayer2013/
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The Connecticut Example 12 This is the one we will discuss the most It is not dynamic like the federal, GA, or NYC example It is not just a % of spending breakdown
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Differences 14 What are the primary differences between Georgia and Connecticut? Advantages? Disadvantages? Which is more feasible for your local government?
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Creating a Taxpayer Receipt 15 For the dynamic one like GA and NYC Just need to have a programmer and a website Plug in the percentages and have it calculate the dollars after user inputs it Disclaimer I am not a programmer! For the CT style Do not need a programmer Can add values to the dollar amounts More room for policy
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Steps to Create CT Style 16 Assumption: Only property taxes included Step 1: Find either per capita property tax burden or average household property tax burden for your local government Burden will be lower if per capita More people may relate to household total I will use household
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Steps to Create CT Style 17 Step 2: Look at what property taxes fund in your government and what percentage they make up of that funding This is where property taxes are going! Step 3: Decide on the categories of spending The big ones, but any smaller sub-categories you want to highlight Think about your audience and priorities Want to avoid too much “other”
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Steps to Create CT Style 18 Step 4: For each of the categories of spending see what percentage of spending from property tax revenue they represent Step 5: Multiply the tax burden by the percentages I do this, like CT, on a monthly basis So a 1/12 th of the total tax burden This will not effect your percentages
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Steps to Create CT Style 19 Step 6: Find other similarly priced items Try to make them relevant to your area Or at least fairly universal and recognizable
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Steps to Create CT Style 20 Step 7: Format Keep it simple! Keep clusters of spending together Think about how it will be disseminated Can you include hyperlinks? Will you be printing it? Black and white vs color How long? You want to explain your methodology and where the #s come from
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Orange County’s Taxpayer Receipt 21
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Why a Receipt? 22 Information on the scope of what your jurisdiction does. Information on the cost associated with these services. Research has shown that citizens are more willing to pay for services: When governments can link revenues with services When they understand the need and the relationship between cost on provision
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But other tools can do that… 23 People are accustomed to receiving a receipt when they make payments Can put their payments into perspective: Is that service worth that to me?
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Risks of a Receipt 24 Easily manipulated. What are some of the ways it can be manipulated? How do we avoid that?
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Will this work for you? 25 Take a few minutes and discuss at your table what you are already doing Information sharing Consultation Active participation Are there groups you are missing? Are you already communicating this information effectively? Is this something you would try in your community?
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Involving the Budget Office 26 Keep in mind, many of them will immediately think:
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Conclusion 27 Engagement can mean lots of different things Need to consider your ultimate goal How you want to use feedback, if you solicit it There are numerous “low cost” options to create tools for disseminating information Receipts Bar charts Let me know! I would like to hear about your experiences and if you try one. afonso@sog.unc.eduafonso@sog.unc.edu http://sogpubs.unc.edu/electronicversions/pdfs/pmb08.pdf http://sogpubs.unc.edu/electronicversions/pdfs/pmb08.pdf
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Looking to Engage Beyond Informing? 28 Fairfax County, VA Can you create a better budget?
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Better Budget? 31 Not just informing though Though it is They are soliciting feedback about how “you” would spend the money
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Resources 32 Berner, M. M., Amos, J. M., & Morse, R. S. (2011). What constitutes effective citizen participation in local government? Views from city stakeholders. Public Administration Quarterly, 35(1), 128-163. Jimenez, B. S. (2013). Raise Taxes, Cut Services, or Lay Off Staff: Citizens in the Fiscal Retrenchment Process. Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory. Stephens, John B. 2011, Creating Effective Citizen Participation in Local Government Budgeting: Practical Tips and Examples for Elected Officials and Budget Administrators, Public Management Bulletin #06, Chapel Hill, NC: School of Government, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 37 pages. Connecticut Taxpayer Receipt: http://www.ctvoices.org/sites/default/files/bud12cttaxpayerreceipt.pdf http://www.ctvoices.org/sites/default/files/bud12cttaxpayerreceipt.pdf Fairfax County, Virginia: Build a better budget http://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/braddock/pdfs/letter-simulation.pdf http://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/braddock/pdfs/letter-simulation.pdf Whitney Afonso afonso@sog.unc.edu
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