
San Diego County Cities Fare Well in 2023 Rankings
I've become a big fan of The History Channel's series 'Alone' and 'Alone Australia.' The goal is for one of ten contestants to survive the longest in the fall and winter months above the Arctic Circle or near the Antarctic Circle. Living off the land is not as easy as it seems, but the winning survivalist wins a significant cash prize.
I play a similar game with California's 482 cities. Except I get to wait for the last one to finally complete its audit by an independent Certified Public Accounting firm and then post its annual comprehensive financial report (ACFR) for its residents to see. This disclosure requirement is usually completed within six months after the conclusion of the June 30 fiscal year end. Sometimes it takes nine months. Sometimes ... years.
For Imperial County, the cities of Holtville and Westmorland have yet to post their June 30, 2020, ACFRs. That makes them nearly four years late. Because of this brazen delinquency, I have broken up Caltrans District 11 into two halves. This is why this ranking is only for the 18 cities in San Diego County.
Including a column providing the dates when the auditors completed their field work in the chart below shows that seven of the cities met the timeliness goal of Dec. 31. Another seven made it by March 31. Number 15 is Coronado (July 15, 2024), followed by National City (Oct. 2, 2024), Lemon Grove (Dec. 16, 2024), and finally La Mesa (April 11, 2025). La Mesa's City Council approved the receipt of the financial report on the evening of April 22. That's some 16 months late and nearly two years after the close of the fiscal year.
The reason for La Mesa's serious delinquency: 'Please note: FY 23 Audit is delayed due to ERP system upgrade and will be posted as soon as it is complete.'
Related Stories
2/26/2025
12/30/2024
Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) is a type of software that integrates essential business processes within an organization. Investopedia provides a
Although along the Mexican border and experiencing immigration
The tiny city of Del Mar doubled its unrestricted net position, allowing it to move up one position. Compared to the previous year, its charges for services rose by $767,250, grants for public safety rose by $872,239, grants for public works rose by $578,059, property tax revenues were $550,991 higher, and investment income was up $699,868. Looking at the prior year's revenues in excess of expenditures of $4.6 million, these revenue improvements explain the increase to $8.2 million.
Along with $1.3 million in capital projects that were deferred due to the pandemic, the unrestricted net position grew by $6.2 million. This is probably more than you needed to know, but this is what can be garnered from a city's ACFR.
Solana Beach was the big upward mover. Having revenues in excess of expenditures of $17.3 million was the big reason. The city moved $4 million into restricted assets and invested $8.3 million in capital assets, leaving $5 million to improve its unrestricted net position.
Lemon Grove improved its unrestricted net position by 155 percent. It had revenues in excess of expenditures of $5 million, explaining the $4.1 million improvement to its unrestricted net position.
Let's go back to where we started. Timeliness is critical for decision-making when preparing the annual budget. It's important for transparency to the stakeholders, the property owners of the city, to keep them informed on the fiscal management of the city council. And promptness reflects proper stewardship.
California state Sen. Steven Choi (R-Irvine) introduced a bill in February to encourage timely reporting.
Here's to hoping we can provide the June 30, 2024, San Diego County rankings soon.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Politico
2 hours ago
- Politico
Eric Adams says his administration is the most ‘pro-housing' in NYC history. The reality is more complicated.
In the new numbers, the Adams administration didn't just count city-subsidized housing already in progress, as it typically does, but also added some 200,000 units that are expected to come out of measures like city-led land use reforms, rezonings from private developers and efforts to redevelop public land that may still be in the community engagement process. 'They're both good things,' Slatkin said, referring to city-financed housing and future production from various reforms. 'Do they add up to 426,800? I wouldn't have done that math myself.' Leila Bozorg, Adams' executive director for housing, argues that they actually took a conservative approach in coming up with the figure. 'It's a large number, and we expected there to be lots of questions about it,' Bozorg said. 'We didn't actually include a lot of stuff that we are working on that is not yet ready to say we've planned for it.' NYC's housing pipeline Of the total units Adams is counting, just 95,100 are actually new homes that have already been or will soon be added to the market. Roughly 40 percent of that total has been completed. About half of those newly built apartments are city-subsidized units that ensure rents are affordable to low- and middle-income households. The other half covers market-rate apartments in buildings that receive tax exemptions. Another 134,700 units in Adams' total are known as 'preserved,' which includes buildings where the city's housing department offers financing to owners to keep rents affordable and public housing units transferred to private management to facilitate repairs. The remaining 197,000 apartments fall under the 'planned' category. The bulk — about 129,000 homes — is projected to be completed over the next 10 to 15 years through city-led land use changes. These units are projected under a blueprint known as City of Yes, which is expected to spur residential construction across the five boroughs, and through upzonings, or plans to allow more housing development, in five neighborhoods. One of these rezonings, poised to clear City Council approval Thursday, is expected to spur 9,500 homes in Midtown Manhattan over 10 years. Two others, in Long Island City and Jamaica in Queens, are projected to make way for 14,000 and 12,000 homes, respectively — though both plans still need a green light from the council in order to move forward.


Fox News
2 hours ago
- Fox News
City council cracks down on ‘vulgar' merchandise at popular beach destination
Provocative and profanity-labeled merchandise has long been a feature of oceanfront stores in Virginia Beach, but that could soon be a thing of the past if local officials get their way. The Virginia Beach City Council passed a resolution Tuesday strongly encouraging retailers on the popular Atlantic Avenue boardwalk to voluntarily remove what they call "indecent" or "vulgar" clothing from display in an effort to maintain the area's image as family-friendly and welcoming to people of all ages. The tourism hub is lined with hotels, restaurants, shops and entertainment spots, but the council says lewd messages sprawled across the backsides of storefront mannequins and tongue-in-cheek T-shirts are tarnishing the area's wholesome image. For instance, in one display, shorts on lower-leg mannequins bear slogans such as "All you can eat" and "It ain't going to spank itself." "Along Atlantic Avenue, there has been a proliferation of indecent and/or vulgar T-shirts and displays in storefronts," background text to the resolution reads. "The proliferation of such displays creates an unwelcoming environment for the very families to whom the city markets itself and the city's residents." A resolution is not legally binding in the way an ordinance or statute is, so officials are calling on retailers to act in good faith and remove such material given the area's heavy dependence on tourism. Virginia Beach welcomed 14.1 million visitors in 2023, generating $2.5 billion in spending, according to a tourism study by the Virginia Beach Convention and Visitors Bureau. "Because the standard for criminal enforcement — obscenity — is a difficult standard to reach, the City Council desires voluntary action by retailers," the text reads. Councilman Worth Remick, who represents part of the Oceanfront and has fielded numerous complaints, said he is fed up with the displays. "Enough is enough," Remick told The Virginian-Pilot. "This is a calm, gentle, nice way to say this is not good for our brand, for our city." Businesses, mostly small, independent retailers, are being asked to remove or refrain from placing lewd or suggestive items on public-facing displays. The move has divided locals and tourists alike, and retailers selling the merchandise say the items are major moneymakers. "The new generation, they like this so much," Adam Desouki, the store manager at Ocean 11 clothing and gift shop, told the outlet. He said the store's shorts, priced between $25-$35 a piece, are top sellers in the business's coveted summer months and they have no plans to stop displaying them. One 18-year-old resident said he doesn't have a problem with the clothing and believes the lewd phrases entice customers into stores. "I don't think they're that offensive," Perry Clay told They're trying to spur business things like that. I haven't been offended." The city passed a similar measure in 1992, discouraging lewd products in shop displays.


New York Times
4 hours ago
- New York Times
Plan to Add 9,500 Homes to Midtown Expected to Get City Council Approval
The City Council on Thursday is expected to pass a plan aimed at invigorating Midtown Manhattan by allowing the development of some 9,500 additional homes, as New York City leaders continue a push to make room for more housing. The plan targets about 42 blocks across four areas of Midtown and Midtown South where decades-old rules have prevented new residential construction. The goal, city officials said, is to address New York City's severe housing shortage while also revitalizing a part of the city's business center that has struggled to recover from the pandemic. 'This is one of the biggest leaps forward in creating new housing in Manhattan in quite some time,' said Keith Powers, the Democratic councilman whose district includes some of the targeted areas and who supports the plan. The housing crisis is one of New York City's most daunting challenges. The share of apartments available to rent is at its lowest level in nearly 60 years, according to the most recent city figures, while rents continue to rise and homelessness remains high. City leaders have wrestled with how and where to add housing. The administration of Mayor Eric Adams, who is running for re-election in November, pushed through a sweeping plan last year, known as City of Yes, that is allowing more development citywide. His biggest rivals, former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo and Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani, have both pledged to unleash much more construction. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.