Perry hears FY 2012 audit
Perry City council members heard a review of the city’s
fiscal year 2012 audit during their work session Monday.
“I’m very pleased,” said Mayor Jimmy Faircloth after the
meeting. “I consider it a clean audit.”
Mark Hardison with Clifton, Lipford, Hardison and Parker,
LLC, presented a graph of the general fund balance for the past eight fiscal
years, with 2010 being the lowest balance.
“The positive news is that you’ve had an increase since
2010,” stated Hardison.
Fiscal year 2011 had a general fund balance of $2,233,684
and fiscal year 2012 had a general fund balance of $2,918,159.
Hardison told the council that most of the city’s revenues
come from property taxes, which are considered 47.8 percent of the total
$12,577,796 in general fund revenues. He said the total expenditures from the
general fund amounted to $12,678,972, with 36 percent being public safety and 36
percent being the general government expenditures.
When reviewing the solid waste fund’s non-operating interest
earnings that totaled $152, Faircloth asked a question about the amount.
“We don’t get a lot from the bank these days,” said
Hardison. “It’s hurting a lot of governments right now.”
Although the audit was considered clean, there were three
findings. One concerned the recording of revenue and receivables. Hardison
said, “The city did not properly record certain revenue transactions.”
“We believe that is because of turnover,” he explained. Faircloth said the finding “has been corrected and a
procedure is in place” to make sure it does not happen again.
The second finding involved “capital assets acquired through
the SPLOST fund were erroneously recorded in the Governmental Activities
capital assets instead of the Business Type Activities capital assets,” stated
the presentation.
“The city accounted for it, but the city had it in the wrong
bucket, so to say,” explained Hardison.
The third concerned money still owed on a bond that was used
for operating expenses of the water and sewer fund. Hardison stated that
$211,145 is still owed.
Once the presentation was complete, Faircloth asked Hardison
what the target amount the city should have in unrestricted funds, meaning
money that has not been assigned for a specific purpose.
Hardison said the city has about two months worth of the
operating budget in the unrestricted fund, which he said was “not excessive.”
He considered six months worth as excessive.
“Most governments don’t have a strong fund balance like Perry
does,” said Hardison.
Faircloth said, “We are seeing some savings at this time
because we are running so lean.”
“I don’t want people thinking we have an excess,” Faircloth
explained. “We still have a long way to go.”
After the meeting, Faircloth said the clean audit was “a
testament to how hard the city employees worked.”
HHJ News
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