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Comprehensive Annual Financial Report - 1990-1991COMPREHENSIVE ANNUAL FINANCIAL REPORT FISCAL YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA COMPREHENSIVE ANNUAL FINANCIAL REPORT SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 Prepared by. - Finance Department Joseph E. Van Zile Finance Director THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK ii CITY OF CLSRMONT, FLORIDA COMPREHENSIVE ANNOA.L FINANCIAL REPORT FISCAL YEAR ENDSD SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 TABLE OF CONTENTS IN RODUCTORY SECTION Letter of Transmittal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Organization Chart . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Listing of City Officials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Certificate of Achievement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 AUDITORS REPORTS Independent Auditor's Report . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Report on Internal Control Structure . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Report on Compliance With Laws and Regulations . . . . . . 21 Management Letter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 GB'NERAL PURPOSE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Combined Balance Sheet - All Fund Types and Account Groups . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Combined Statement of Revenues, Expenditures and Changes In Fund Balances - All GQvernmental Fund Types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 Combined Statement of Revenues, Expenditures and Changes In Fund Balances - Budget and Actual - General, Special Revenue and Capital Projects Funds . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 32 I i i TABLE OF CONTENTS FrNANCIAL SECTION (CONTD.) rej i_L._ VLip L kO r Combined Statement of Revenues, Expenses and Changes In Retained Earnings/Fund Balances - All Proprietary Fund Types and Similar Trust Funds . . . . . . . . . . 34 Combined Statement of Cash Flows - All Proprietary Fund Types and Non -Expendable Trust Funds . . . . . . . 36 Notes To Financial Statements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 COMBINING AND INDIVIDUAL FUND AND ACCOUNT GROUP STATEMENTS General Fund: Comparative Balance Sheet 0 0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64 Statement of Revenues, Expenditures and Changes In Fund Balance - Budget and Actual . . . . . . . . . 65 Statement of Revenues - Budget and Actual . . . . . . . . 66 Statement of Expenditures - Budget and Actual . . . . . . 68 Special Revenue Funds: Combining Balance Sheet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72 Combining Statement of Revenues, Expenditures and Changes in Fund Balances . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73 Statement of Revenues, Expenditures and Changes In Fund Balance - Budget and Actual - Infrastructure Fund. 74 Statement of Revenues, Expenditures and Changes In Fund Balance - Budget and Actual - Impact Fee Fund 75 Sales Tax Revenue Bond Sinking Fund: Comparative Balance Sheet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78 Statement of Revenues, Expenditures and Changes In Fund Balance - Budget and Actual . . . . . . . . . . . 79 iv TABLE OF CONTENTS coNB wX NG AND INDIVIDUAL FUND AND ACCOMT- GROUP STATEMENTS(CONTD.) Capital Projects Funds: Combining Balance Sheet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82 Combining Statement of Revenues, Expenditures and Changes In Fund Balances . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83 Statement of Revenues, Expenditures and Changes In Fund Balance - Budget and Actual - Palatlakaha Recreation Area Fund • e s e e e e • e • e e e e e e e . e e e . e 84 Statement of Revenues, Expenditures and Changes in Fund Balance - Budget and Actual - Building Construction Fund . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • 8 5 Enterprise Funds: Combining Balance Sheet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90 Combining Statement of Revenues, Expenses and Changes In Retained Earnings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93 Combining Statement of Cash Flows . . . . . . . . . . . . 94 Comparative Schedule of Revenues, Expenses and Changes In Retained Earnings - Required by Bond Ordinance . . . 96 Group Self Insurance Fund: Comparative Balance Sheet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98 Statement.of Revenues, Expenses and Changes In Retained Earnings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99 Statement of Cash Flows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100 Trust and Agency Funds: Combining Balance Sheet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105 Combining Statement of Revenues, Expenses and Changes In Fund Balances - Trust Funds . . . . . . . . . . . . 106 Statement of Cash Flows - Non -Expendable Trust Fund . . . 108 Statement of Changes In Assets and Liabilities - Deferred Compensation Agency Fund . . . . . . . . . . . 109 v TABLE OF CONTENTS F'►W CIAL SECTION (CONTD-) Account Groups:;; Schedule of General Fixed Assets By Sources . . . . . . 114 Schedule of General Fixed Assets By Function . . . . . . 115 Schedule of Changes In General Fixed Assets By Function . 116 Schedule of General Long -Term Debt . . . . . . . . . . . 117 Comments On The Statistical Section . . . . . . . . . . . 119 General Governmental Expenditures By Function - Last Ten Fiscal Years . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120 General Revenue By Source - Last Ten Fiscal Years . . . . 122 Property Tax Levies, Tax Collections and Assessed Valuations - Last Ten Fiscal Years . . . . . . . . . . 124 Property Tax Rates - Direct and A11 Overlapping Governments - Last Ten Fiscal Years . . . . . . . x . . . . . . . . . 126 Special Assessment Collections - Last Ten Fiscal Years . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 129 Utility Revenue Bond Coverage - All Utility Revenue Bonds - Last Ten Fiscal Years . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 130 Demographic Statistics - Last Ten Fiscal Years . . . . . 132 vi TABLE OF CONTENTS ` O co Property Value, Construction and Bank Deposits - 134 Last Ten Fiscal Years . . . . . . . • • . • • • • • • Principal Taxpayers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 136 Pension Expenses By Type - All Pension Plans - Last Ten Fiscal Years . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137 Pension Revenues By Source - All Pension Plans Last Ten Fiscal Years . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 139 Pension Trend Data Defined Benefit Pension Plans - Last Ten Fiscal Years . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 140 Schedule of Insurance Coverages . . . . . . . . . . . . . 142 Miscellaneous Statistics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 144 vii THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK viii INTRODUCTORY SECTION This section contains the letter of transmittal, organizational chart, and listing of city officials. CITY OF CLERMONT March 23, 1992 Office of the Finance Director Honorable Mayor and Council Members City of. Clermont Clermont,, Florida The Comprehensive Annual Financial Report of the City of Clermont, Florida, for the fiscal year ended September 30, 1991, is hereby submitted. This report was prepared by the City's Finance Department. Responsibility for both the accuracy of the presented data and the coripleteness and fairness of the presentation, including all disclosures, rests with the City. We believe the data, as presented, is accurate in all naterial aspects; that it is presented in a manner designed to fairly present the' financial position and results of operations of the City as measured by the financial activity of its various funds, and that it includes the disclosures necessary to enable the reader to gain the maximum understanding of the C*ity's financial activities. THE REPORTING ENTITY AND ITS SERVICES The City of Clermont, which occupies four square miles, was incorporated in. 1916. The City is located in south Lake County, Approximately thirty miles west of the City of Orlando and thirty miles sou .heist of the City of Leesburg. The City is conveniently accessible to Orlando via Florida Highway 50. The City is essentially residential in character and i,ts economy is primarily centered in retail trade as well as lodging, food :and beverage establishments which are tourism oriented. Lake. County, located in Central Florida, is bounded to the: north by Marion County, to the south by Polk County, to the east by mange County, Seminole County and Volusia County, and to the west by Sumter County. Tavares, the County Sean, is located approximately 190 miles southeast of .'allahassee, the State Capitol, and f. ifty miles northeast of Orlando. The City has a Council -Manager form of government, with a Mayor and four other Council Members who are elected at large for two year 1 P.O. BOX 120219 0 CLERMONT, FLORIDA 3471 2-021 J • PHONE: 904/394-40B 1 staggered terms. Elections are held on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November of each year. The City employs a full-time manager who is the Chief Executive and Administrative officer of the City. The City provides a full range of municipal services as directed by its charter. These include Police and Fire Protection, Street and Sidewalk Maintenance, Planning and Development, Code Enforcement, Recreational Facilities and Programs, Cemetery and General Administrative functions. Clermont also operates and maintains water, wastewater treatment, sanitation and stormwater utilities. In addition, the City is the largest financial supporter of a private library that serves city residents, as well as residents of the surrounding area. The funds and entities related to the City of Clermont included in our Comprehensive Annual Financial Report are controlled by or dependent on the City. Determination of "controlled or dependent on" is based on criteria outlined in the Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB) statements. The basic criterion for inclusion is the exercise of oversight responsibility by the City Council. Based upon this criterion, the various funds and account groups shown in the Table of Contents are included in'this report. The report, together with the accounting and budgeting systems, have been designed to conform to the standards set forth by the Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB). ACCOUNTING SYSTEM AND BUDGETAR ONTROL The City's accounting records for General, Special Revenue, Capital Projects and certain Trust and Agency Funds are maintained on a modified accrual basis with revenues being recognized when they become measurable and available, while expenditures are recorded at the time liabilities are incurred. Accounting records for the Enterprise, Internal Service and certain Trust and Agency Funds are maintained on a full accrual basis. In developing and modifying the City's accounting system, consideration is given to the adequacy of internal accounting controls. Internal accounting controls are designed to provide reasonable, but not absolute assurance regarding: 1. The safeguarding of assets against loss from unauthorized use or disposition; and 2. The reliability of financial records for preparing financial statements and maintaining accountability for assets. The concept of reasonable assurance recognizes that: 1. The cost of a control should not exceed the benefits likely 2 to be derived, and 2. The evaluation of costs and benefits requires estimates and judgments by management. All internal control evaluations occur within the above framework. We believe that the City"s internal accounting controls adequately safeguard assets and provide reasonable assurance of proper recording of financial transactions. Budgetary integration is established in the accounting records for control purposes at the object level. The City Manager is authorized to approve transfers within departments, but changes in total budget appropriations for a department must have prior approval.. o,f the City Council. Budgetary reports are issued and reviewed monthly. EXE TCIAL STKTEMEN'r' FORMAT The report is arranged in the following sections: Section I: Introductory Section This section contains the Letter of Transmittal and other such material as may be useful in understanding the reporting entity. Section I!: Financial section This section of the report contains the Independent Auditor's Reports and Financi.a? Statements of the Citv. The Financial Statements present fairly the financial position and results of operation for the fiscal year ended SeplCember 30, 1991. The section is divided into the following parts: ?part 1. Reports issued by the Independent Auditor based ort their, review of. the City's Financial Statements and internal control structure; Pest 2. General Purpose Financial Statements, which display financial data for the City as a whole; and Part 3. Combining Statements - By fund terse, which present data for homogeneous funds. 3 Section III. Statistical Section This section presents detailed historical information which will be beneficial to the reader in understanding the City's growth and its future potential. GENERAL FUND The General Fund encompasses the general governmental functions of the City and ,all other functions not accounted for in other separate funds. Unreserved, undesignated fund balance decreased 8.1% from $1,135,200 to $1,043,085 and was 49.8% of total General Fund expenditures. Fund balance is the amount of resources available for expenditure in future years. Of the fund balance available at September 30, 1991, $18,800 is budgeted for use in the 1991-92 fiscal year budget. Revenues and other financing sources of the current fiscal year as compared with those of the previous year are presented as follows: 1990-91 Percent of Amount Total Percent 1989-90 Increase Percent <Decrease> of over Amount Total 1989-90 Taxes $1,281,612 62.3 1,143,268 58.1 12.1 Licenses and Permits 28,917 1.4 25,688 1.3 12.6 Intergovernmental 486,812 23.7 547,878 27.9 <11.1> Charges,for Services 19,327 .9 8,585 0.3 125.1 Fines & Forfeitures 69,571 3.4 40,572 2.1 71.5 Miscellaneous Revenues 170,579 8.3 168,410 8.5 1.3 Transfers -In -0- 32.732 1.8 <100.0> 2 056 818 100.01 $1,967,133 100.21 4.6% Revenues increased 4.6% from $1,967,133 to $2,056,818. The most significant changes in revenue sources occurred in the areas of Intergovernmental Revenues, Taxes and Fines and Forfeitures. Intergovernmental Revenues decreased 11.1% primarily due to reductions in state and locally shared revenues and grants. Unfortunately, the trend in these revenue areas has been of decreasing revenues and this trend appears to be continuing in the 1991-92 fiscal year. As a result, the City has had to look at locally controlled revenue sources to make up the difference. Therefore, Taxes increased 12.1% due to an increase in the ad valorem millage rate, an increase in the energy utility tax rate and the addition of a water utility tax. The City of Clermont millage rate increased from 2.429 to 2.729 per $1,000 of assessed valuation. As can be noted on Table 4 of the Statistical Section of this report, this increase is the first since the 1985-86 4 fiscal year. Clermont continues to enjoy the lowest ad valorem tax rate of any cite in Lake County with comparable services. The increase of the energy utility tax rate from 8.5% to 10.0% of all fuel related purchases within the City and the addition of a 5$ u.tility tax on all water sold by the City reflects the City's position of keeping revenues current with expenditures. Fines and Forfeitures increased 71.5% primarily due to a significantincrease ease in the enforcement of traffic violations. Licenses and Perr.+its and. Charges for Services increased at higher percentage rates than the overall fund increase. However, the increases did not reflect a change in the City's _re'venue policy. Charges for Services revenues increased significantly primarily due t .,,o the event ticket sales of a recently created advisory group who prorote the arts in the Clermont area. The 2.989-90 Transfers -In represented an amount to be used for the purchase of recreational equipment at the Palatlakaha Recreation Area. With the Recreation Area nearing completion, a: transfer was not necessary in the 1990-91 fiscal year. Expenditures and other financing uses of the current fiscal year as compared with those of the ,previous year are as follows: Percent 1990-91 193:q-90 Increase Percent Percent <Decrease> of of over Amount Total Amount Total i 989-y90 General Govednment 393,621 18.3 $ 381; 694 17.,e% 3 <.1% Public Safetv 830,411 38.5 767,734 35.3 8.2 Physical Environment 99,989 4.6 99,084 4.5 >9 Transportavion 311,383 14'.4 303,211 13.9 2.7 Economic Environment 9,283 .4 9,596 .1 < 3,3> Human Services 13,665 .7 18,703 1.0 <26.9> Culture & recreation 435,738 20.2 403,535 18.6 8.0 Transfers - Out 194,,_860 5.0 <6 ! .3> $21155_,5 2 100.0% Z.4. 8 417 100.0, < 1.0%> Expenditures and other financing uses decreased 3..0% primarily due to a aign:ificant decrease in Transfers - Out. The $194,86u Transfer - Out in 1989-90 represented a transfer to the City's Sanitation Fund to purchase garbage true -.s. Without considering t:he Transfer - Out, expenditures increased 5. 6i from $1, 98:3, 55>7 to $2, 094,100. With the exception of Public Safety and Culture and Recreation, all. departments' expe..nditures either decreased or incrLa.sed at rates :Less than the fund increase. Public Safety (Law Enforcement) and Culture and. Recreation (Parks and Rocreat.: on) expenditures increased primarily due to additional positions. lurks 5 and Recreation operating costs also increased due to the opening of the Palatlakaha Recreation Area and the necessary maintenance of the park. SPECIAL REVENUE FUNDS INFRASTRUCTURE FUND The Infrastructure Fund was established to account for the City"s share of the Local Government Infrastructure Surtax, which can. -be used only for fixed capital outlay. The surtax represents a countywide one cent increase in the sales tax until the end of the fiscal year 2002., A comparison of Local Government Infrastructure Surtax Revenue for the last three fiscal years is presented as follows: Local Government Infrastructure Surtax 1990-91 $300,154 1989-90 $370,639 1988-89 $260,092 Included in the 1989-90 revenue amount was an adjustment of $50,857 for prior year collections due to an incorrect formula used by the State of Florida in calculating distributions. In fiscal year 190-91, Infrastructure Surtax Funds were expended on sidewalk projects throughout the City, as well as property acquisition. In addition, funds were also transferred to the Sales Tax Revenue Bond Sinking Fund to cover the debt service of the 1989 Sales Tax Bond Issue. The Local Government Infrastructure Surtax has been pledged as the primary source of revenue to repay the bonds. IMPACT FEE FUND The Impact Fee Fund was established in the 1990-91 fiscal year to account for the Police, Fire and Recreation Impact Fees paid by developers. Impact fees were adopted by the City in May 1991 to require new development to pay its proportionate fair share of the capital costs necessary to accommodate new development impacts on Police, Fire and Recreation Services. DEBT SERVICE FUND The Sales Tax Revenue Bond Sinking Fund is maintained to account for the accumulation of resources and the payment of debt service on the 1989 Sales Tax Revenue Bond. The bond was issued to provide funds for the development of the Palatlakaha Recreation Area and construction of a new Public Services Complex and Public Safety Building. 2 CAPITAL PROJECTS FUNDS PA%ATLAKAHA :RECREATION AREA FUND This fund was created in the 1987-88 fiscal year to account for the development of the Palatlakaha Recreation Area. Phase I, which includes baseball, softball and soccer/football fields was completed in the 1990-91 fiscal year. Phase II, which includes a bike path, pavilion, and a boardwalk is scheduled to be completed in the 1991-92 fiscal year. Revenue sources that have been used and will continue to be used until all phases are complete include the 1989 Sales Tax Revenue Bond proceeds, Local Government Infrastructure Surtax revenue, donations, and grants. BUI3,DING CONSTRUCTION FUND This fund was established in the 1988-89 fiscal year to account for the construction of a new Public Services Complex and a Public Safety Building. The Public Services Complex was completed in January 1992 and the architectural design phase for the Public Safety Building is estimated to be completed in the 1991-92 fiscal year. Financing for these projects is obtained from the 1989 Sales Tax Revenue Bond proceeds and Loral Government Infrastructure Surtax revenues. ENTERPRISE FUNDS UTILITY --FUND The Utility Fund accounts for the provision of eater and sewer services to the residents of the City. operating revenues decreased 2.7% from $1,092,768 to $1,062,790 primarily due. to a. decrease in water sales as a result of restrictions on water usage in the Central Flcrida area. A ccrparison of the number of gallons of water sold between the 1989-90 and 1990-91 fiscal years shcws a 5. ^,A ttecrease in water gallons sole. Operating expenses inn --eased 2.8% from $!;!70,400 to $997,402. Comparative cda u for the last three years-i s'll-astrated-Ir— the following table: 1990-93. 1989-90 1988-89 Operating RevenU s $ 1,062,790 $ 1,092,768 $ 1,118,064 Operating E:pencas �- 997,402 9 040 841..76 Operating Income 65.388 �1221728 .216.30 Net Fixed Assets S 8,065,155 $ 8R.163,316 �.. c 7.8S36,031 Dent Servi..ce Coverage l % 1 6 % 6 SANITATION FUND The Sanitation Fund accounts for the provision of garbage, trash removal and composting services to the residents of Clermont. Operating revenues increased 13.1% from $385;276 to $435,835 due to a corresponding percentage increase in monthly sanitation rates. Operating expenses increased 7.6% from $389,777 to $419,410 primarily due to increased personnel related costs and depreciation recognized on new garbage trucks purchased in the 1989-90 fiscal year. A segment of operating expenses that actually decreased was landfill charges. The fees paid to Lake County for the disposal of garbage in the County's incinerator plant decreased approximately $10,000 due to the operation of the citywide garbage recycling and composting programs. Through these programs, plastic bottles, glass containers, aluminum cans and compostable plant materials are removed from the waste stream which consequently results in decreased garbage disposal fees. Comparative data for the last three fiscal years is illustrated in the following table: Operating Revenues Operating Expenses Operating Income <Loss> STORKWATER UTILITY FUND 1990-91 1989-90 1988-89 $ 435,835 $ 385,276 $ 272,889 419,43-0 389,777 268,832 $ 16.425 $ <4,501> $ 4,005�7 The City created a Stormwater Utility Fund in the 1990-91 fiscal year in order to account for the maintenance and improvement of the City's stormwater drainage system. The stormwater utility fee is charged to all property owners/tenants throughout the City and is based on the impervious area of their property. A portion of the annual revenue is used for the maintenance of the existing system. The remaining funds are earmarked for the cost of a stormwater drainage master plan to be performed in the future. INTERNAL SERVICE FUND The City maintains a Group Self -Insurance Fund to account for the accumulation of resources and the payment of insurance claims pertaining to the employee health, dental and life insurance coverages. The modified Self -Insurance Program is responsible for health and dental claims up to $25,000 per employee and $192,500 for the entire group. Reinsurance provides coverage in excess of the City's limits up to $1,000,000 per employee. Life Insurance coverage is in the face amount of one and one-half times the employee's salary. 8 TRUST AND i:GFNCY FUNDS Trust and Agency Funds account for assets held by the City as Trustee for individuals, private organizations and Sather governmental units and/or funds. The General Employees', Police Officers' and Volunteer Firefighters' Pension Trust Funds account for the accumulation of resources to be used for the retirement annuities of all city employees. The Cemetery Perpetual Care Trust Fund accounts for monies received from people buying lots in the city cemetery. The principal must be kept intact, but the interest may be transferred to the General Fund to defray the cost of cemetery operation and maintenance. The Employees' Deferred Compensation Agency Fund accounts for :Honey earned by employees but voluntarily deferred until some future tire period. GENERAL FIXED ASSETS The general fixed assets of the City of Clermont are those: fixed assets used in the performance of general governmental functions and exclude the fixed assets of the Proprietary Fronds. .As of September 301, 1991, the general fixed assets of the City totalled $5, 939, 635. This amount represents the ongina.1 cost of the assets and is, therefore, considerably less than their rrescnt value. Depreciation of general fixed assets is not recognized in the City's accounting system. ;;ASH MANAGEMENT The City earned $346, 386 or 7. 9% of total revenue from all Funds, with the exception of the Pension and Deferred Compensation Funds, in interest revenue during the 1990-91 fiscal year. The : e ghted adarage rate of return during 1990-91 was approximately 7.32%. The following table shows the breakdown of interest by source: State Board cf Administration Certificates of Deposit Repurcha:,e Agreements Percent Average of Rate of Amount Total Return $242,568 70.0% "'. 2% 90,379 26.1 8.04% _13,439 3.9 5.99t The City maintains the majority of its funds with the Florida State Board of Administration investment Pool, The pool is managed by the State of Florida and is available to, any governmental �.gency within the State. Txhe major advantage the pool offers to small cities such as Clermont, is the higher rate of return from t.:e large amount 9 of funds available to invest. The funds in the pool are very liquid in that access is available on a daily basis. The City has $1,900,000 in Certificates of Deposit with local qualified public depositories with interest rates ranging from 6.60% to 7.50%. The maturity periods range from six months to one year. The City has a Banking Service Agreement with a local qualified public depository that provides that all funds in excess of a compensating balance will earn interest through overnight repurchase agreements. The agreement provides that a specific rate of return based on the bank's federal funds rate and amount of excess funds will be earned and credited to the City's account on a daily basis. DEBT ADMINISTRATION The City had one (1) long-term note and two (2) Water and Sewer Revenue Refunding Bond Issues and one (1) Sales Tax Revenue Bond Issue outstanding on September 30, 1991. The long-term note was obtained in 1980 to finance the construction of the library building. The Water and Sewer Revenue Refunding Bonds were issued in 1972 and 1988 and are secured by the gross revenues of the water and sewer system. The Sales Tax Revenue Bond was issued in 1989 to provide funding for the development of the Palatlakaha Recreation Area and construction of a new Public Services Complex and Public Safety Building. RISK MANAGEMENT The City maintains liability and Workmen's Compensation Insurance through programs sponsored and administered by the Florida League of Cities. The limit of protection for the liability coverage is $1,500,000 per occurrence. The City is not aware of any pending or threatened litigation which would not be covered by insurance. FINANCIAL POSITION AND FUTURE PROSPECTS The City of Clermont continues to maintain a sound financial position while providing excellent levels of service in all areas to the residents of the City. The costs associated with the levels of service provided are favorable when compared to other governmental units providing similar services. Conservative budgeting practices along with collective short and long range planning strategies will ensure a positive future for the City. The City will be faced with increasing development demands in the near future. South Lake County is considered the "hot spot" for development in the County. We are continually meeting with developers and land owners to discuss potential developments in and around the City. The majority of the development demand is coming from the metropolitan Orlando area. The western extension of the East-West Expressway and its connection to the Florida Turnpike, for which a new 10 interchange is being constructed at the intersection of highway 50 and Killarney, will provide an excellent transportation system between Clermont and the metropolitan Orlando area. We are already seeing increased residential development east of the City. Lake County has indicated that they are not interested in providing utility services to the urban areas surrounding the City. Therefore, the future developments will be looking to Clermont for water and sewer utilities in order to construct the densities they would desire in these areas. The City is currently studying a proposed extension of our water service to an area approximately five miles south of the present city limits that would serve 1,000 new water customers. This would be a joint project between Lake County and the City with funding from the Department of Environmental Regulation (DER). The DER funded a feasibility study for the project which has been completed, and the City is currently talking with.the developers and the County to finalize the plans for the extension. This is only the first step of the City Council's commitment to provide services outside of the city limits. In all likelihood, the City of Clermont, which is the largest City in South Lake County, will become a regional supplier for water and sewer, with many of the developments actually being annexed into the city limits in order to obtain all of the services offered by the City. The City Council has indicated their commitment to encourage well -planned, quality growth in the area, with the demands on the city services being funded by the new growth without significant burden on the existing citizens of the City of Clermont. This will require continual forecasting and long range planning for all services provided by the City with consideration to the financial impact of providing these services. Although the City of Clermont is in excellent financial condition, we must continue to monitor our revenue sources, as well as all legislation affecting those revenue and potential future revenue sources. In addition, the City must have a conservative attitude toward budgeting and continue to find innovative methods of providing necessary services that are affordable. The City has adequate reserves and a relatively low ad valorem tax rate. This, coupled with the potential for unprecedented growth and sound management practices will continue to provide excellent and affordable standards of living for the residents'of Clermont. CERTIFICATE OF ACHIEVEMENT The Government Finance Officers Association of the United States and Canada (GFOA) awarded a Certificate of Achievement for Excellence in Financial Reporting to the City of Clermont, Florida, for its Comprehensive Annual Financial Report for the fiscal year ended September 30, 1990. The Certificate of Achievement is the highest form of recognition for excellence in state and local government financial reporting. In order to be awarded a Certificate of Achievement, a government unit must publish an easily readable and efficiently organized 11 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report, whose contenCs conform to program standards. Such reports must satisfy both generally accepted accounting principles and applicable legal requirements. A Certificate of Achievement is valid for a period of one year only. The City of Clermont has received a Certificate of Achievement for the last three consecutive fiscal years. We believe our current report continues to conform to the Certificate of Achievement Program requirements, and we are submitting it to GFOA. INDEPENDENT AUDIT Florida statutes and the City Charter require an annual financial audit of, the financial statements of the City of Clermont by an independent certified public accountant selected by the City Council. This requirement has been satisfied and the Auditor's unqualified opinion has been included in this report. ACKNONLEDGEMEE S The preparation of this report on a timely basis could not have been accomplished without the efficient and dedicated services of the staffs of the City Manager's office, Planning Department and Finance Department. I would also like to thank the Mayor and members of the City Council for their interest and support in planning and conducting the financial operations of the City in a responsible and progressive manner. Respectfully submitted, 12 CITY OF CLERMONT ORGANIZATIONAL CHART CITIZENB CLERNONT City CITY Attorney COUNCIL Committees City Manager mi L.Lolice.j Fire V Public Services Streets Parks Animal Control Sanitation Water Sewer 13 Finance Accounting Budgeting Payroll Utility Billing Risk Management Planning Planning Zoning Licensing Permitting Code Enforcement CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA LISTING OF CITY OFFICIALS AS OF SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 ELECTED OFFICIALS Mayor Mayor/Pro-Tem Councilmember Councilmember Councilmember APPOINTED OFFICIALS City Manager City Attorney Finance Director Public Services Director Chief of Police Fire Chief City Engineer Planning Director 14 Robert A. Pool Hal Turville .inn Dupee Ken Norquist Lester Cole Wayne Saunders Leonard H. Baird, Jr. Joseph E. Van Zile Preston Davis Prentice Tyndal Carle Bishop John Springstesd Lanny Harker Certificate of Achievement for Excellence in Financial Reporting Presented to City of Clermont, Florida For its Comprehensive Annual Financial Report for the Fiscal Year Ended September 30, 1990 A Certificate of Achievement for Excellence in Financial Reporting is Presented by the Government Financial Officers Association of the United States and Canada to government units and public employee retirement systems whose comprehensive annual financial reports (CAFR's) achieve the highest standards in government accounting and financial reporting. r • ' �,,MGE Offjcf t 0 IW 7O Win IM!{ ji 9m President Y of FEE +o Executive Director 15 THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK 16 FINANCIAL SECTION This Section Contains the Following Subsections: AUDITORS' REPORTS GENERAL PURPOSE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS COMBINING AND INDIVIDUAL FUND AND ACCOUNT GROUP STATEMENTS AUDITORS' REPORTS GREENLEE KURRAS RICE & BROWN, PA CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS CLERMONT: Herbert John Greenlee, Jr., C.P.A Jerry D. Brown, C.P.A. MOUNT DORA: INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT The Honorable Mayor and City Council City of Clermont, Florida Dorothy A. Kurras, C.P.A. John S. Rice, C.P.A. Patricia A. Sykes, C.P.A C. L. (Chip) Garner, C.P.A. John A. Powers, C.P.A. Mark A_Farner, C.P.A. We have audited the general purpose financial statements of the City of Clermont, Florida, as of and for the year ended September 30, 1991, as listed in the accompa- nying table of contents. These general purpose financial statements are the re- sponsibility of the City's management. Our responsibility is to express an opin- ion on these general purpose financial statements based on our audit. We conducted our audit in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards and Government Auditing Standards, issued by the Comptroller General of the United States. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the general purpose financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the general purpose financial statements. An audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall finan- cial statement presentation. We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion. In our opinion, the general purpose financial statements referred to above present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the City of Clermont, Florida, at September 30, 1991, and the results of its operations and its cash flows in its proprietary and nonexpendable trust fund for the year then ended in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles. Our audit was made for the purpose of forming an opinion on the general purpose financial statements taken as a whole. The combining, individual fund, and individual account group financial statements and schedules listed in the accompanying table of contents are presented for purposes of additional analysis and are not a required part of the general purpose financial statements of the City of Clermont, Florida. Such information has been subjected to the auditing procedures applied in the audit of the general purpose financial statements and, in our opinion, is fairly presented in all material respects in relation to the general. purpose financial_ statements taken as a whole. Clermont, Florida January 22, 1992 MEMBER: FLORIDA INSTITUTE OF CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS & AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS 752MontroseStreet 627N. Donnelly Street Post Office Box 1204009 Clermont, FL 34712-0400 Post Office Box 8. Mount Dora, FL 32757 Telephone: (904) 394-3256 17 Telephone: (904) 383-6300 THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK 18 GREENLEE CLERMONT: Herbert John Greenlee, Jr., C.P.A ^ � KURRAS MOUNT DORA: JerryD. Brown, C.P.A. Dorothy A. Kunas, C.P.A. RICE & John S. Rice, C.P.A. Patricia A. Sykes, C.P.A BROWN, PA C. L. (Chip) Garner, C.P.A. CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS John A. Powers, C.P.A. Mark A. Farner, C.P.A. INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT ON INTERNAL CONTROL STRUCTURE RELATED MATTERS NOTED IN A FINANCIAL STATEMENT AUDIT CONDUCTED IN ACCORDANCE WITH GOVERNMENT AUDITING STANDARDS To the Honorable Mayor and City Council City of Clermont, Florida We have audited the general purpose financial statements of the City of Clermont, Florida, for the year ended September 30, 1991, and have issued our report thereon dated January 22, 1992. We conducted our audit in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards Government AuditingStandards, issued by the Comptroller General of the United Staces, and the provisions of Office of Mana)ement and Budget Circular A-7.28, "AUdits of Slate a.ud Local Governments." Those standards arid OMB Circular A-128 require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the general purpose financial statements are free of material misstatement. In planning and performing our audit of the general purpose financial statements of the City of Clermont, Florida, for the year ended September 30, 1991, we considered its internal control structure in order to determine our auditing procedures for the purpose of expressing our opinion on the general purpose financial statements and not to provide assurance on the internal control structure. The management of the City of Clermont, Florida, is responsible for establishing and maintaining an internal control structure. In fulfilling this responsibility, estimates and judgments by management are required to assess the expected benefits and related costs of internal control structure policies and procedures. The objectives of an internal control structure are to provide management with reasonable, but not absolute, assurance that assets are safeguarded against loss from unauthorized use or disposition; and that transactions are executed in accordance with management's authorization and recorded properly to permit the preparation of financial statements in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Because of inherent limitations in any internal control structure, errors or irregularities may nevertheless occur and not be detected. Also, projection of any evaluation of the structure to future periods is subject to the risk that procedures may become inadequate because of changes in conditions or that the effectiveness of the design and operation of policies and procedures may deteriorate. MEMBER: FLORIDA INSTITUTE OF CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS & AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS 752 Montrose Street 627 N. Donnelly Street Post Office Box 120400. Clermont FL 34712-0400 Post Office Box 8. Mount Dora, FL 32757 Telephone: (904) 394-3256 19 Telephone: (904) 383-6300 For the purpose of this report, we have classified the significant internal control structure policies and procedures in the following categories: Cash and investments Revenues and receivables Inventory Property, equipment Expenditures and payables Debt and debt service Data Processing For all of the control categories listed above, we obtained an understanding of the design of relevant policies and procedures and whether they have been placed in operation, and we assessed control risk. Our consideration of the internal control structure would not necessarily disclose all matters in the internal control structure that might be material weaknesses under standards established by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants. A material weakness is a reportable condition in which the design or operation of the specific internal control structure elements does not reduce to a relatively low level the risk that errors or irregularities in amounts that would be material in relation to the general purpose financial statements being audited may occur and not be detected within a timely period by employees in the normal course of performing their assigned functions. We noted no matters involving the internal control structure and its operation that we consider to be material weaknesses as defined above. However, we noted certain matters involving the internal control structure and its operation that we have reported to the management of the City of Clermont, Florida, in a separate letter dated January 27, 1992. This report is intended for the information Florida. This restriction is not intended report, which is a matter of public record. Clermont, Florida January 27, 1992 of the management and the State of to limit the distribution of this 20 p GREENLEE KURRAS RICE & BROWN, PA CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS CLERMONT: Herbert John Greenlee, Jr., C.P.A Jerry D. Brown, C.P.A. MOUNT DORA: Dorothy A. Kurras, C.P.A. John S. Rice, C.P.A. Patricia A. Sykes, C.P.A C. L. (Chip) Garner, C.P.A. John A. Powers, C.P.A. Mark A. Farner, C.P.A. REPORT ON COMPLIANCE WITH LAWS AND REGULATIONS The Honorable Mayor and City Council City of Clermont, Florida We have audited the general purpose financial statements of the City of Clermont, Florida, as of and for the year ended September 30, 1991, and have issued our report thereon dated January 22, 1992. We conducted our audit in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards and Government Auditing Standards, issued by the Comptroller General of the United States. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the general purpose financial statements are free of material misstatement. Compliance with laws, regulations, contracts, and grants applicable to the City of Clermont, Florida, is the responsibility of the City's management. As part of obtaining reasonable assurance about whether the general purpose financial statements are free of material misstatement, we performed tests of the City's compliance with certain provisions of laws, regulations, contracts, and grants. However, our objective was not to provide an opinion on overall compliance with such provisions. The results of our tests indicate that, with respect to the items tested, the City of Clermont, Florida, complied, in all material respects, with the provisions referred to in the preceding paragraph. With respect to items not tested, nothing came to our attention that caused us to believe that the City had not complied, in all material respects, with those provisions. We noted certain immaterial instances of noncompliance that we have reported to the management of the City of Clermont, Florida, in a separate letter dated January 27, 1992. This report is intended for the information of This restriction is not intended to limit the a matter of public record. Clermont, Florida January 27, 1992 management and the State of Florida. distribution of this report, which is MEMBER: FLORIDA INSTITUTE OF CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS & AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS 752 Montrose Street 627N. Donnelly Street Post Office Box 120400. Clermont, FL 34712-0400 Post Office Box 8. Mount Dora, FL 32757 Telephone: (904) 394 3256 21 Telephone. (904) 383-6300 THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK P&A GREENLEE KURRAS RICE & BROWN, PA CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS CLERMONT: MOUNT DORA: MANAGEMENT LETTER The Honorable Mayor and City Council City of Clermont, Florida Herbert John Greenlee, Jr., CPA Jerry D. Brown, C.P.A. Dorothy A. Kurras, C.P.A. John S. Rice, C.P.A. Patricia A. Sykes, C.P.A C. L. (Chip) Garner, C.P.A. John A. Powers, C.P.A. Mark A. Farner, C.P.A. This report contains our comments as required by Chapter 10.554(1), Rules of the Auditor General, Local Governmental Entity Audits, for the City of Clermont, Florida, for the year ended September 30, 1991. Subparagraph (1) refers to whether irregularities reported in the preceding annual financial audit have been corrected. There were no irregularities reported in the preceding annual financial audit. Subparagraphs (2) and (4) refer to whether recommendations made in the preceding annual audit have been followed and recommendations to improve the City's present financial management, accounting procedures, and internal control. We made no recommendations in the prior year and make none this year. Subparagraph (3) refers to the City's being in a state of financial emergency during the fiscal year. The City did not experience any of the conditions described in Section 218.503(1) of Florida Statutes. Subparagraph (5) refers to violations of laws, rules and regulations discovered within the scope of the financial audit. We noted the following violation: The Water and Sewer Revenue Bond, 1972 series, covenant requires the City to have an audit within sixty (60) days of its year end. The audit was started but not completed during this time. Subparagraph (6) refers to illegal or improper expenditures discovered within the scope of the financial audit. We did not discover any illegal or improper expenditures. MEMBER: FLORIDA INSTITUTE OF CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS & AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS 752 Montrose Street 627N. Donnelly Street Post Office Box 120400. Clermont, FL 34712-0400 23 Post Office Box 8. Mount Dora, FL 32757 Telephone: (904) 394 3258 Telephone: (904) 383-6300 Subparagraph (7)(a)(b) and (d) requires disclosure of improper or inadequate accounting procedures, failures to properly record financial transactions, and other inaccuracies, irregularities, shortages, and defalcations discovered. Our examination did not discover any of the above items which would require disclosure. Adjustments were made to the City's accounts for the year ended September 30, 1991. All adjustments are reviewed with the City's Finance Director prior to delivery of this report. Subparagraph (7)(c) refers to the agreement of the financial report filed with the Department of Banking and Finance pursuant to Section 218.32, Florida Statutes with the annual financial audit report: For the year ended September 30, 1991, the financial report was in agreement in all material respects. The foregoing conditions were considered in determining the nature, timing, and extent of the audit tests to be applied in our examination of the City's financial statements, and this report does not affect our report on these financial statements dated January 22, 1992. This report is intended solely for the use of management and the State of Florida and should not be used for any other purpose. This restriction is not intended to limit the distribution of this report which, upon acceptance by the City of Clermont and the State of Florida, is a matter of public record_ Clermont, Florida January 27, 1992 24 GENERAL PURPOSE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Combined Statements -Overview) These basic financial statements provide a summary overview of the financial position of all funds and account groups as well as the operating results of all funds. They also serve as an introduction to the more detailed statements and schedules that follow in the next Subsection. THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK 25 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA COMBINED BALANCE SHEET ALL FUND TYPES AND ACCOUNT GROUPS SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------ GOVERNMENTAL FUND TYPES PROPRIETARY ----------- SPECIAL DEBT CAPITAL ASSETS ------ GENERAL ------- REVENUE ------- SERVICE ------- PROJECTS -------- ENTERPRISE ---------- Cash $ 13,234 $ 3,010 $ 83,969 $ .. $ 170,582 Investments 1,135,136 ... ... 799,822 1,528,914 Receivables: Interest 8,539 ... ... 1,841 6,690 Accounts 15,136 ... ... ... 153,058 Assessments 29,469 ... ... ... ... Other ... ... ... ... 1,073 Interfund receivables ... ... ... 14,867 119,722 Due from other governments 18,034 24,000 ... ... 24,000 Inventory 4,098 ... ... ... 22,211 Restricted Assets: Cash ... ... ... ... 91,038 Investments ... ... ... ... 1,359,688 Land .. ... ... ... 927,606 Buildings ... ... ... ... ... Water System ... ... ... ... 3,449,265 Sewer system ... ... ... ... 6,369,826 Improvements other than buildings ... ... ... ... ... Machinery and equipment ... ... ... ... 608,587 Construction in progress ... ... ... ... ... Accumulated depreciation ... ... ... (3,078,404) Amount to be provided for retirement of long-term debt ... ----------- ... --------- ... --------- ... ----------- ... ------------ TOTAL ASSETS $ 1,223,646 ----------- ----------- $ 27,010 --------- --------- $ 83,969 --------- --------- $ 816,530 ----------- ----------- $ 11,753,856 ------------ ------------ The notes to the financial statements are an integral part of this statement. 01.1 FIDUCIARY TOTALS FUND TYPES FUND TYPES ACCOUNT GROUPS (MEMORANDUM ONLY) ---------- ----------- TRUST --------------------------- GENERAL GENERAL ----------------------------- INTERNAL AND FIXED LONG-TERM SERVICE ------- AGENCY ------ ASSETS ------ DEBT ---- 1991 ---- 1990 ---- $ ... $ 5,223 $ ••• $ ••• $ 276,018 $ 189,194 ... 2,121,119 ... ... 5,584,991 6,055,943 „ 17,070 25,732 10,000 ... ... ... 178,194 141,929 ... ... ... ... 29,469 ... ... ... ... ... 1,073 633 ... 23,824 ... ... 158,413 139,792 .,. ,.. ... 66,034 103,656 ... ... ... ... 26,309 29,177 ,.. ... ... ... 91,038 274,235 ..• ... ... 1,359,688 1,230,923 ... ... 806p732 ••• 10734,338 1,687,170 ... ... 1,276,264 ... 1,276,264 724,440 ... ... ... ... 3,449,265 3,006,803 .., .., ,.. ... 6,369,826 6,345,497 ... ... 2,808,533 ... 2,808,533 2,509,662 ... ... 1,048,106 ... 1,656,693 1,558,706 ... ... ... ... .. 324,160 ... ... .•. ... (3,078,404) (2,798,168) ... --------- ... ----------- ... ----------- 2,022,396 ----------- 2,022,396 ------------ 2,136,812 ------------ $ 10,000 --------- --------- $ 2,150,166 ----------- ----------- $ 5,939,635 ----------- ----------- $ 2,022,396 ----------- ----------- $ 24,027,208 ------------ ------------ $ 23,686,301 ------------ ------------ Continued 27 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA COMBINED BALANCE SHEET ALL FUND TYPES AND ACCOUNT GROUPS SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 -------------------------------------------------- GOVERNMENTAL FUND TYPES PROPRIETARY ------------ SPECIAL DEBT CAPITAL LIABILITIES ----------- GENERAL ------- REVENUE ------- SERVICE ------- PROJECTS -------- ENTERPRISE ---------- Accounts payable $ 42,734 $ ... $ ... $ 25,579 $ 30,211 Other accrued expenses/deferred revenue 10,753 ... ... 40,625 20,291 Contracts payable ... ... ... 6,582 ... Notes payable ... ... ... Payable From Restricted Assets: ... Construction contracts ... ... ... ... Deposits ... ... ... ... ... 42,442 Accrued interest ... ... ... ... 85,268 Revenue bonds ... ... ... 105P000 Interfund payables 13,880 15,047 ... ... 14,867 110,979 Deferred compensation payable ... ... ... ... Revenue bonds payable ... ----------- ... ... ... ... 3,245,000 Total Liabilities 67,367 ----------- ------------------ 15,047 ----------- ... 87,653 ------------ 3,639,191 EQUITY AND OTHER CREDITS ------------------ ----------- ------------ ------------------------ Contributed capital ... ... ... ... 2,667,107 Investment in general fixed assets ... ... ... Retained Earnings: ... ... Reserved ... ... ... ... 1,218,016 Unreserved ... ... ... ... 4,229,542 Fund Balances: Reserved for police education 6,554 .. ... ... Reserved for inventory 4,098 ... ... ... ... ... Reserved for recreation 18,607 ... ... ... Reserved for cemetery care ... ,,, ... ... ... Reserved for debt service ... ... 83,969 ... . ... Reserved for employees' retirement systems ... ... ... ... ... Unreserved, designated for capital replacement 83,935 ... ... ... ... Unreserved, undesignated 1,043,085 11,963 ... 728,877 ... Total Equity ----------- ------------------ ----------- ------------ and Other Credits 1,156,279 ----------- 11,963 ------------------ 83,969 ----------- 728,877 8,114,665 ------------ TOTAL LIABILITIES AND FUND EQUITY $ 1,223,646 $ 27,010 $ 83,969 $ 816,530 $ 11,753,856 The notes to the financial statements are an integral part of this statement. M FIDUCIARY TOTALS FUND TYPES FUND TYPES ACCOUNT GROUPS (MEMORANDUM ----------------------------- ONLY) ---------- ---------- TRUST --------------------------- GENERAL GENERAL INTERNAL AND FIXED LUNG -TERM SERVICE ------- AGENCY ------ ASSETS ------ DEBT ---- 1991 ---- 1990 ---- $ 19,267 $ ... $ ... $ ... $ 117,791 $ 104,616 393 ... ... ... 72,062 24,000 6,562 308,847 62,396 62,396 66,812 .., .<. ... ... ... 42,056 42,442 39,622 ,.. ... ... .., 85,268 87,443 ... 105,000 95,000 3,640 .., ... ... 158,413 139,792 ... 52,273 ..• ... 52,273 44,186 1,960,000 5,205,000 5,420,000 --------- 23,300 --------- ----------- 52,273 ----------- ----------- .•. ----------- ----------- 2,022,396 ----------- ------------ ------------ 5,907,227 ------------------------ 6,372,374 2,667,107 2,648,111 5,939,635 4,980,169 1,218,016 1,283,097 4,216,242 3,968,488 6,554 3,934 4,098 3,637 18,607 18,607 173,970 160,020 83,969 83,317 1,923,923 1,571,901 83,935 93,935 1,783,925 2,498,711 18,119,981 17,313,927 ------------------------ $ 24,027,208 $ 23,686,301 ------------------------ ------------------------ P401 THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK 30 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA COMBINED STATEMENT OF REVENUES, EXPENDITURES AND CHANGES IN FUND BALANCES ALL GOVERNMENTAL FUND TYPES FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---- --- ---- TOTALS GOVERNMENTAL FUND TYPES (MEMORANDUM ONLY) --------------------------------------------------- SPECIAL DEBT CAPITAL -------------------------- GENERAL REVENUE SERVICE ------- ------- PROJECTS -------- 1991 ---- 1990 Revenues: ------- Taxes $ 1,281,612 $ ,,, $ ... $ ... $ 1,281,612 $ 1,143,268 Licenses and permits 28,917 ... ... ... 28,917 25,688 Intergovernmental revenues 486,812 300,154 ... ... 786,966 918,517 Charges for services 19,327 ... ... ... 19,327 8,585 - Fines and forfeitures 69,571 ... ... ••. 69,571 40,572 Miscellaneous revenues 170,579 3,300 5,225 94,008 273,112 314,772 Total Revenues ----------- 2,056,818 ----------- ------------------- 303,454 ------------------- 5,225 ----------- 94,008 ----------- ----------- 2,459,505 ----------- ----------- 2,451,402 ----------- Expenditures: Current: General government, Public safety Physical environment Transportation Economic environment Human services Culture and recreation Capital outlay Debt service Total Expenditures Excess of Revenues Over (Under) Expenditures Other Financing Sources (Uses): Operating transfers in Operating transfer out Revenue bond proceeds Total Other Financing Sources (Uses) Excess of Revenues and Other Financing Sources Over (under) 393,621 47,168 ... ... 440,789 464,318 830,411 ... ... ... 830,411 767,734 99,989 ... ... ... 99,989 99,084 311,383 19,093 ... ... 330,476 442,340 9,283 ... ... .•. 9,283 9,596 13,665 ... ... ... 13,665 18,703 435,748 ... ... ... 435,748 421,271 ... ... ... 758,623 758,623 966,787 ... ... 251,573 ... 251,573 61,638 ----------- 2,094,100 ----------- ---------- 66,261 ---------- --------- 251,573 --------- ----------- 758,623 ----------- ----------- 3,170,557 ----------- ----------- 3,271,971 ----------- (37,282) 237,193 (246,348) (664,615) (711,052) (820,569) ... ... 247,000 233,885 480,885 328,879 (61,752) (247,000) ... ... ... (182,134) ... (490,886) ... (523,738) 2,070,000 ----------- (61,752) ----------- ---------- (247,000) ---------- --------- 247,000 --------- ----------- 51,751 ----------- ----------- (10,001) ----------- ----------- 1,875,141 ----------- Expenditures and Other Uses (99,034) (9,807) 652 (612,864) (721,053) 1,054,572 Fund Balances - October 1 1,255,313 21,770 83,317 1,341,741 2,702,141 1,646,003 Residual equity transfer in ... ... ... ... ... 1,566 FUND BALANCES - SEPTEMBER 30 $ 1,156,279 $ 11,963 $ 83,969 $ 728,877 $ 1,981,088 $ 2,702,141 The notes to the financial statements are an integral part of this statement. 31 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA COMBINED STATEMENT OF REVENUES, EXPENDITURES AND CHANGES IN FUND BALANCES - BUDGET AND ACTUAL - GENERAL, SPECIAL REVENUE, AND CAPITAL PROJECT FUNDS FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 ------------------------------------------ GENERAL FUND VARIANCE FAVORABLE BUDGET ACTUAL (UNFAVORABLE) Revenues: ------ ------ ------------- Taxes $ 1,276,550 $ 1,281,612 $ 5,062 Licenses and permits 37,000 28,917 (8,083) Intergovernmental revenues 477,563 486,812 9,249 Charges for services 19,055 19,327 272 Fines and forfeitures 61,800 69,571 7,771 Miscellaneous revenues 131,651 170,579 38,928 Total Revenues ----------- 2,003,619 ----------- 2,056,818 ----------- 53,199 Expenditures: ----------- ----------- ----------- Current: General government 385,523 393,621 (8,098) Public safety 822,664 830,411 (7,747) Physical environment 98,208 99,989 (1,781) Transportation 312,424 311,383 1,041 Economic environment 11,100 9,283 1,817 Human services 17,315 13,665 3,650 Culture and recreation 443,475 435,748 7,727 Capital outlay ... ... Debt service ... Total Expenditures ----------- 2,090,709 ----------- 2,094,100 ----------- (3,391) Excess (Deficiency) of Revenues ----------- ----------- ----------- Over Expenditures (87,090) (37,282) 49,808 Other Financing Sources (Uses): ----------- ----------- ----------- Operating transfers in ... ... Operating transfers out (53,752) (61,752) ... (8,000) Revenue bond proceeds ... .., . Total Other Financing Sources (Uses) ----------- (53,752) ----------- (61,752) ----------- (8,000) Excess (Deficiency) of Revenues and ----------- ----------- ----------- Other Sources Over (Under) Expenditures and Other Uses (140,842) (99,034) 41,808 Fund Balances - October 1 1,255,313 1,255,313 ... FUND BALANCES - SEPTEMBER 30 ----------- $ 1,114,471 ----------- $ 1,156,279 ----------- $ 41,808 The notes to the financial statements are an integral part of this statement. 32 SPECIAL REVENUE FUND DEBT SERVICE FUND -------------------------- CAPITAL PROJECTS FUND ----------------------------------------- VARIANCE ----------------------------------- VARIANCE VARIANCE FAVORABLE FAVORABLE FAVORABLE BUDGET ------ ACTUAL ------ (UNFAVORABLE) ------------- BUDGET ------ ACTUAL ------ (UNFAVORABLE) ------------- BUDGET ------ ACTUAL ------ (UNFAVORABLE) ------------- $ ... $ ... $ ... $ ... $ ... $ ... $ ... $ ... $ ... 300,000 300,154 154 ... .•. ••• " ' 300 3,300 3,000 5,000 5,225 225 -------;--- 91,913 -------;--- 94,008 2,095 - ---------------------- 300,300 ---------------------- 303,454 ----------- 3,154 ----------- --------- 5,000 --------- --------- 5,225 --------- --------- 225 -------------------- 91,913 ----------- 94,008 2,095 ------ 47,168 47,168 ... ... ... 19,093 19,093 ... ... ... ... ... ... .•• �„ 852,677 758,623 94,054 . „ , •• ... ... 251,800 251,573 227 ••• ----------- --------- --------------- 66,261 ---------------------- 66,261 ----------- ... ----------- --------- 251,800 --------- --------- 251,573 --------- -------------------- 227 -------------------- 852,677 ----------- 758,523 94,054 234,039 ----------- ----------- 237,193 3,154 ----------- (246,800) --------- (246,348) --------- 452 -------------------- (760,764) ----------- (664,615) -----96_149 ... 252,000 247,000 (5,000) 223,866 233,885 10,019 ,,, (252,000) (247,000) 5,000 ... ... ... (170,114) (182,134) (12,020) --------- ----------- (252,000) ---------------------- (247,000) ----------- 5,000 ----------- --------- 252,000 --------- --------- 247,000 --------- --------- ----------- (5,000) ---- --------- -------I--- 53_752----- 51 751 ----------- (2,001) ----- (17,961) (9,807) 8,154 5,200 652 4,548 (707,012) (612,864) 94,148 21,770 21,770 ... 83,317 83,317 ... ----------- 1,341,741 ----------- 1,341,741 ----------- ----------- ----------- $ 3,809 $ 11,963 ----------- $ 8,154 --------- $ 88,517 --------- $ 83,969 --------- $ 4,548 $ 634,729 $ 728,877 $ 94,148 33 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA COMBINED STATEMENT OF REVENUES, EXPENSES AND CHANGES IN RETAINED EARNINGS/FUND BALANCES ALL PROPRIETARY FUND TYPES AND SIMILAR TRUST FUNDS FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PROPRIETARY ENTERPRISE Operating Revenues: Charges for services $ 1,638,810 Investment earnings ... Contributions ... Cemetery lot sales Sale of recycled materials 4,381 Reimbursements ... Total Operating Revenues 1,643,191 Operating Expenses: Personal services 509,448 Utilities 141,650 Landfill 109,545 Administrative services 99,543 Repair and maintenance 116,259 Depreciation 280,237 Professional services 79,019 Insurance 56,726 Operating supplies 64,728 Office expense 15,762 Bad debt expense 2,525 Benefit payments ... Refunds ... Trustee/administrative fees ... Medical claims ... Total Operating Expenses 1,475,442 Operating Income (Loss) 167,749 Nonoperating Revenues (Expenses): Interest revenue 218,686 Interest expense (241,253) Grants 41,718 Rent 2,502 Total Nonoperating Revenues (Expenses) 21,653 Income Before Operating Transfers 189,402 Operating Transfers In 10,000 Net Income 199,402 Retained Earnings/Fund Balances - October 1 5,248,156 RETAINED EARNINGS/FUND BALANCES - SEPTEMBER 30 $ 5,447,558 The notes to the financial statements are an integral part of this statement. 34 TOTALS FUND TYPES FIDUCIARY FUND TYPES (MEMORANDUMS ----------------------------- ONLY) ---------- INTERNAL ------------------------------ PENSION NONEXPENDABLE SERVICE TRUST TRUST 1991 1990 $ 209,889 $ $ ... $ 1,848,699 $ 1,611,238 ... 331,05, ... 331,685 (38,585) .,. 127,157 127,157 125,086 ,.. ... 13,950 13,950 12,300 ... ... 4,381 ... 34,881 ... ... 34,881 ---------------------- ... ----------- 244,770 ----------- ----------- 458,842 ----------- ----------- 13,950 ----------- 2,360,753 ---------------------- 1,710,039 .,, .., ... 509,448 432,896 141,650 143,434 109,545 119,655 .,, ... ... 99,543 89,685 116,259 125,867 280,237 245,344 ,,, .,, ... 79,019 83,851 53,813 ... ... 110,539 81,856 64,728 53,598 15,762 12,669 ,,, 2,525 2,215 ... 62,012 ... 62,012 35,889 14,530 ... 14,530 20,949 ON 30,278 ... 37,656 44,205 201,253 ... ... 201,253 ----------- 92,945 ----------- 262,444 ----------- 106,820 ----------- ... ----------- 1,844,706 ----------- 1,585,058 ----------- (17,674) ----------- ----------- 352,022 ----------- ----------- 13,950 ----------- ----------- 516,047 ---------------------- 124,981 945 ... ... 219,631 267,095 (241,253) (247,330) 41,718 2,500 ... ... ... 2,502 ... ----------- 945 ----------- ... ----------- ... ---------------------- 22,598 ----------- 22,265 ----------- (16,729) ----------- 352,022 ----------- 13,950 ----------- 538,645 147,246 ----------- ----------- ----------- 10,000 ---------------------- 194,860 (16,729) 352,022 13,950 548,645 342,106 3,429 ----------- 1,571,901 ----------- 160,020 ----------- 6,983,506 ---------------------- 6,641,400 $ (13,300) $ 1,923,923 $ 173,970 $ 7,532,151 $ 6,983,506 35 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA COMBINED STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS ALL PROPRIETARY FUND TYPES AND NONEXPENDABLE TRUST FUNDS FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ FIDUCIARY TOTALS PROPRIETARY FUND TYPES FUND TYPE (MEMORANDUMS ONLY) ---------------------- ------------- ----------------------- INTERNAL NONEXPENDABLE ENTERPRISE SERVICE TRUST 1991 1990 ---------- -------- --------- ---- ---- Cash Flows From Operating Activities: Cash received from customers $ 1,600,083 $ 238,804 $ 13,950 $ 1,852,837 $ 1,615,722 Cash payments to suppliers (692,172) (61,191) ... (753,363) (705,010) Cash payments for employee services (506,415) ... ... (506,415) (419,849) Cash payments for medical claims ... (189,919) ... (189,919) ----------- (85,051) ----------- Net Cash Provided By ----------- --------- --------- Operating Activities 401,496 (12,306) 13,950 403,140 405,612 Cash Flows From Noncapital ----------- --------- --------- ----------- ----------- Financing Activities: Operating transfer in 10,000 ... ... 10,000 194,860 Grants 17,718 ... ... ---------- 17,718 2,500 Net Cash Provided by ----------- --------- ----------- ----------- Noncapital Activities 27,718 ... ... 27,718 ----------- 197,360 ----------- Cash Flows From Capital and Related ----------- --------- --------- Financing Activities: Acquisition and construction of capital assets (307,512) ... ... (307,512) (745,388) Principal paid on revenue bonds (95,000) ... ... (95,000) (80,000) Interest paid on revenue bonds (243,429) ... ... (243,429) (249,179) Contributed capital 18,996 ... ... 18,996 104,435 Rent 2,502 ... ... 2,502 ... Net Cash Provided (Used) By Capital ----------- --------- --------- ----------- ----------- and Related Financing Activities (624,443) ... ... (624,443) (970,132) Cash Flows From Investing Activities: ----------- --------- --------- ----------- ----------- Interest 221,098 945 ... 222,043 267,345 Net Increase (Decrease) in Cash ----------- --------- --------- ----------- ----------- and Cash Equivalents 25,869 (11,361) 13,950 28,458 (99,615) Cash and Cash Equivalents at Beginning of Year 3,124,353 11,361 160,020 3,295,734 3,395,349 Cash and Cash Equivalents at ----------- --------- --------- ----------- ----------- End of Year $ 3,150,222 $ ... $ 173,970 $ 3,324,192 $ 3,295,734 The notes to the financial statements are an integral part of this statement. 36 Reconciliation of Operating Income to Net Cash Provided (Used) by Operating Activities: Operating Income (Loss) Adjustments to Reconcile Operating Income to Net Cash Provided (Used) by Operating Activities: Depreciation Change in Assets and Liabilities: Decrease (Increase) in receivables Decrease (Increase) in inventory Decrease in prepaid expenses Increase (Decrease) in accrued expenses Increase in payables Total Adjustments Net Cash Provided (Used) by Operating Activities: FIDUCIARY TOTALS PROPRIETARY FUND TYPES FUND TYPE (MEMORANDUMS ONLY) ---------------------- ------------- ----------------------- INTERNAL NONEXPENDABLE ENTERPRISE SERVICE TRUST 1991 1990 ------------------ ------------- ---- ---- $ 167,749 $ (17,674) $ 13,950 $ 164,025 $ 130,541 ----------- ------------------ ----------- ----------- 280,237 ... ... 280,237 245,344 (57,444) (10,000) ... (67,444) (13,810) 3,329 ... ... ... ... ... 3,329 ... 1,364 2,3o6 2,203 .. ... 2,203 4,176 5,422 ----------- 15,368 ... ------------------ 20,790 ----------- ----------- 35,891 233,747 ----------- 5,368 ... --------- --------- 239,115 ---------------------- 275,271 $ 401,496 $ (12,306) $ 13,950 $ 403,140 $ 405,312 37 THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK 38 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 1. Summary of Significant Accounting Policies: The City of Clermont, Florida was incorporated December, 1916, under the laws of the State of Florida and operates under the Council-manager form of govern- ment under its charter adopted pursuant to H.B. 2223 ch 67 - 1217, Special Acts 1967, of the State of Florida. The financial statements of the City of Clermont, Florida have been prepared in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles as applicable to governments. The following is a summary of the City's more significant accounting policies: A. Reporting Entity - The financial statements of the City include all funds and account groups that are controlled by or dependent on the City. The City did not have any oversight responsibilities with respect to a component unit, a separate governmental unit, agency or nonprofit corporation, which would require the inclusion of the component unit's financial statements with the City's financial statements. The basic criterion for including a component unit within the City's reporting entity is the exercise of oversight responsibility. The specific criteria used by the City to establish oversight responsibility are: MANIFESTATIONS OF OVERSIGHT RESPONSIBILITY 1. Selection of governing authority 2. Designation of management 3. Ability to significantly influence operations ACCOUNTABILITY FOR FISCAL MATTERS 1. Budgetary authority 2. Responsibility for debt 3. Fiscal management Factors other than oversight which may significantly influence the entity relationship are: 1. Scope of public service 2. Special financing relationships Based upon the application of these criteria, the following is a brief review of each potential component unit addressed in defining the City's reporting entity. Wt CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Included within the reporting entity: The City of Clermont Employees' Retirement Systems The City's general employees, police officers, and volunteer firemen participate in the City's Employees Retirement Systems. These systems function for the benefit of the employees and are governed by a seven- member pension board which is made up of the five members of the City Council and a representative of the police department and the volunteer fire department respectively. The City and retirement system participants are obligated to fund all retirement system costs based on actuarial valuations. The City is authorized to establish benefit levels. Excluded from the reporting entity: Lake Apopka Natural Gas District The Lake Apopka Natural Gas District was established on June 20, 1959 by a special act of the Florida legislature. The City of Clermont is one of three member municipalities and is entitled to appoint one member to the Board of Commissioners of the district. The Board of Commissioners is empowered to make monetary distributions to the member municipalities of net current assets that have not been reserved or designated for capital expansion. The City of Clermont has no legal obligation on District debt or deficits nor does it significantly influence the operation of the District. Cooper Memorial Library The Cooper Memorial Library is located within the city limits and provides service to the residents of the City. The City holds title to the library building and makes the annual mortgage note payment. The City also makes an annual contribution to the Library. The Library Board selects and hires management staff, establishes the budget, and is responsible for the operation of the Library. The City does not appoint any of the Board members. South Lake County Hospital Tax District The South Lake Hospital Tax District operates South Lake Hospital which is located within the City and provides service to residents of the City. The tax district has a separate elected board. The City Council has no ability to exercise influence in daily operations, approve budgets, or provide funding. 40 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS B. Fund Accounting - The accounts of the City are organized on the basis of funds and account groups,.each of which is considered a separate accounting entity. The operations of each fund are accounted for with a separate set of self -balancing accounts that comprise its assets, liabilities, fund equity, revenue and expenditures, or expenses, as appropriate. Government resources are allocated to and accounted for in individual funds based upon the purposes for which they are to be spent and the means by which spending activities are controlled. The various funds and account groups of the City are as follows: Governmental Funds - 1. General Fund - To account for all financial resources except those required to be accounted for in another fund. 2. Special Revenue Fund - To account for the proceeds of specific revenue sources (other than special assessments, expendable trusts or for major capital projects) that are legally restricted to expenditure for specified purposes. 3. Debt Service Fund - To account for the accumulation of resources for, and the payment of, general long term debt principal, interest and related cost. 4. Capital Projects Funds - To account for financial resources to be used for the acquisition or construction of major capital facilities (other than those financed by proprietary funds and trust funds.) Proprietary Funds - 1. Enterprise Funds - To account for operations (a) that are financed and operated in a manner similar to private business enterprises --where the intent of the governing body is that the costs (expenses, including depreciation) of providing goods or services to the general public on a continuing basis be financed or recovered primarily through user charges; or (b) where the governing body had decided that periodic determination of revenues earned, expenses incurred, and/or net income is appropriate for capital maintenance, public policy, management control, accountability or other purposes. 2. Internal Service Fund To account for the financing of goods or services provided by one department or agency to other departments or agencies of the City, or to other governments, on a cost -reimbursement basis. Fiduciary Funds - Trust and Agency Funds - To account for assets held by the City in a trustee capacity or as an agent for individuals, private organizations, other governmental units, and/or other funds. These include pension trust and agency funds. Pension trust funds are accounted for in essentially the same manner as Proprietary Funds, since capital maintenance is critical. Agency Funds are purely custodial (assets equal liabilities) and thus, do not involve measurement of results of operations. 41 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Account Groups - General Fixed Asset Account Group - is used to maintain control and cost information for all fixed assets other than those accounted for in the Proprietary and Nonexpendable Trust Funds. General Long -Term Debt Account Group - is used to record the outstanding long-term obligations not otherwise recorded in Proprietary, Nonexpendable Trust and Pension Trust Funds. C. Basis of Accounting - The accounting and financial reporting treatment applied to a fund is determined by its measurement focus. All governmental funds are accounted for using a current financial resources measurement focus. With this measurement focus, only current assets and current liabilities generally are included on the balance sheet. Operating state- ments of these funds present increases (i.e., revenues and other financing sources) and decreases (i.e., expenditures and other financing uses) in net current assets. All proprietary funds, nonexpendable trust funds and pension trust funds are accounted for on a flow of economic resources measurement focus. With this measurement focus, all assets and all liabilities associated with the operation of these funds are included on the balance sheet. Fund equity (i.e., net total assets) is segregated into contributed capital and retained earnings components. Proprietary fund -type operating statements present increases (e.g., revenues) and decreases (e.g., expenses) in net total assets. The modified accrual basis of accounting is used by all governmental fund types and agency funds. Under the modified accrual basis of accounting, revenues are recognized when susceptible to accrual (i.e., when they become both measurable and available,) "Measurable" means the amount of the transaction can be determined and "available" means collectible within the current period or soon enough thereafter to be used to pay liabilities of the current period. The government considers property taxes as available if they are collected within 60 days after year end. A one-year availability period is used for revenue recognition for all other governmental fund revenues. Expenditures are recorded when the related fund liability is incurred. Principal and interest on general long-term debt are recorded as fund liabilities when due or when amounts have been accumulated in the debt service fund for payments to be made early in the following year. All major revenues, except property taxes and licenses, are considered measurable and available and, as such, susceptible to accrual. The accrual basis of accounting is utilized by proprietary fund types, pension trust funds and nonexpendable trust funds. Under this method, revenues are recorded when earned and expenses are recorded at the time liabilities are incurred. Encumbrance accounting is not used by the City. 42 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS D. Budgets The City follows these procedures in establishing the budgetary data re- flected in the financial statements: 1. Prior to August 31, the City Manager submits to the City Council the proposed operating budget for the fiscal year commencing the following October 1. The operating budget includes proposed expenditures and the means of financing them. 2. Public hearings are conducted to obtain taxpayer comments. 3. Prior to October 1, the budget is legally enacted through passage of an ordinance. The legal level of budgetary control is the department level. Administrative control is maintained at the object level through integration with the accounting records. Appropriations lapse at the end of each fiscal year. In the general fund, the following departments had an excess of expenditures over appropriations: legislative ($644), finance ($7,145), planning ($235), other general government ($8,098), law enforcement ($7,535), fire control ($212), and public works ($1,781.) The budget is prepared on a basis consistent with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) for the governmental fund types and the non - expendable trust fund. The enterprise funds' budgets are prepared on a non-GAAP basis as depreciation in the utility fund is not budgeted while debt principal payments and capital additions are budgeted as expenses in all enterprise funds. The City Manager is authorized to transfer budgeted amounts within departments within any fund. However, any revisions that alter the total expenditures of a department must be approved by the City Council. Budget amounts are reported as originally adopted or revised. A schedule summarizing budget revisions by fund is presented in notes to the financial statements No. 2. Budgets are adopted for all funds except the impact fee, internal service and trust and agency funds. Budget amounts for the governmental fund types are reported in the combined financial statements. A comparison of budgeted and actual (budgetary basis) expenses in the enterprise funds is shown in notes to financial statements No. 2. E. Assets, Liabilities and Fund Equity 1. Cash and Investments - Cash includes amounts in demand deposits as well as short-term investments with a maturity date within three months of the date acquired by the government. Investments are stated at cost or amortized cost, except for investments in the deferred compensation agency fund which are reported at market value. 43 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 2. Accounts Receivable From Other Governments - Those amounts that represent a claim against another government, and are measurable, have been accrued. 3. Receivables - The Water and Sewer System maintains the direct write-off method of bad debt recognition due to the immateriality of the amounts. The City has no concentrations of credit risk. 4. Inventories - Inventories are priced at lower of cost or market using the first -in, first -out method. Inventories are maintained by the General Fund and the Utility Fund. The City uses the consumption method in expensing governmental fund inventories. 5. Restricted Assets - The restricted assets shown on the Enterprise Fund balance sheet represent those assets of the Enterprise Fund which are earmarked for specific purposes and cannot be used for paying general obligations of the Fund. The corresponding liability designated as payable from restricted assets represents the current maturities for which the restricted assets are accumulated. 6. Fixed Assets - General fixed assets are not capitalized in the funds used to acquire or construct them. Instead, capital acquisition and construction are reflected as expenditures in governmental funds, and the related assets are reported in the general fixed assets account group. All purchased fixed assets are valued at cost where historical records are available and at an estimated historical cost where no historical records exist. Donated fixed assets are valued at their estimated fair market value on the date received. The costs of normal maintenance and repairs that do not add to the value of the asset or materially extend asset lives are not capitaliz- ed. Improvements are capitalized and depreciated over the remaining useful lives of the related fixed assets, as applicable. Public domain ("infrastructure") general fixed assets consisting of roads, bridges, curbs and gutters, streets and sidewalks, drainage systems and lighting systems are capitalized by the City along with other general fixed assets. Assets in the general fixed assets account group are not depreciated. Depreciation of buildings, equipment and vehicles in the proprietary fund types is computed using the straight-line method, over the following estimated useful lives: Useful Proprietary Type Funds Lives (,years) Buildings 25 - 40 Land Improvements 5 - 40 Equipment - 3 35 44 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Interest is capitalized on proprietary fund assets acquired with tax- exempt debt. The amount of interest to be capitalized is calculated by offsetting interest expense incurred from the date of the borrowing until completion of the project with interest earned on invested proceeds over the same period. T Compensated Absences - No accrual is made for accrued vacation leave in the governmental funds because of immateriality. Accumulated vacation leave of employees in the proprietary funds is recorded as an expense and liability of those funds as the benefits accrue to employees. No accrual is made for sick leave benefits which accumulate but do not vest until retirement. Accumulated unpaid vacation benefits of $15,775 are accrued in the proprietary funds. 8. Long -Term Obligations - Long-term debt is recognized as a liability of a governmental fund when due. For other long-term obligations, only that portion expected to be financed from expendable available financial resources is reported as a fund liability of a governmental fund. The remaining portion of such obligations is reported in the general long-term debt account group. Long-term liabilities expected to be financed from proprietary fund operations are accounted for in those funds. 9. Fund Equity - Contributed capital is recorded in proprietary funds that have received capital grants or contributions from developers, customers or other funds. Reserves represent those portions of fund equity not appropriable for expenditure or legally segregated for a specific future use. Designated fund balances represent tentative plans for future use of financial resources. F. Revenues, Expenditures and Expenses 1. Interest income resulting from pooling of cash in master bank accounts is allocated to the funds in their proportionate share. 2. Unbilled revenue, which results from cyclical billing practices, is recorded in the following fiscal year. 3. Interfund Transactions - Legally authorized transfers from the fund receiving revenue to the fund through which the resources are to be expended, transfers of tax revenues from a special revenue fund to a debt service fund, transfers from the general fund to a special revenue or capital projects fund, operating subsidy transfers from the general or a special revenue fund to an enterprise fund, and transfers from an enterprise fund other than payments in lieu of taxes to finance general fund expenditures. 4. Property Tax Recognition - The key dates in the property tax cycle (latest date where appropriate) are as follows: Assessment roll validated July 1 Millage resolution approved September 30 Beginning of fiscal year for which taxes have been levied October 1 Tax bills rendered and due November 1 Property taxes payable: Maximum discount November 30 Delinquent April 1 Tax certificates sold May 31 45 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Property taxes are collected and remitted by the county tax collector. The City does not accrue its portion of county held tax sale certificates because such amounts are neither measurable nor available at balance sheet date. The statutory maximum tax rates which may be assessed by the City are as follows: Ad valorem millage 10 mills Utility tax (Electric, gas, telephone) 10% (Telecommunications) 7% G. Total columns on the Combined Statements -Overview - Total columns on the Combined Statements -Overview are captioned Memorandum Only to indicate that they are presented only to facilitate financial analysis. Data in these columns do not present financial position, results of operations, or changes in cash flows in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles. Neither is such data comparable to a consolidation. Interfund eliminations have not been made in the aggregation of this data. 2. Stewardship, Compliance, and Accountability: A. Budget Revisions The following schedule summarizes budget revisions by Fund: General Fund Special Revenue Fund: Infrastructure Impact Fee Debt Service Fund: Sales Tax Revenue Bond Sinking Capital Projects Funds: Palatlakaha Recreation Area Building Construction Original Final Budget Revisions Budget $ 2,063,525 $ 80,936 $ 2,144,461 345,500 (27,239) 318,261 ... 251,800 251,800 60,000 212,001 272,001 1_,215,000 _(464,210) 750,790 $ 3,684,025 $ 53,288 $ 3,737,313 46 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS B. Enterprise Funds Budget Comparisons Comparison of budgeted and actual (budget basis) expenses at the legal level of control for the Enterprise Funds is presented as follows: Actual (GAAP Basis) Less: Depreciation Add: Capital additions Principal payments Actual (Budget Basis) Budget Variance -favorable (unfavorable) 3. Deposits and Investments: Utilitv Fund Sanitation Stormwater Water Sewer Fund Fund $ 519,604 $ 719,052 $ 419,410 $ 58,630 (104,233) (149,454) ... ... 103,891 51,634 23,490 15,000 80,000 ... 534,262 701,232 442,900 58,630 528,750 748,875 475.587 58,145 $ (5,512) $ 47,643 $ 32,687 $ 485 DEPOSITS The Florida Security for Depositors Act identifies those financial institutions that have deposited the required collateral in the name of the treasurer of the State of Florida as qualified public depositories. The City only places depos- its with qualified public depositories. Therefore, all City deposits are entirely insured by FDIC or Florida's Multiple Financial Institution Collateral Pool. At year end, the carrying amount of the City's deposits was $1,904,461 and the bank balance was $2,022,064. The City's investments are categorized below to give an indication of the level of risk assumed by the entity at year-end. Category 1 includes investments that are insured or registered or for which the securities are held by the City or its agent in the City's name. Category 2 includes uninsured and unregis- tered investments for which the securities are held by an agent in the City's name. Category 3 includes uninsured and unregistered investments for which the securities are held by a broker/dealer or agent but not in the City's name. 47 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS State statutes and the City's investment policies authorize investment in U.S. Government Obligations, Federal Farm Credit Banks, Federal National Mortgage Association Obligations and Repurchase Agreements. Carrying Market Value Value Risk Category 3: Repurchase Agreements $ 284,000 $ 284,000 (Secured by FNMA REMIC, due 9/25/14 @ 8.45% held by bank in bank's name) Investment in state treasurer's invest- ment pool 3,169,972 3,169,972 Florida Municipal Pension Trust Fund 1,900,099 1,900,099 Deferred Compensation Plan 52,273 52,273 Total $ 5,406,344 $ 5,406,344 4. Changes In General Fixed Assets: A summary of changes in general fixed assets is as follows: Land Buildings Improvements other than buildings Machinery and equipment Totals Balance - 09/30/90 $ 759,564 724,440 Additions $ 47,168 $ 551,824 Deletions Balance 09/30/91 $ 806,732 1,276,264 2,509,662 298,871 ... 2,808,533 986,503 79,537 _ 17,934 1,048,106 $ 4,980,169 $ 977,400 $ 17,934 $ 5,939,635 5. A Summary of Proprietary Fund property, plant and equipment: Transfers Transfers Balance and and Balance 9 30 90 Additions Deletions 9 30 91 Land $ 927,606 $ ... $ ... $ 927,606 Water system 3,006,803 442,462 ... 3,449,265 Sewer system 6,345,497 24,329 ... 6,369,826 Equipment 572,203 36,384 ... 608,587 Construction in progress 324,160 324,160 Total 11,176,269 $ 503,175 $ 324,160 11,355,284 Less: Accumulated depreciation 2,798,168 _ 280,237 3,078,404 Net $ 8,378,101 $ 8,276,880 48 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 6. Pension Funds: The City has three separate single employer defined benefit plans for general employees, sworn police officers, and volunteer firefighters respectively, as well as a defined contribution plan for general employees. The investment and administrative agent for these plans is the Florida Municipal Pension Trust Fund, an agent multiple -employer Public Employee Retirement System. DEFINED BENEFIT PENSION PLANS Total City payroll for the year ended September 30, 1991, was $1,444,071. Covered payroll for each of the defined benefit plans was: General employees Police officers Volunteer firemen $ 129,278 410,608 11,531 Membership in each of the defined benefit pension plans at September 30, 1991, was as follows: General Police Volunteer Employees Officers Firefighters Retirees/beneficiaries currently receiving benefits 13 2 2 Vested terminated employees 1 0 0 Active employees: Fully vested 5 2 3 Nonvested 0 15 17 Eligibility for Participation General employees - all permanent general employees actively employed by the City on September 30, 1985, who elected to participate. Police officers - all actively employed sworn police officers. Volunteer firefighters - all actively employed volunteer firemen. VESTING General Employees Police Officers Volunteer Firefighters FULL Age 65; 10 years Age 55; 10 years Age 55; 10 years service service service PARTIAL Age 60; 10 years Age 50; 10 years Age 50; 10 years service service service MONTHLY BENEFITS 2% of highest 5 year 2.25% of average $2.00 times years average salary monthly earnings of creditable times years of times years of service creditable creditable service service 49 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For all plans the partially vested monthly benefit shall be the fully vested amount reduced by 5/12th of 1% of said amount for each month that early retire- ment precedes the normal retirement date. Each defined benefit plan provides disability benefits. Benefit provision and all other requirements are established by Florida Statute and City Ordinance. If an employee terminates his or her employment with the Police or Volunteer Fire Departments, the employee is entitled to a refund of his or her contribution. Police officers and volunteer firefighters contribute 1% of their annual salary to their respective plans. The General Employee plan is non-contributory. The City is required to contribute the remaining amount necessary to fund the Plans according to the actuarial valuations. Funding Status and Progress The Florida Municipal Pension Trust Fund, in which the City of Clermont participates, provided an actuarial valuation for plan years beginning October 1, 1990, for each of the City's three defined benefit plans. The actuarial cost method used for the actuarial valuations of the General Employees' Plan was the individual spread gain method. Under this method, the actuarial present value of each increment of an individual's projected benefits is allocated on a level basis over the future earnings or service of the individual between the age at which such increment is first recognized and the exit age(s). The portion of this actuarial present value allocated to a valuation year is called the normal cost. The actuarial value of assets is deemed to be assigned to individuals on a reasonable and consistent basis; for example, each individual's share may be the accumulation of his (her) prior normal costs and any prior actuarial gains (losses) allocated to the individual. Actuarial gains (losses) are allocated to individuals in proportion to the assigned actuarial value of assets, or on any other reasonable and consistent basis. The actuarial accrued liability for an individual equals the assigned portion of the actuarial value of assets. The Police Officers' and Firefighters' plans use the individual level dollar cost method. Under this method, the actuarial present value of each increment of an individual's projected benefits is allocated on a level basis over the future earnings or service of the individual between the age at which such increment is first recognized and the exit age(s). The portion of this actuarial present value allocated to a valuation year is called the normal cost. Each individual's portion of the actuarial accrued liability should be determined on a consistent basis, usually as the retrospective accumulation of _the_individual'_s_prior_actuarial_accrued_liability_and pror_normal_cost,using_ the valuation actuarial assumptions. 50 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS The amount shown below as the "pension benefit obligation" is a standardized disclosure measure of the present value of pension benefits adjusted for the effects of projected salary increases estimated to be payable in the future as a result of employee service to date. The measure is intended to help users assess the funding status of the plans on a going -concern basis, assess progress made in accumulating sufficient assets to pay benefits when due, and make comparisons among employers. The measure is the actuarial present value of credited projected benefits and is independent of the funding method used to determine contributions to the plans. The pension benefit obligation was computed as part of the actuarial valuation performed for the plan year beginning October 1, 1990. Significant actuarial assumptions used in the valuation include: (a) An 8 percent compounded annual return on the investment of present and future assets. (b) Projected salary increases due to: Inflation Merit General employees 2% 2% Police officers 2% 3% Firefighters 2% 3% (c) No increase in benefits after retirement. Pension Benefit Obligation: Retirees and beneficiaries currently receiving benefits Terminated employees not yet receiving benefits Current employees: Accumulated employee contri- butions Employer financed -vested Employer financed-nonvested Total pension benefit obligation Net assets available for bene- fits at cost which approxi- mates market General Police Volunteer Employees Officers Firefil,.hters Total $ 473,894 $ 281,882 $ 8,236 $ 764,012 -0- -0- 2,277 2,277 -0- 14,324 156 14,480 276,368 326,580 3,304 606,252 -0- 59,125 2,571 61 696 750,262 681,911 16,544 1,448,717 S 757,437 . 65 85,104 - 194,749 $ 1,637. 90 Unfunded pension benefit ob- ligation/(assets in excess of pension benefit obligation) $ (7,175) $ (3,193) $(178,205) $ (188,573) 51 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Contributions Rer;uired And Contributions Made The City of Clermont's funding policy is to provide for periodic employer contributions at actuarially determined amounts that are designed to accumulate sufficient assets to pay benefits when due. The required contributions for the general employees' plan were determined using the individual spread gain method. Contributions to the plan were determined using the individual level dollar cost method. Unfunded actuarial accrued liabilities would be amortized as a level percent of payroll over a thirty year period. The actuarial assumptions used to compute contribution requirements were the same as those used to compute the pension benefit obligation standardized measure. During the year ended September 30, 1991, contributions were made in accordance with contribution requirements by actuarial valuations of each of the plans as of October 1, 1990. Actuarially Determined Employer Contribution Requirement: Normal Cost As a Dollar Amount Contributions Made: Employer City State Subtotal Employee Total Covered Payroll Contributions as a % of Covered Payroll: Employer Employee Total General Police Volunteer Employees Officers Firefighters $ 38,690 $ 30,484 $ 1,111 $ 38,690 $ ... $ ... 31,163 9,594 38,690 31,163 $ 9,594 $ 38,690 $ 129,278 4,217 $ 35,380 aa:sa:aaa $ 410,608 29.93% 2.34% 1.02% 29.93% 3.36% 110 $ 9,704 83.20% .95% 84.15% 52 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS xxsxssssaaaaaa-aria:mmmaassmasssamasa:smamssamxssssxmxssxxmsssssxxaxxxxxxxasmsaax Trend Information Trend information gives an indication of the progress made in accumulating sufficient assets to pay benefits when due. Information is presented below for the three years ending September 30, 1991, 1990, and 1989. Ten-year historical trend information is presented in the Statistical Section of this report. All Employer contributions were made in accordance with actuarially determined requirements. Percentage of PBO funded by available assets General Employees: 1991 1990 1989 Police Officers: 1991 1990 1989 Volunteer Firefighters: 100.96 78.49 94.12 100.47 87.04 74.21 Unfunded PBO as a percentage of covered Dayroll (5.55) 133.11 25.64 (.78) 22.66 56.24 Employer's contribution as a percentage of covered Pavrol 29.93 28.65 5.58 2.34 7.95 7.31 1991 1,177.16 (1,545.44) 83.20 1990 1,039.43 (2,051.91) 178.30 1989 590.69 (2,173.25) 144.46 GENERAL EMPLOYEE DEFINED CONTRIBUTION PENSION PLAN The defined Contribution Pension Plan for General Employees of the City of Clermont was established October 1, 1985, as defined in Chapter 16, Article IV, of the Clermont Code. This Plan is available to all permanent general employees of the City at September 30, 1985, who elected participation in this plan and all permanent general employees hired by the City on or after October 1, 1985. Employees are fully vested in the Plan after ten years of service. The following is the partial vesting schedule: YEARS OF SERVICE Less than five years 5 years 6 years 7 years 8 years 9 years 10 years VESTED INTEREST 0% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100% 53 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Membership in the defined contribution pension plan at September 30, 1991, was as follows: General Employees Retirees and beneficiaries currently receiving benefits 0 Vested terminated employees 2 Active employees: Fully vested 8 Partially vested 7 Nonvested 24 In a defined contribution plan, benefits depend solely on amounts contributed to the plan plus investments earnings. Contributions for, and interest forfeited by, employees who terminate employment before five years of service are used to reduce the City's current period contributions. Covered payroll for this Plan for FY 1991 was $772,644; the City's total pay- roll was $1,444,071. The City contributes annually to the pension account of each active participant an amount equal to seven percent (7%) of the employee's annual compensation. No contribution is required of employees. The required contribution by the City for FY 1991 was $54,085, or seven percent (7%) of covered payroll, less forfeitures of $11,058. Actual contribution was $43,383. 7. Post -retirement Benefits: Retired or terminated employees have the option of continuing the same type of health, dental, or life insurance coverages available to them while they were employed with the City, in accordance with the provisions of the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act. The cost of the premiums are paid totally by the former employees. There is no direct cost to the City for these benefits. 8. Deferred Compensation: The City offers its employees a deferred compensation plan created in accordance with Internal Revenue Code Section 457. The plan, available to all government employees, permits them to defer a portion of their salary until future years. Participation in the plan is optional. The deferred compensation is not available to employees until termination, retirement, death or unforeseeable emergency. All amounts of compensation deferred under the --plan,-all-property and -rights -purchased -with-those- amounts,and -al-lincome-- attributable to those amounts, property or rights are (until paid or made available to the employee or other beneficiary) solely the property and rights of the government subject only to the claims of the government's general creditors. Participants' rights under the plan are equal to those of general creditor of the government in an amount equal to the fair market value of the deferred account for each participant. aA CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS It is the opinion of the government's legal counsel that the government has no liability for losses under the plan but does have the duty of due care that would be required of an ordinary prudent investor. The government believes that it is unlikely that it will use the assets to satisfy the claims of general creditors in the future. The Deferred Compensation Fund is classified as an agency fund. The assets are stated at the market value which is represented by the contract value provided by the city's third party administrator. 9. Risk Management During fiscal year 1990, the City established an internal service fund to account for its uninsured risk of loss for employee health, accident, and life coverage. Under this program, the fund provides coverage for up to a maximum of $25,000 per year in medical and/or dental claims for each covered employee. The City purchases commercial insurance for claims in excess of coverage provided by the fund with a total aggregate stop -loss of $1,000,000. Life insurance with a face value of one and a half times salary for each participating employee is covered with commercial insurance. The general, sanitation, stormwater and utility funds participate in the program and make payments to the internal service fund based on historical costs of prior year commercial insurance premiums. At September 30, 1991, there were claims outstanding in the amount of $19,267. Claims paid during the fiscal year amounted to $201,253. No amount has been accrued for any unreported claims as information available does not indicate any probability of such claims. 10. General Long -Term Debt: The following is a summary of changes in notes payable and bonds outstanding for the year ended September 30, 1991: Bonds and note payable at October 1, 1990 Retirements Bonds and Note Payable At September 30, 1991 Note Bonds Pavable Total $ 2,070,000 $ 66,812 $2,136,812 (110,000) (4,416) �(114,416) $ 1,960,000 $ 62,396 $2,022,396 55 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Bonds and notes payable at September 30, 1991, are comprised of the following individual issues: Note payable to NCNB National Bank, dated May 23, 1980, due in 24 annual installments of $4,417 each, starting May 23, 1982, plus interest at 5 1/2% per annum, secured by the gasoline tax revenues of the City. Balance 9-30-91 $ 62,396 $2,070,000 Sales Tax Revenue Bond, Series 1989 due serially in annual installments of $110,000 to $225,000 starting June 1,1991 through June 1, 2003; interest rates vary from 6.3% to 7.05% Balance 9-30-91 1.960,000 Total General Long Term Debt $ 2,022,396 The annual requirements to amortize all general long-term debt outstanding as of September 30, 1991, including interest payments of $1,019,343, are as follows: YEAR ENDING NOTE SEPTEMBER 30 BONDS PAYABLE TOTAL 1992 $ 259,954 $ 7,848 $ 267,802 1993 258,024 7,605 265,629 1994 260,344 7,362 267,706 1995 262,220 7,119 269,339 1996 258,376 6,876 265,252 1997 - 2001 1,265,422 30,735 1,296,157 2002 - 2006 389,082 20,772 409-854 $ 2,953,422 $ 88,317 $ 3,041,739 ---------------------_-------- 11. Enterprise Funds Long -Term Debt: The following is a summary of changes in bonds outstanding for the year ended September 30, 1991: 1972 1988 Issue Issue Total Bonds payable - October 1, 1990 $ 1,265,000 $ 2,180,000 $ 3,445,000 Retirements ��65,000) (30,000) (95,000) Bonds Payable - September 30, 1991---$--1,200,000 $-2-,150,000 $-3,350,000-- CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS The debt is comprised of the following individual issues: $1,540,000 1972 Water and Sewer revenue refunding bonds due serially in annual installments of $50,000 to $135,000 starting starting November 1, 1985 through November 1, 2002; interest at 6% due semianually $ 1,200,000 $2,200,000 1988 refunding bond issue due serially in annual installments of $20,000 to $185,000 starting December 1, 1989 through December 1, 2015; interest coupon rate ranges from 5.25% to 8% and is paid semiannually 2,150,000 Total Bonds Payable $ 3,350,000 Bonds Payable: Current portion of bonds payable $ 105,000 Long-term portion of bonds payable _ 3,245,000 Total Bonds Payable $ 3,350,000 The gross revenues of the water and sewer system are pledged for retirement of the Water and Sewer Revenue Bonds, and for certain other reserves and accounts in the system. The annual requirements to amortize all bonds outstanding as of September 30, 1991, including interest payments of $3,224,340, are as follows: YEAR ENDING SEPTEMBER 30 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 2001 2002 - 2006 2007 - 2011 2012 - 2016 TOTAL $ 339,689 338,256 336,436 339,084 336,204 1,687,099 1,261,631 971,941 964,000 $ 6,574,340 57 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 12. Interfund Receivables/Payables: Individual fund interfund receivable and payable balances at September 30, 1991, are as follows: General Fund Utility Revenue Fund Sanitation Fund Stormwater Fund Capital Project Funds: Palatlakaha Recreation Area Fund Building Construction Fund General Employees Pension Trust Fund Police Pension Trust Fund Fire Pension Trust Fund Infrastructure Fund Group Self Insurance Fund Totals 13. Reserved Fund Balances and Retained Earnings: Interfund Interfund Receivables Pam abler $ ... $ 13,880 107,861 3,514 ... 107,043 11,861 422 14,867 ... ... 14,867 23,780 ... 33 11 ... 15,047 3.640 $ 158,413 $ 158,413 Fund Balance - Reserves have been established for the following items: Reserved for Police Education - Funds reserved by state statute for training of police officers. $ 6,554 Reserved for Inventory '- Funds expended for goods that will be used in the following year. 4,098 Reserved for Recreation - Funds provided by de- velopers in accordance with a City ordinance for the acquisition and development of parks and recreation areas. 18,607 Reserved for Cemetery Care Funds reserved by City ordinance for future care of,the cemetery. 173,970 Reserved for Employees' Retirement Systems - Funds restricted for payment of retirement benefits 1,923,923 Total Reserved Fund Balances $ 2,127,152 58 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. ___s___________��____________________________a__m____�___a__6_ssa�_-g=-=_s=_ Retained Earnings - Reserves have been established in accordance with both the covenants of the City's bond indentures for the following items in the Enter- prise Funds: Reserved for Sinking Fund - Funds restricted for the payment of principal and interest. 1972 series $ 29,687 1988 series 1,952 Reserved for Reserve Account - Funds restricted for future servicing of the revenue bonds (maxi- mum amount of debt service due in any ensuing year.) 142,000 Reserved for Improvement, Repair and Replacement - Funds restricted for meeting of various contingen- cies as may be specified and defined in the indenture. 150,000 Reserved for Utility Benefit Fees - Funds restricted for utility expansion. 894,377 Total Reserved Retained Earnings $ 1,218,016 14. Changes in Contributed Capital: Balance October 1, 1990 $ 2,648,111 Contributions from developers 18.996 Balance September 30, 1991 $ 2,667,107 15. Segment Information: The City maintains three Enterprise Funds which provide sanitation, water and sewer, and stormwater services. Segment information for the year ended September 30, 1991, is as follows - UTILITY SANITATION STORMWATER ENTERPRISE FUND FUND FUND FUNDS Operating Revenues $ 1,062,790 $ Depreciation 253,687 Operating Income 65,388 Operating transfer in ... Net Income 56,998 Current Capital -Contributions 18,996 Plant, Property and Equipment: Additions 103,891 Net Working Capital 1,522,747 Total Assets 11,077,844 Bonds and Other Long -Term Liabilities: Payable From Operating Revenues 3,245,000 Total Equity 7,560,918 440,216 $ 140,185 $ 1,643,191 26,550 ... 280,237 20,806 81,555 167,749 10,000 ... 10,000 59,690 82,714 199,402 ... ... 18,996 51,634 155,525 259,308 82,714 1,864,769 591,583 84,429 11,753,856 ... ... 3,245,000 471,033 82,714 8,114,665 59 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 16. Contingencies: The City is not aware of any pending or threatened litigation which would not be covered by insurance. 17. Other Matters: The City of Clermont, together with several other cities in Lake County, has disagreed with the County over the amounts charged the cities for disposal of its solid waste at the County's incinerator. In an effort to force the County to resolve the matter, the City on January 28, 1992, authorized the withholding of a percentage of the County's solid waste tipping fee representing amounts the City believes they were overcharged from March 1, 1991 to December 5, 1991. The City has established a separate fund with an escrow account to accumulate the amount they feel representative of the overcharges for the above -mentioned time period. W COMBINING AND INDIVIDUAL FUND ACCOUNT GROUP STATEMENTS These financial statements provide a more detailed view of the "General Purpose Financial Statements" presented in the preceding subsection. Combining statements are presented when there are more than one fund of a given fund type. Individual fund and account group statements are presented when there is only one fund of a given type and for the account group. They are also necessary to present budgetary comparisons. GOVERNMENTAL FUND TYPES 61 THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK 62 GENERAL FUND The General Fund accounts for all revenues and expenditures of the City which are not required to be accounted for in other funds. It receives a greater variety and number of taxes and other general revenues than any other fund. 63 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA GENERAL FUND COMPARATIVE BALANCE SHEET SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 AND 1990 ASSETS 1991 1990 Cash $ 13,234 $ 3,290 Investments 1,135,136 1,231,197 Receivables: Interest 8,539 13,055 Accounts 15,136 15,457 Assessments 29,469 ... Interfund ... 13,871 Due from other governments 18,034 36,079 Inventory 4,098 ----------- 3,637 ----------- TOTAL ASSETS $ 1,223,646 $ 1,316,586 LIABILITIES AND FUND BALANCE ---------------------------- Liabilities: Accounts payable $ 42,734 $ 42,124 Other accrued expenses 10,753 5,668 Interfund payables 13,880 13,481 ---------------------- Total Liabilities 67,367 61,273 Fund Balance: Reserved for police education 6,554 3,934 Reserved for inventory 4,098 3,637 Reserved for recreation 18,607 18,607 Unreserved, designated for capital replacement 83,935 93,935 Unreserved, undesignated 1,043,085 1,135,200 Total Fund Balance 1,156,279 1,255,313 ---- ------- ----------- TOTAL LIABILITIES AND FUND BALANCE $ 1,223,646 $ 1,316,586 64 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA GENERAL FUND STATEMENT OF REVENUES, EXPENDITURES AND CHANGES IN FUND BALANCE - BUDGET AND ACTUAL FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 WITH COMPARATIVE ACTUAL AMOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1990 ---------------- VARIANCE FAVORABLE 1990 BUDGET ACTUAL ------ (UNFAVORABLE) ------------- ACTUAL ------ Revenues: Taxes ------ $ 1,276,550 $ 1,281,612 $ 5,062 $ 1,143,268 Licenses and permits 37,000 28,917 (8,083) 25,688 Intergovernmental revenues 477,563 486,812 9,249 547,878 Charges for services 19,055 19,327 272 8,585 Fines and forfeitures 61,800 69,571 7,771 40,572 Miscellaneous revenues 131,651 170,579 38,928 168,410 Total Revenues ----------- 2,003,619 ----------- 2,056,818 ----------- ----------- 53,199 ----------- ----------- 1,934,401 ----------- Expenditures: ----------- General government 385,523 393,621 (8,098) 381,694 Public safety 822,664 830,411 (7,747) 767,734 Physical environment 98,208 99,989 (1,781) 99,084 Transportation 312,424 311,383 1,041 303,211 Economic environment 11,100 9,283 1,817 9,596 Human services 17,315 13,665 3,650 18,703 Culture and recreation 443,475 435,748 7,727 403,535 Total Expenditures ----------- 2,090,709 ----------- 2,094,100 ----------- ----------- (3,391) ----------- ----------- 1,983,557 ----------- Excess (Deficiency) of Revenues ----------- Over Expenditures (87,090) (37,282) 49,808 ----------- (49,156) ----------- Other Financing Sources (Uses): ----------- ----------- Operating transfers in ... ... .. 32,732 Operating transfers out (53,752) ----------- (61,752) ----------- (8,000) ----------- (194,860) ----------- Total Other Financing Sources (Uses) (53,752) (61,752) ----------- (8,000) ----------- (162,128) ----------- Excess (Deficiency) of Revenues ----------- over Expenditures and Other Sources (Uses) (140,842) (99,034) 41,808 (211,284) Fund Balance - October 1 Residual equity transfer in FUND BALANCE - SEPTEMBER 30 1,255,313 ----------- $ 1,114,471 1,255,313 $ 1,156,279 $ 41,808 1,465,031 1,566 $ 1,255,313 65 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA GENERAL FUND SCHEDULE OF REVENUES - BUDGET AND ACTUAL FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 WITH COMPARATIVE ACTUAL AMOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1990 Taxes: Ad valorem Local option gas tax Franchise fees Utility taxes Total Licenses and Permits: Professional and occupational Other permits Total Intergovernmental revenues: Two -cent cigarette tax State revenue sharing Mobile home licenses Alcoholic beverage licenses Half -cent sales tax Motor fuel tax rebate Municipality share of county occupational licenses Municipality share of one -cent voted gas tax Contribution from Natural Gas District Special fuel tax School crossing guard Grants Total VARIANCE FAVORABLE BUDGET ACTUAL (UNFAVORABLE) ------ ------------------- $ 392,900 $ 393,354 $ 454 147,000 149,227 2,227 294,500 300,116 5,616 442,150 438,915 (3,235) -------------------------------- 1,276,550 1,281,612 -------------- -------- 21,000 20,067 16,000 8,850 ---------------------- 37,000 28,917 1990 ACTUAL $ 333,249 151,744 299,891 358,384 5,062 1,143,268 --------------------- (933) 13,956 (7,150) 11,732 --------------------- (8,083) 25,688 30,043 30,024 (19) 32,539 159,470 164,541 5,071 180,999 10,000 11,295 1,295 10,875 6,500 5,530 (970) 5,668 207,000 206,746 (254) 210,087 3,200 4,525 1,325 3,816 14,500 15,288 788 15,354 44,000 44,178 178 43,125 150 ••• 24 5 95 37,500 92 2,700 4,440 1,740 3,164 • • • ----------- • • • --------------------- • • • ----------- 4,659 477,563 ----------- 486,812 --------------------- 9,249 ----------- _547,878 Continued 66 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA GENERAL FUND SCHEDULE OF REVENUES - BUDGET AND ACTUAL FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 WITH COMPARATIVE ACTUAL AMOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1990 VARIANCE FAVORABLE 1990 BUDGET ACTUAL (UNFAVORABLE) ACTUAL ------ ------------------- ------ Charges for Services: Program activity fees $ 19,055 $ 19,327 $ 272 $ 8,585 -------------------------------------------- Fines and forfeitures Court fines 60,000 66,083 6,083 37,204 Police education 1,300 2,768 1,468 1,988 False alarms 500 ---------------------- 720 ----------- 220 ----------- 1,380 Total 61,800 ---------------------- 69,571 ----------- 7,771 ----------- 40,572 Miscellaneous: Impact fees ... 29,468 29,468 ... Interest 104,000 106,647 2,647 135,353 Rentals 12,512 8,876 (3,636) 11,357 Memorial sales 1,000 728 (272) 546 Surplus equipment sales 1,500 4,060 2,560 296 Contributions 5,265 7,622 2,357 13,083 Other miscellaneous 7,374 ----------- 13,178 ---------------------- 5,804 7,775 ----------- Total 131,651 ----------- 170,579 ---------------------- 38,928 168,410 ----------- TOTAL REVENUES $ 2,003,619 $ 2,056,818 $ 53,199 $ 1,934,401 67 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA GENERAL FUND SCHEDULE OF EXPENDITURES - BUDGET AND ACTUAL FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 WITH COMPARATIVE ACTUAL AMOUNTS FOR THE -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1990 VARIANCE FAVORABLE BUDGET ACTUAL (UNFAVORABLE) 1990 ---- General Government Services: ------ ------ ------------- --------------------------- City Council: Personal services $ 6,593 $ 6,593 $ ••• $ 6,518 Operating expenses 2,300 2,944 (644) 4,473 ----------- Total Legislative 8,893 ----------- 9,537 ----------- ---------------------- (644) ---------------------- 10,991 ----------- City Manager: Personal services 76,744 76,477 267 66,606 Operating expenses 7,800 8,061 (261) 7,698 Capital outlay 2,273 1,995 278 . 185 ----------- Total Executive 86,817 ----------- 86,533 ---------------------- 284 74,489 ----------- Finance and Administrative: ----------- ---------------------- Personal services 94,480 96,193 (1,713) 85,373 Operating expenses 55,000 59,748 (4,748) 56,089 Capital outlay 2,157 2,841 (684) 17,172 Debt service ... ... ... ----------- 2,800 ----------- Total Finance and ----------- ----------- Administrative 151,637 158,782 (7,145) ----------- 161,434 ----------- Legal Counsel: ----------- ----------- Operating expenses 11,200 10,815 385 ----------- 9,233 ----------- Total Legal Counsel ----------- 11,200 ----------- 10,815 ----------- ----------- 385 ---------------------- 9,233 Planning and Zoning: Personal services 74,517 65,639 8,878 59,480 Operating expenses 34,500 43,977 (9,477) 41,936 Capital outlay 1,166 802 364 929 ----------- Total Planning and Zoning ----------- 110,183 ----------- 110,418 ----------- ---------------------- (235) ---------------------- 102,345 Other General Government: Operating expenses 16,793 17,536 (743) 23,202 -------------------------------------------- -Total- General Government Services 385,523 393,621 (8,098) 381,694 -------------------------------------------- Continued CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA GENERAL FUND SCHEDULE OF EXPENDITURES - BUDGET AND ACTUAL FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 WITH COMPARATIVE ACTUAL AMOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1990 Public Safety: ------------- Law Enforcement: Personal services Operating expenses Capital outlay Total Law Enforcement Fire Control: Personal services Operating expenses Capital outlay Debt service Total Fire Control BUDGET $ 638,350 91,749 53,755 783,854 13,700 23,080 2,030 e . 38,810 Total Public Safety 822,664 Physical Environment: Public Works: Personal services 72,503 Operating expenses 25,705 Capital outlay ... Total Physical Environment 98,208 Transportation: -------------- Road and Streets: Personal servcies Operating expense Capital outlay Total Transportation VARIANCE FAVORABLE ACTUAL (UNFAVORABLE) 1990 ------------------- ---- $ 633,249 $ 5,101 $ 582,480 106,428 (14,679) 93,759 51,712 ----------- 2,043 ---------------------- 41,525 791,389 ----------- (7,535) ---------------------- 717,764 14,262 (562) 10,722 22,765 315 19,535 1,995 35 ... ... ... 19,713 - - - --- - - - - - 39,022 ----------- -- - -- - - - - - - - -- (212) ---------------------- - - -- - -- - 49,970 830,411 ----------- (7,747) ---------------------- 767,734 68,098 4,405 62,273 29,587 (3,882) 33,138 2,304 (2,304) 3,673 ---------------------- 99,989 ----------- (1,781) 99,084 $ 114,550 $ 116,331 $ (1,781) $ 163,261 155,222 152,401 2,821 139,950 42,652 42,651 1 ... -------------------------------------------- 312,424 311,383 -1,041 303,211 -------------------------------------------- Continued CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA GENERAL FUND SCHEDULE OF EXPENDITURES - BUDGET AND ACTUAL FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 WITH COMPARATIVE ACTUAL AMOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1990 Economic Environment: -------------------- Economic Development: Operating expenses Total Economic Development Human Services: -------------- Animal Control: Personal services Operating expenses Total Human Services Culture and Recreation: ---------------------- Library: Operating expenses Debt service Total Library Parks and Recreation: Personal services Operating expenses Capital outlay Total Parks and Recreation Total Culture and Recreation TOTAL EXPENDITURES BUDGET 11,100 11,100 13,000 4,315 17,315 56,500 8,100 64,600 220,285 104,725 53,865 378,875 443,475 $ 2,090,709 VARIANCE FAVORABLE ACTUAL (UNFAVORABLE) 9,283 9,283 10,092 3,573 13,665 55,724 8,091 63,815 1,817 1,817 2,908 742 3,650 776 9 785 1990 9,596 9,596 12,057 6,646 18,703 61,259 8,334 69,593 198,453 21,832 186,333 125,263 (20,538) 78,122 48,217 ----------- 5,648 ---------------------- 69,487 371,933 ----------- 6,942 ---------------------- 333,942 435,748 7,727 403,535 $ 2,094,100 $ (3,391) $ 1083,557 70 SPECIAL REVENUE FUNDS The Special Revenue Funds are used to account for the proceeds of specific revenue sources (other than special assessments, expendable trust, or major capital projects) that are legally restricted to expenditure for specified purposes. Certain administrative expenses are paid by the General Fund. INFRASTRUCTURE FUND To account for the proceeds of the Local Government Infrastructure Surtax to be received by the City until the end of Fiscal Year 2002. The proceeds and interest accrued thereto, by law are only to be used to finance, plan and construct infrastructure. IMPACT FEE FUND To account for the Recreation, Police and Fire Impact Fees collected from new developments constructed in the City. 71 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA SPECIAL REVENUE FUNDS COMBINING BALANCE SHEET SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 WITH COMPARATIVE TOTALS FOR SEPTEMBER 30, 1990 INFRA - IMPACT TOTALS STRUCTURE FEE ----------------------- ASSETS FUND FUND 1991 1990 Cash $ ... $ 3,010 $ 3,010 $ 67,691 Due from other government 24,000 ... 24,000 26,000 TOTAL ASSETS $ 24,000 $ 3,010 $ 27,010 $ 93,691 LIABILITIES AND FUND BALANCE Liabilities: Accounts payable $ ... $ ... $ ... $ 125 Contracts payable ... ... ... 57,530 Interfund payables 15,047 --------- ... --------- 15,047 --------- 14,266 --------- Total Liabilities 15,047 ... 15,047 71,921 Fund Balance 8,953 --------- 3,010 --------- 11,963 --------- 21,770 --------- TOTAL LIABILITIES AND FUND BALANCE $ 24,000 $ 3,010 $ 27,010 $ 93,691 72 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA SPECIAL REVENUE FUNDS COMBINING STATEMENT OF REVENUES, EXPENDITURES AND CHANGES IN FUND, -BALANCES FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 WITH COMPARATIVE TOTALS FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1990 INFRA - IMPACT TOTALS STRUCTURE FEE ----------------------- FUND FUND 1991 1990 ---- ---- ---- ---- Revenues: Intergovernmental $ 300,154 $ ... $ 300,154 $ 370,639 Interest 290 25 315 9,610 Impact fees ... --------- 2,985 --------- 2,985 --------- ... --------- Total Revenues 300,444 3,010 303,454 380,249 Expenditures: Current: General government 47,168 ... 47,168 83,124 Transportation 19,093 .o. 19,093 139,129 Culture and recreation ... --------- ,.. --------- ... --------- 17,736 --------- Total Expenditures 66,261 --------- ... --------- 66,261 --------- 239,989 --------- Excess of Revenues Over Expenditures 234,183 3,010 237,193 140,260 Operating Transfers (Out) (247,000) --------- ... --------- (247,000) --------- (296,147) --------- Excess of Revenues Over (Under) Expenditures and Operating Transfers (12,817) 3,010 (9,807) (155,887) Fund Balance - October 1 21,770 ... 21,770 177,657 FUND BALANCE - SEPTEMBER 30 $ 8,953 $ 3,010 $ 11,963 $ 21,770 73 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA INFRASTRUCTURE FUND STATEMENT OF REVENUES, EXPENDITURES AND ..CHANGES IN FUND BALANCE BUDGET AND ACTUAL FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 WITH COMPARATIVE TOTALS FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1990 ------------------------- VARIANCE FAVORABLE 1990 BUDGET ACTUAL (UNFAVORABLE) ACTUAL ------ ------------------- ------ Revenues: Intergovernmental $ 300,000 $ 300,154 $ 154 $ 370,639 Interest 300 290 (10) 9,610 ------------------------------------ Total Revenues 300,300 300,444 144 380,249 ------------------------------------ Expenditures: Current: General government 47,168 47,168 ®.. 83,124 Transportation 19,093 19,093 ••. 139,129 Culture and recreation ... ... ... 17,736 Total Expenditures 66,261 66,261 ... 239,989 Excess of Revenues Over Expenditures 234,039 234,183 144 140,260 Operating Transfers (Out) (252,000) (247,000) 5,000 (296,147) ------ --------- --------- --------- Excess of Revenues Over (Under) Expenditures and Operating Transfers (17,961) (12,817) 5,144 (155,887) Fund Balance - October 1 21,770 21,770 ... 177,657 ------------------------------------ FUND BALANCE - SEPTEMBER 30 $ 3,809 $ 8,953 $ 5,144 $ 21,770 74 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA IMPACT FEE FUND STATEMENT OF REVENUES, EXPENDITURES AND CHANGES IN FUND BALANCE - BUDGET AND ACTUAL FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 WITH COMPARATIVE TOTALS FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1990 VARIANCE FAVORABLE 1990 BUDGET ACTUAL (UNFAVORABLE) ACTUAL ------ ------------------- ------ Revenues: Interest $ ... $ 25 $ 25 $ ... Impact fees ... 2,985 2,985 ... --------- --------- --------- --------- Total Revenues ... 3,010 3,010 ... --------- --------- --------- --------- Expenditures: ... ... ... ... --------- --------- --------- --------- Excess of Revenues Over Expenditures ... 3,010 3,010 ... Fund Balance - October 1 ... ... ... ... --------- --------- --------- --------- FUND BALANCE - SEPTEMBER 30 $ ... $ 3,010 $ 3,010 $ ... 0 75 THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK 76 DEBT SERVICE FUND The Debt Service Fund is used to account for the accumulation of resources for, and the payment of, General Long -Term Debt principal and interest. SALES TAX REVENUE BOND SINKING FUND To account for the accumulation of funds and payment of Debt Service pertaining to the 1989 Sales Tax Revenue Bond. The City's share of the Local Government infrastructure Surtax has been pledged to pay the 1989 Sales Tax Bond Debt Service. A portion of the surtax revenue is transferred to the Sales Tax Bond Fund monthly. 77 Cash TOTAL ASSETS CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA SALES TAX REVENUE BOND SINKING FUND COMPARATIVE BALANCE SHEET SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 AND 1990 ASSETS FUND BALANCE ------------ Reserved for debt service TOTAL FUND BALANCE TOTALS ---------------------------- 1991 1990 $ 83,969 $ 83,969 $ 83,969 $ 83,969 $ 83,317 $ 83.317 $ 83,317 $ 83,317 78 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA SALES TAX REVENUE BOND SINKING FUND STATEMENT OF REVENUES, EXPENDITURES AND CHANGES IN FUND BALANCE BUDGET AND ACTUAL - FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 WITH COMPARATIVE ACTUAL AMOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1990 Revenues: Interest Expenditures: Debt Service: Fees Interest Principal Total Expenditures Excess of Revenues Over (Under) Expenditures Other Financing Sources: Operating transfers in Excess of Revenues and Other Financing Sources Over Expenditures and Other Financing Uses Fund Balance - Beginning of Year FUND BALANCE - END OF YEAR 1991 VARIANCE FAVORABLE BUDGET ACTUAL (UNFAVORABLE) 1990 ------ ------------------- ---- $ 5,000 $ 5,225 $ 225 $ 2,639 ------------------------------------ 1,800 140,000 110,000 251,800 1,621 139,952 110,000 251,573 (246,800) (246,348) 179 48 227 81,638 81,638 452 (78,999) 252,000 247,000 (5,000) 162,316 ------------------------------------ 5,200 652 4,548 83,317 83,317 83,317 ... ... ------------------------------------ $ 88,517 $ 83,969 $ 4,548 $ 83,317 79 THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK 80 CAPITAL PROJECTS FUNDS Capital Projects Funds are used to account for financial resources to be used for the acquisition or construction of major capital facilities (other than those financed by Proprietary Funds and Trust Funds). PALATLAKAHA RECREATION AREA FUND To account for the acquisition of land and development of the Palatlakaha Recreation Area Park. Financing will be obtained from a combination of 1989 Sales Tax Revenue Bonds proceeds, Local Government Infrastructure Surtax, donations and grants. BUILDING CONSTRUCTION FUND To account for the construction of the Public Services Complex, and Public Safety Building. Financing will be obtained from the 1989 Sales Tax Revenue Bond proceeds and the Local Government Infrastructure Surtax. 81 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA CAPITAL PROJECTS FUNDS COMBINING BALANCE SHEET SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 WITH COMPARATIVE TOTALS FOR SEPTEMBER 30, 1990 PALATLAKAHA TOTALS RECREATION BUILDING -------------------------- AREA CONSTRUCTION 1991 1990 ---------------- ---- ---- ASSETS Cash $ ... $ ... $ ... $ 15,707 Investments ... 799,822 799,822 1,501,205 Interest receivable ... 1,841 1,841 3,577 Interfund receivables 14,867 ... 14,867 14,266 TOTAL ASSETS $ 14,867 $ 801,663 $ 816,530 $ 1,534,755 LIABILITIES AND FUND BALANCE ---------------------------- Liabilities: Accounts payable $ 14,867 $ 10,712 $ 25,579 $ 14,266 Contracts payable ... 6,582 6,582 164,877 Retainage payable ... 40,625 40,625 ... Interfund payables ... 14,867 ---------------------- 14,867 ----------- 13,871 ----------- Total Liabilities 14,867 72,786 87,653 193,014 Fund Balance ... 728,877 ------------------- --- 728,877 ----------- 1,341,741 ----------- TOTAL LIABILITIES AND FUND BALANCE $ 14,867 $ 801,663 $ 816,530 $ 1,534,755 [-IN CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA CAPITAL PROJECT FUNDS COMBINING STATEMENT OF REVENUES, EXPENDITURES AND CHANGES IN FUND BALANCES FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 WITH COMPARATIVE TOTALS FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1990 Revenues: Miscellaneous: Contribution Interest Total Revenues Expenditures: Capital outlay: General government Public safety Public works Culture/recreation Total Expenditures Excess of Revenues Over (Under) Expenditures Other Financing Sources (Uses): Operating transfers in Operating transfer (out) Revenue bond proceeds Total Other Financing Sources (Uses) PALATLAKAHA TOTALS RECREATION BUILDING -------------------------- AREA CONSTRUCTION 1991 1990 ---------------- ---- ---- $ 367 $ ... $ 367 $ 4,594 3,247 ---------------------- 90,394 ----------- 93,641 129,519 ----------- 3,614 ---------------------- 90,394 ----------- 94,008 134,113 ----------- Goo .0. ... 15,321 ... 12,134 12,134 23,374 ... 464,468 464,468 57,203 282,021 ---------------------- ... ----------- 282,021 870,889 ----------- 282,021 ---------------------- 476,602 ----------- 758,623 966,787 ----------- (278,407) (386,208) (664,615) (832,674) 233,885 ... 233,885 133,831 ... (182,134) (182,134) (32,731) ... -- ------- -- ----- ..m -- ---- -- ... ----- -- -- 2,070,000 ----------- 233,885 --------------- (182,134) ------- ----------- 51,751 2,171,100 ----------- Excess of Revenues and Other Financing Sources Over (Under) Expenditures and Other Financing Uses (44,522) (568,342) (612,864) 1,338,426 Fund Balance - October 1 44,522 1.297,219 1,341,741 3,315 -------------------------------------------- $ ••• $ 728,877 $ 728,877 $ 1,341,741 FUND BALANCE - SEPTEMBER 30 83 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA PALATLAKAHA RECREATION AREA FUND STATEMENT OF REVENUES, EXPENDITURES AND CHANGES IN FUND BALANCE - BUDGET AND ACTUAL FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 WITH COMPARATIVE TOTALS,FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1990 1991 ---=------------------------------------ VARIANCE FAVORABLE 1990 BUDGET ACTUAL (UNFAVORABLE) ACTUAL Revenues: Contributions $ 367 $ 367 $ ... $ 4,594 Interest ----------- 3,246 3,247 ---------------------- 1 37,731 ----------- Total Revenues ----------- 3,613 3,614 ---------------------- 1 42,325 ----------- Expenditures: Capital outlay ----------- 272,001 282,021 ---------------------- (10,020) 870,889 ----------- Excess of Revenues Over (Under) Expenditures (268,388) (278,407) 00,019) (828,564) Other Financing Sources (Uses): Operating transfers in 223,866 233,885 10,019 95,202 Operating transfers out ... ... ... (32,731) Revenue bond proceeds ----------- ... ... ... 807,300 Total Other Financing ---------------------- ----------- Sources (Uses) ----------- 223,866 233,885 ---------------------- 10,019 869,771 ----------- Excess of Revenues and Other Financing Sources Over Expenditures and Other Financing (Uses) (44,522) (44,522) ... 41,207 Fund Balance - October 1 ----------- 44,522 44,522 ---------------------- ... 3,315 ----------- FUND BALANCE - SEPTEMBER 30 $ ... $ .,. $ ... $ 44,522 84 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA BUILDING CONSTRUCTION FUND STATEMENT OF REVENUES, EXPENDITURES AND CHANGES IN FUND BALANCE - BUDGET AND ACTUAL FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 WITH COMPARATIVE TOTALS FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1990 ---------------------------------------- 1991 VARIANCE FAVORABLE 1990 BUDGET ------ ACTUAL ------ (UNFAVORABLE) ------------- ACTUAL ------ Revenues: Interest $ ----------- 88,300 $ 90,394 ----------- $ 2,094 $ ------ ----- ----------- 91,788 Expenditures: Capital outlay ----------- 580,676 476,602 -------- --- 104,074 ----------- ----------- 95,898 Excess of Revenues Over (Under) Expenditures (492,376) (386,208) 106,168 (4,110) Other Financing Sources (Uses): Operating transfers in .., ... ... 38,629 Operating transfers out (170,114) (182,134) (12,020) ... Revenue bond proceeds ss• ... ... 1,262,700 ----------- Total Other Financing ----------- ---------------------- Sources (Uses) ----------- (170,114) (182,134) ----------- (12,020) ---------------------- 1,301,329 Excess of Revenues and Other Financing Sources Over (Under)Expenditures and Other Financing Uses (662,490) Fund Balance - October 1 1 297 219 FUND BALANCE - SEPTEMBER 30 , , $ 634,729 (568,342) 1,297,219 $ 728,877 94,148 1,297,219 85 THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK 86 PROPRIETARY FUND TYPES 87 THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK 88 ENTERPRISE FUNDS Enterprise Funds are used to account for operations (a) that are financed and operated in a manner similar to private business enterprises where the intent of the governing body is that the costs (expenses, including depreciation) of providing goods or services to the general public on a continuing basis be financed or recovered primarily through user charge; or (b) where the governing body has decided that periodic determination of revenues earned, expenses incurred, and/or net income is appropriate for capital maintenance, public policy, management control, accountability, or other purposes. UTILITY FUND To account for the provision of water and sewer services to the residents of the City. All activities necessary to the provision of these services are accounted for in this fund, including, but not limited to administration, plant and line maintenance. SANITATION FUND To account for the provision of garbage and trash removal services to the residents of the City. All activities necessary to the provision of these services are accounted for in this fund. STORMWATER UTILITY FUND To account for the construction and maintenance of stormwater drainage systems within the City. All activities necessary to the provision of this service is accounted for in this fund. CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA ENTERPRISE FUNDS COMBINING BALANCE SHEET SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 WITH COMPARATIVE TOTALS FOR SEPTEMBER 30, 1990 TOTALS UTILITY SANITATION STORMWATER ---------- -------------- ASSETS FUND FUND FUND 1991 1990 Current Assets: ---- ---- ---- ---- Cash $ 28,046 $ 69,968 $ 72,568 $ 170,582 $ 4,824 Investments 1,372,660 156,254 ... 1,528,914 1,614,367 Receivables: Interest 6,690 ... 6,690 91100 Accounts 153,058 153,058 126,472 Other 495 578 ... 1,073 633 Interfund 107,861 ... 11,861 119,722 89,303 Inventory 22,211 ... ... 22,211 25,540 Due from other governments 24,000 ------------ ... ----------- ... ----------- 24,000 ------------ ------------ ... Total Current Assets 1,561,963 ------------ 379,858 84,429 2,026,250 1,870,239 Restricted Assets: ----------- ----------- ------------------------ Cash 91,038 ... 91,038 274,235 Investments 1,359,688 ------------ ... ----------- ... ----------- 1,359,688 ------------------------ 1,230,928 Total Restricted Assets 1,450,726 ------------ ... ----------- ... ----------- 1,450,726 ------------------------ 1,505,163 Property, Plant and Equipment: Land Water system 927,606 3,449,265 ... 927,606 927,606 Sewer system 6,369,826 ... ... 3,449,265 6,369,826 3,006,803 6,345,497 Machinery and equipment 228,368 380,219 ... 608,587 572,203 Construction in progress ... ------------ ... ----------- ... ----------- ... ------------ 324,160 ------------ 10,975,065 380,219 ... 11,355,284 11,176,269 Less accumulated depreciation 2,909,910 ------------ 168,494 ----------- ... ----------- 3,078,404 ------------ 2,798,168 ------------ Net Property, Plant and Equipment 8,065,155 ------------ 211,725 ----------- ... ----------- 8,276,880 ------------ 8,378,101 ------------ TOTAL ASSETS $ 11,077,844 $ 591,583 $ 84,429 $ 11,753.856 $ 11,753.503 ___=_____=__ ==__=__==_- 90 UTILITY LIABILITIES AND FUND EQUITY FUND --------------------------- Liabilities: ---- Current Liabilities (payable from current assets): Accounts payable $ 22,453 Other accrued expenses 13,249 Contracts payable Interfund payables 3,514 Total Current Liabilities ------------ (payable from current assets) 39,216 Current Liabilities (payable from ------------ restricted assets): Construction contracts ... Deposits 42,442 Revenue bond interest 85,268 Revenue bonds 105,000 Total Current Liabilities ------------- (payable from restricted assets) 232,710 Long-Term Liabilities: ------------ Revenue bonds (net of current portion) 3,245,000 Total Liabilities ------------ 3,516,926 Fund Equity: ------------ Contributed capital 2,565,385 Retained Earnings: ------------ Reserved 1,218,016 Unreserved 3,777,517 Total Retained Earnings ------------ 4,995,533 Total Fund Equity ------------ 7,560,918 TOTAL LIABILITIES AND ---------- - FUND EQUITY $ 11,077.844 ==____==__=_ TOTALS SANITATION STORMWATER ---------------------------- FUND ---- FUND ---- 1991 ---- 1990 ---- $ 7,703 $ 55 $ 30,211 $ 40,169 5,804 1,238 20,291 18,332 ... ... 86,440 107,043 ----------- 422 ----------- 110,979 ------------------------ 98,174 120,550 ----------- 1,715 ----------- 161,481 ------------------------ 243,115 ... ... 42,056 ... ... 42,442 39,622 ... ... 85,268 87,443 ... ----------- ... ----------- 105,000 ------------ ------------ 95,000 ... ----------- ... ----------- 232,710 ------------------------ 264,121 ... ... 3,245,000 3,350,000 120,550 1,715 3,639,191 3,857,236 101,722 ----------- ... ----------- 2,667,107 ------------------------ 2,648,111 ... 1,218,016 1,283,097 369,311 82,714 4,229,542 3,965,059 ----------- 369,3i1 ----------- 82,714 ------------------------ 5,447.558 5,248,t56 ----------- 471,033 ----------- 82,714 ------------------------ 8,114,665 7,896,267 $ 591,583 $ 84,429 $ 11,753,856 $ 11,753,503 ------------------------------------ZZZZ=z==ZZZZ 91 THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK 92 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA ENTERPRISE FUNDS COMBINING STATEMENT OF REVENUES, EXPENSES AND CHANGES IN RETAINED EARNINGS FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 WITH COMPARATIVE TOTALS FOR SEPTEMBER 30, 1990 TOTALS UTILITY SANITATION STORMWATER ------------------------- FUND FUND FUND 1991 1990 Operating Revenues - ---- ---- ---- ---- Charges for services $ 1,062,790 $ 435,835 $ 140,185 $ 1,638,810 $ 1,475,544 Sale of recycled materials ... ---------------------- 4,381 ----------- ... ----------- 4,381 ... ----------- Total Operating Revenues 1,062,790 440,216 140,185 1,643,191 1,475,544 Operating Expenses: ---------------------- ----------- ----------- ----------- Personal services 259,423 213,765 36,260 509,448 432,896 Utilities 141,650 . ... 141,650 143,434 Landfill .. 109,545 ... 109,545 119,655 Administrative services 73,000 21,143 5,400 99,543 89,685 Repair and maintenance 105,765 7,355 3,139 116,259 125,867 Depreciation 253,687 26,550 280,237 245,344 Professional services 69,118 3,300 6,601 79,019 83,851 Insurance 44,274 9,686 2,766 56,726 50,603 Operating supplies 36,425 23,916 4,387 64,728 53,598 Office expense 12,664 3,098 .. �77 15,762 12,669 Bad debt expense 1,396 1,052 2,525 2,215 Total Operating Expenses ---------------------- 997,402 ----------- 419,410 ----------- 58,630 1,475,442 ----------- 1,359,817 Operating Income (Loss) ---------------------- 65,388 ----------- 20,806 ----------- 81,555 167,749 ----------- 115,727 Nonoperating Revenues (Expenses): ---------------------- ----------- ----------- ----------- Interest revenue 206,361 11,166 1,159 218,686 266,180 Interest expense (241,253) ... (241,253) (247,330) Grants 24,000 17,718 ... 41,718 2,500 Rent 2,502 ... ..> 2,502 ... Total Nonoperating ---------------------- ----------- ----------- ----------- Revenues (Expenses) (8,390) 28,884 1,159 21,653 21,350 Income Before Operating ---------------------- ----------- ----------- ----------- Transfers 56,998 49,690 82,714 189,402 137,077 Operating transfer in ... 10,000 ... 10,000 194,860 Net Income ---------------------- 56,998 ----------- 59,690 ----------- 82,714 199,402 ----------- 331,937 Retained Earnings - October 1 4,938,535 ---------------------- 3090621 ----------- ... ----------- 5,248,156 4,9160219 ----------- RETAINED EARNINGS - SEPTEMBER 30 $ 4,995,533 $ 369,311 $ 82,714 $ 5,447,558 $ 5,248,156 =========_= _=_________ -===-==-=== --==_____-_ 93 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA ENTERPRISE FUNDS COMBINING STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 WITH COMPARATIVE TOTALS FOR SEPTEMBER 30, 1990 ------------------------------- ---- --"-- ----" ----- --------------- TOTALS UTILITY SANITATION STORMWATER ------------------------- FUND FUND FUND 1991 1990 Cash Flows From Operating Activities: Cash received from customers Cash payments to suppliers Cash payments for employee services Net Cash Provided By Operating Activities Cash Flows From NonCapital Financing Activities: Operating transfer in Grants Net Cash Provided By Non - Capital Financing Activities Cash Flows From Capital and Related Financing Activities: Acquisition and construction of capital assets Principal paid on revenue bonds Interest paid on revenue bonds Contributed capital Rent proceeds Net'Cash (Used) By Capital.and Related Financing Activities Cash Flows From Investing Activities: Interest Net Increase (Decrease) in Cash and Cash Equivalents Cash and Cash Equivalents at Beginning of Year Cash and Cash Equivalents at End of Year $ 1,047,053 $ 424,783 $ 128,247 (498,507) (171,427) (22,238) (256,351) (215,464) (34,600) --------------------------------- 292,195 37,892 71,409 --------------------------------- $ 1,600,083 $ 1,467,728 (692,172) (664,813) (506,415) -(419,849) ---------------------- 401,496 383,066 ---------------------- ... 10,000 ... 10,000 194,860 ... -------------------- 17,718 ----------- ... 17►718 ---------------------- 2,500 ... ------------------- 27,718 ----------- ... 27,718 ---------------------- 197,360 (284,022) (23.490) ... (307,512) (745,388) (95,000) ... ... (95,000) (80,000) (243,429) ... ... (243,429) (249,179) 18,996 ... ... 18,996 104,435 2,502 ------------------- ... ----------- ... 2,502 ---------------------- ... (600,953) ---------------------- (23,490) ----------- ... (624,443) ---------------------- (970,132) 208,774 ---------------------- 11,165 ----------- 1.159 221.098 ---------------------- 266,430 (99,984) 53,285 72,568 25,869 (123,276) 2,951,416 ---------------------- 172,937 ----------- ... 3,124,353 ---------------------- 3►247,629 $ 2,851,432 $ 226,222 $ 72.568 $ 3,150,222 $ 3,124,353 =-_-____=_= ===--_==__- =-__-_-___- ___________ _________=_ 94 Reconciliation of Operating Income To Net Cash Provided By Operating Activities: Operating income Adjustments to Reconcile Operating Income to Net Cash Provided by Operating Activities: Depreciation Change in Assets and Liabilities: (Increase) in receivables Decrease in inventory Decrease in prepaid expenses Increase (Decrease) in accrued expenses Increase (Decrease) in payables Total Adjustments Net Cash Provided by Operating Activities TOTALS UTILITY SANITATION STORMWATER ------------------------- FUND FUND FUND 1991 1990 $ 65,388 $ 20,806 $ 81,555 $ 167,749 $ 115,727 ------------------------------------------------------- 253,687 26,550 ... 280,237 245,344 (18,558) (27,025) (11.861) (57,444) (13,810) 3,329 ... ... 3.329 1,364 ... ... ... ... 2,306 3,072 (2,107) 1,238 2,203 4,176 (14,723) ---------------------- 19,668 ----------- 477 ----------- 5,422 ----------- 27,959 226,807 ---------------------- 17,086 ----------- (10,146) ----------- 233,747 ----------- 267,339 $ 292,195 $ 37,892 $ 71,409 $ 401,496 $ 383,066 95 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA UTILITY FUND COMPARATIVE SCHEDULE OF REVENUES, EXPENSES AND CHANGES IN RETAINED EARNINGS REQUIRED BY BOND ORDINANCE FOR THE YEARS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 AND 1990 Operating Revenues: Charges for services Operating Expenses: Personal services Utilities Administrative services Repair and maintenance Depreciation Professional services Insurance Supplies Other expenses Total Operating Expenses Operating Income Nonoperating Revenues (Expenses): Interest Interest expense and amortization Grants Rent Total Nonoperating Revenues (Expenses) Net Income Retained Earnings - October 1 RETAINED EARNINGS - SEPTEMBER 30 Customers Connected To The Water System at September 30 1991 1990 $ 1,062,790 ----------- $ 1,092,768 ----------- 259,423 240,163 141,650 143,434 73,000 69,549 105,765 115,851 253,687 238,643 69,118 80,851 44,274 41,303 36,425 28,729 14,060 ----------- 11,517 ----------- 997,402 ----------- 970,040 ----------- 65,388 122,728 206,361 251,141 (241,253) (247,330) 24,000 2,502 ---------------------- (8,390) 3,811 56,998 126,539 4,938,535 4,811,996 ---------------------- $ 4,995,533 $ 4,938,535 2,541 2,528 96 INTERNAL SERVICE FUND The Internal Service Fund is used to account for the financing of goods or services provided by one department to other departments on a cost reimbursement basis. GROUP SELF-INSURANCE FUND To account for the City°s retention of risk financing arising from employee medical and dental expense claims. Costs are billed based on historical costs to the various departments. 97 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA GROUP SELF INSURANCE FUND COMPARATIVE BALANCE SHEET SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 AND 1990 TOTALS ------------------------ ASSETS 1991 1990 Cash $ ... $ 11,361 Accounts receivable 10,000 000 --------- --------- Total Assets $ 10,000 $ 11,361 LIABILITIES AND FUND EQUITY --------------------------- Liabilities: Accounts payable $ 19,267 $ 7,932 Due to other funds 3,640 00. Deferred revenue 393 0.0 --------- --------- Total Liabilities 23,300 7,932 ------------------ Retained Earnings: Unreserved (13,300) 3,429 ------------------ TOTAL LIABILITIES AND FUND EQUITY $ 10,000 $ 11,361 98 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA GROUP SELF INSURANCE FUND COMPARATIVE STATEMENT OF REVENUES, EXPENSES AND CHANGES IN RETAINED EARNINGS FOR THE YEARS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 AND 1990 TOTALS ------------------------ 1991 1990 Operating Revenues: Charges for services $ 209,889 $ 135,694 Insurance stop -loss payments 34,881 ... --------- --------- Total Operating Revenues 244,770 135,694 ------------------ Operating Expenses: Life insurance premiums 15,007 7,452 Re -insurance premiums 38,806 23,801 Administrative fees 7,378 8,982 Medical claims 201,253 92,945 ------------------ Total Operating Expenses 262,444 133,180 ------------------ Operating Income (Loss) (17,674) 2,514 Nonoperating Revenues: Interest revenue 945 915 ------------------ Net Income (16,729) 3,429 Retained Earnings - October 1 3,429 ... --------- --------- RETAINED EARNINGS - SEPTEMBER 30 $ (13,300) $ 3,429 99 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA GROUP SELF INSURANCE FUND COMPARATIVE STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS FOR THE YEARS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 AND 1990 TOTALS ------------------------ 1991 1990 Cash Flows From Operating Activities: Cash received from customers $ 238,804 $ 135,694 Cash payments to suppliers (61,191) (40,197) Cash payments for medical claims (189,919) (85,051) Net Cash Provided (Used) By Operating Activities (12,306) 10,446 ------------------ Cash Flows From Investing Activities: Interest 945 915 ------------------ Net Increase (Decrease) in cash (11,361) 11,361 Cash at Beginning of Year 11,361 0.0 Cash at End of Year $ ... $ 11,361 Reconciliation of Operating Income to Net Cash Provided (Used) By Operating Activities: Operating income $ (17,674) $ 2,514 --------- Adjustments to Reconcile Operating --------- Income to Net Cash Provided (Used) By Operating Activities: Increase in receivables (10,000) ... Increase in payables 15,368 7,932 ------------------ Net Cash Provided (Used) By Operating Activities $ (12,306) $ 10,446 100 FIDUCIARY FUND TYPES 101 THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK 102 TRUST AND AGENCY FUNDS Trust Funds are used to account for assets held by the City in a trustee capacity. Agency Funds are used to account for assets held by the City as an agent for individuals, private organizations, other governments and/or other funds. NON -EXPENDABLE TRUST FUND CEMETERY PERPETUAL CARE FUND To account for monies provided by people buying lots in the City cemetery. The principal must be kept separate and apart from all other funds, but the interest may be transferred to the General Fund to defray the cost of cemetery operation and maintenance. PENSION TRUST FUNDS GENERAL EMPLOYEES PENSION TRUST FUND To account for the accumulation of resources to be used for the retirement annuities of all full-time permanent employees, except police officers and volunteer firefighters. The City maintains Defined Benefit and Defined Contribution Plans for its general employees. Annual contributions made to the Defined Benefit Plan are in accordance with an actuarial study, whereas, a fixed percentage of employees salaries is used in determining the annual contribution to the Defined Contribution Plan. POLICE OFFICERS PENSION TRUST FUND To account for the accumulation of resources to be used for the retirement annuities of all police officers. The State contributes money based upon the number of police officers and the City contributes an amount determined by an actuarial study. VOLUNTEER FIREFIGHTERS PENSION TRUST FUND To account for the accumulation of resources to be used for the retirement annuities of all volunteer firefighters. The State contributes money based upon the number of firefighters and the City contributes an amount determined by an actuarial study. AGENCY FUND DEFERRED COMPENSATION FUND To account for assets held for employees in accordance with the provisions of Internal Revenue Code Section 457. 103 THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK 104 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA TRUST AND AGENCY FUNDS COMBINING BALANCE SHEET SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 WITH COMPARATIVE TOTALS FOR SEPTEMBER 30, 1990 --------- zz=zszzzz=zsect=ez=css=zzzzzzz zzzz zzssssszs:s_z:zzzzszszz.zz:zzszzszs.zszssszzzszzzs.--- '-_--- ASSETS Cash Investments Receivables: Interfund Due from other governments TOTAL ASSETS LIABILITIES AND FUND BALANCES ----------------------------- Liabilities: Deferred compensation payable Fund Balances: Reserved for cemetery care Reserved for employees' retirement systems NUNEXPENDABLE AGENCY PENSION TRUST FUNDS TRUST FUND FUND TOTALS ---------- EMPLOYEES' GENERAL DEFERRED EMPLUYEES POLICE FIRE CEMETERY COMPENSATION 1991 1990 ----------- ------ ------------ _ ; ... ; ... ; 5,223 ; .•• ; 5,223 E 3,004 1,020,290 685,071 194.738 168,747 52,273 2,121,119 1,709,174 23,780 33 11 ... ... 23,824 22,352 ... ��. ... ... 41,577 - -- --- --------- --------- --------- -- 1,044,070 ; 685,104 $ 194,749 ; 173,970 ; 52,273 ; 2,150,166 $ 1,776,107 --------- azsszzzz= zzzzzzzzzzz aazz.zszzss _zszssszs ssssszz-s ..__._... ••-••-•---' --------------------------- 5-------- .... 173,970 ;- 52_273 1,044,070 685,104 194,749 -------------------------------------- ----- -- 52,273 ; 44,186 ----------- ----------- 173,970 160,020 1,923,923 1,571,901 ----------- ----------- Total Fund Balance 1,044,070 685,104 194,749 173,970 ... 2,097,893 1.731,921 ----------------------------- --------- --------- ----- TOTAL LIABILITIES AND ; 1,044,OT0 ; 685,t04 ; 194,749 ; 173.970 ; 52,273 i 2,150,166 i 1,77 ,t07 FUND BALANCES ------ zz=ee=e==e= azzsszzzzsa zzzzzzzzz azzzzzzzz -::zs=zs. -•-- 105 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA TRUST FUNDS COMBINING STATEMENT OF REVENUES, EXPENSES AND CHANGES IN FUND BALANCES FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 WITH COMPARATIVE TOTALS FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1990 GENERAL EMPLOYEES' Operating Revenues: Investment earnings $ 182,090 ---------- Contributions: State Employees Employer 82,073 82 , 07 3 Cemetery lot sales ---------- Total Operating Revenues 264,163 Operating Expenses: Recurring benefit payments 45,240 Nonrecurring benefit payments 13,796 Trustee fees and expenses 16,532 Total Operating Expenses 75,568 Net Income 188,595 Fund Balances - October 1 855,475 FUND BALANCES - SEPTEMBER 30 $1,044,070 106 NONEXPENDABLE PENSION TRUST FUNDS TRUST FUND TOTALS -------------------------- ------------ -------------------------- TOTAL POLICE FIRE PENSION FUNDS CEMETERY 1991 1990 ------ ------------------------- ---- ---- $ 116,670 ----------- $ 32,925 ----------- $ 331,685 ----------- $ ... ----------- $ 331,685 ----------- $ (38,585) ----------- 31,163 9,594 40,757 ... 40,757 41,577 4,217 110 4,327 ... 4,327 3,763 ... ----------- ... 82,073 ... 82,073 79,746 35,380 ----------- ----------- 9,704 ----------- ----------- 127,157 ----------- ----------- ... ----------- ----------- 127,157 ----------- ----------- 125,086 ----------- ••. ----------- ... ----------- ... ----------- 13,950 ----------- 13,950 ----------- 12,300 ----------- 152,050 ----------- 42,629 ----------- 458,842 ----------- 13,950 ----------- 472,792 ----------- 98,801 ----------- 15,958 814 62,012 ... 62,012 35,889 734 ... 14,530 ... 14,530 20,949 9,414 ----------- 4,332 ----------- 30,278 ----------- ... ----------- 30,278 ----------- 35,223 ----------- 26,106 ----------- 5,146 ----------- 106,820 ----------- ... ----------- 106,820 ----------- 92,061 ----------- 125,944 37,483 352,022 13,950 365,972 6,740 559,160 ----------- 157,266 ----------- 1,571,901 ----------- 160,020 ----------- 1,731,921 ----------- 1,725,181 ----------- $ 685,104 $ 194,749 $ 1,923,923 $ 173,970. $ 2,097,893 $ 1,731,921 107 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA NONEXPENDABLE TRUST FUND STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 WITH COMPARATIVE TOTALS FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1990-__-_-_--_-- Cash Flows from Operating Activities: Cash received from lot sales Net Cash Provided by Operating Activities Net Increase in Cash and Cash Equivalents Cash and Cash Equivalents at Beginning of Year Cash and Cash Equivalents at End of Year Reconciliation of Operating Income to Net Cash Provided by Operating Activities: Cash Provided by Operating Activities TOTALS -------------------------- 1991 1990 $ 13,950 $ 12,300 ------------------ 13,950 12,300 ------------------ 13,950 12,300 160,020 147,720 ------------------ $ 173,970 $ 160,020 $ 13,950 $ 12,300 108 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA DEFERRED COMPENSATION AGENCY FUND STATEMENT OF CHANCES IN ASSETS AND LIABILITIES FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 Investments $ 52,273 Deferred Compensation Payable Beginning Balance $ 44,186 Add: Employee Contributions $ 4,203 Income on Investments 7,534 Less: Administrative Fees (50) Withdrawals (3,600) 8,087 Total Deferred Compensation Payable Ending Balance $ 52,273 109 THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK 110 ACCOUNT GROUPS ill THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT" BLANK 112 ACCOUNT GROUPS GENERAL FD ED ASSETS ACCOUNT GROUP This is a self -balancing account group used to record the fixed assets of the City which are not used in Proprietary Fund operations or accounted for in Trust Funds. GENERAL LONG-TERM DEBT ACCOUNT GROUP This is a self -balancing account group used to record the principal portion of the Citys' General Long -Term Debt which are not related to the Proprietary Fund operations or accounted for in Trust Funds. 113 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA SCHEDULE OF GENERAL FIXED ASSETS BY SOURCES SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 WITH COMPARATIVE TOTALS FOR SEPTEMBER 30, 1990 General Fixed Assets: Land Buildings Improvements other than buildings Equipment and vehicles Total General Fixed Assets Investments in General Fixed Assets From: Capital Projects Funds: Revenue bonds Federal, state and local grants General Fund revenues Special Revenue Fund revenues Gifts and other Total Investment in General Fixed Assets TOTALS ------------------------------ 1991 1990 $ 806,732 1,276,264 2,808,533 1,048,106 $ 5,939,635 $ 1,570,930 211,707 2,903,072 1,217,504 36,422 $ 5,939,635 $ 759,564 724,440 2,509,662 986,503 $ 4,980,169 $ 812,306 211,707 2,768,490 1,151,244 36,422 $ 4,980,169 114 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA SCHEDULE OF GENERAL FIXED ASSETS BY FUNCTION AS OF SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 IMPROVEMENTS OTHER THAN FUNCTION ------------------------ TOTAL ----------- LAND ---------- BUILDINGS ---------- BUILDINGS ------------------------ EQUIPMENT General government $ 221,554 $ ... $ 20,320 $ ... $ 201,234 Public safety 716,493 81,424 118,030 ... 517,039 Physical environment 901,921 47,168 541,305 71,705 241,743 Transportation 1,292,338 ... ... 1,270,321 22,017 Culture/recreation 2,326,144 450,032 511,339 1,320,134 44,639 Older assets not maintained by function 481,185 ----------- 228,108 --------- 85,270 ----------- 146,373 ---------------------- 21,434 TOTAL GENERAL FIXED ASSETS $ 5,939,635 $ 806,732 $ 1,276,264 $ 2,808,533 $ 1,048,106 ----------------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------- 115 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA SCHEDULE OF CHANGES IN GENERAL FIXED ASSETS - BY FUNCTION YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 GENERAL FIXED ASSETS FUNCTION ------------------------------- 9/30/90 ----------- General government $ 215,917 Public safety 668,586 Physical environment 389,679 Transportation 1,230,594 Culture/recreation 1,994,208 Older assets not maintained by function 481,185 GENERAL FIXED ASSETS ADDITIONS ----------- DEDUCTIONS ---------- 9/30/91 ----------- $ 5,637 $ ... $ 221,554 65,841 17,934 716,493 512,242 ... 901,921 61,744 ... 1,292.338 331,936 ... 2,326,144 •.. ... 481,185 TOTAL GENERAL FIXED ASSETS $ 4,980,169 $ 977,400 $ 17,934 $ 5,939,635 116 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA SCHEDULE OF GENERAL LONG-TERM DEBT SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 WITH COMPARATIVE TOTALS FOR SEPTEMBER 30, 1990 TOTALS ------------------------------ 1991 1990 Amount To Be Provided For The Payment of General Long -Term Debt ------------------------- Amount to be Provided $ ----------- 2,022,396 $ ----------- 2,136,812 Total to be Provided $ 2,022,396 $ 2,136,812 General Long -Term Debt Payable ------------------------------ Revenue bonds payable $ 1,960,000 $ 2,070,000 Note payable - Library 62,396 66,812 ---------------------- Total General Long -Term Debt Payable $ 2,022,396 $ 2,136,812 117 THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK 118 STATISTICAL SECTION Statistical tables differ from financial statements because they cover more than one fiscal year and may present nonaccounting data. These tables reflect social and economic data, financial trends, and the fiscal capacity of the City. CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA COMMENTS ON THE STATISTICAL SECTION SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 The following Statistical Tables recommended by the National Council on Governmental Accounting are not included for the reasons stated below: Tables which concern General Obligation Debt are omitted because neither the City or other overlapping governments have incurred any tax - supported debt. The Legal Debt Margin Computation Table is not presented because there is no law or ordinance which sets the maximum amount of debt the City is legally permitted to issue. 119 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA GENERAL GOVERNMENTAL EXPENDITURES BY FUNCTION (1) LAST TEN FISCAL YEARS FISCAL GENERAL PUBLIC PHYSICAL YEAR GOVERNMENT SAFETY ENVIRONME 1981-82 336,836 313,143 105,009 1982-83 260,694 392,050 74,611 1983-84 279,766 383,408 88,225 1984-85 292,866 473,732 67,810 1985-86 290,427 468,671 78,904 1986-87 330,335 521,365 68,484 1987-88 340,666 588,430 170,197 1988-89 392,504 691,581 95,476 1989-90 464,818 767,734 99,084 1990-91 440,789 830,411 99,989 (1) Includes General and Special Revenue Funds 120 TABLE 1 ECONOMIC HUMAN CULTURE AND TRANSPORTATION ENVIRONMENT SERVICES RECREATION TOTAL $ 158,080 -0- 7,764 101,454 1,022,286 343,390 -0- 8,961 191,583 1,271,,289 286,392 -0- 9,248 186,874 1,233,913 272,092 -0- 9,795 155,425 1,271,720 298,605 -0- 11,212 196,486 1,344,305 383,373 2,275 11,329 397,817 1,714,978 461,718 1,175 13,027 283,504 1,858,717 282,696 1,780 12,864 303,943 1,780,844 442,340 9,596 18,703 421,271 2,223,546 330,476 9,283 13,665 435,748 2,160,361 121 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA GENERAL REVENUE BY SOURCE (1) LAST TEN FISCAL YEARS LICENSES FISCAL AND INTER - YEAR TAXES PERMITS GOVERNMENTAL 1981-82 724,860 42,218 386,144 1982-83 597,800 36,952 440,349 1983-84 597,779 45,022 529,181 1984-85 684,898 26,452 581,406 1985-86 740,694 20,768 573,334 1986-87 873,029 21,154 493,684 1987-88 913,493 30,000 767,159 1988-89 954,977 18,931 847,765 1989-90 1,143,268 25,688 918,517 1990-91 1,281,612 28,917 786,966 (1) Includes General and Special Revenue Funds (2) For Fiscal Years including 1988-89 and prior, the City accounted for expenditure reimbursements from other funds as revenues. Effective the 1989-90 Fiscal Year, these expenditure reimbursements are accounted for as reduction of expenditures. 122 TABLE 2 (2) CHARGES FINES INTEREST FOR AND ON SERVICES FORFEITURES INVESTMENTS MISCELLANEOUS lum 56,748 15,860 140,099 79,487 1,445,416 57,830 30,105 112,081 51,393 1,326,510 57,126 40,030 128,838 38,744 1,436,720 56,683 32,418 117,036 44,354 1,543,247 56,572 31,266 85,436 49,901 1,557,971 81,634 30,288 90,575 29,671 1,620,035 85,964 30,199 119,041 36,172 1,982,028 91,679 34,252 124,473 44,905 2,116,982 8,585 40,572 144,963 33,057 2,314,650 19,327 69,571 106,962 66,917 2,360,272 123 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA PROPERTY TAX LEVIES, TAX COLLECTIONS AND ASSESSED VALUATIONS LAST TEN FISCAL YEARS (2) ESTIMATED (1) (4) FISCAL TAX ACTUAL ASSESSED TAX YEAR YEAR VALUE VALUATION RATE 1981-82 1981 $ 81,496,349 $ 73,346,714 3.456 1982-83 1982 86,049,990 77,444,991 2.793 1983-84 1983 95,144,392 85,629,953 2.595 1984-85 1984 97,405,919 87,665,327 2.626 1985-86 1985 110,465,368 99,418,831 2.429 1986-87 1986 122,164,883 109,948,395 2.429 1987-88 1987 129,039,378 116,135,440 2.429 1988-89 1988 136,281,589 122,653,430 2.429 1989-90 1989 157,547,919 141,793,127 2.429 1990-91 1990 164,683,728 148,215,355 2.729 (1) Final Gross taxable assessed valuation per Lake County Property Appraisers' form DR-422 (2) The Florida Department of Revenue has certified the Lake County Tax Rolls as being at least 90% of the estimated actual value of property within the County. Therefore, the estimated actual values shown are calculations based on the 90% certification. (3) Outstanding delinquent taxes are not available from the Lake County Tax Collections' office (4) Tax rate per $1,000 of taxable valuation 124 TABLE 3 RATIO OF RATIO OF CURRENT TAX (3) TOTAL TAX COLLECTIONS DELINQUENT TOTAL COLLECTIONS TAX CURRENT TAX TO TOTAL TAX TAX TO TOTAL LEVY COLLECTIONS TAX LEVY COLLECTIONS COLLECTIONS TAX LEVY $ 253,487 $ 243,723 96.1% $ 409 $ 243,843 97.8% 216,304 211,482 97.8% 41 211,523 97.0% 222,209 213,009 95.9% 152 213,161 97.6% 230,208 223,870 97.2% 795 224,665 96.9% 241,489 233,841 96.8% 200 234,041 96.9% 267,064 258,641 96.8% 212 258,853 97.2% 282,092 274,014 97.1% 124 274,138 97.2% 297,925 291,555 97.9% 458 292,013 98.0% 344,416 333,058 96.7% 191 333,249 96.8% 404,480 392,259 97.0% 1,095 393,354 97.2% 125 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA PROPERTY TAX RATES - DIRECT AND ALL OVERLAPPING GOVERNMENTS (1) LAST TEN FISCAL YEARS (2) LAKE COUNTY OKLAWAHA FISCAL TAX LAKE SCHOOL WATER YEAR YEAR CITY COUNTY DISTRICT DISTRICT 1981-82 1981 3.456 3.318 6.060 .090 1982-83 1982 2.793 2.732 5.478 .040 1983-84 1983 2.595 3.273 7.073 .350 1984-85 1984 2.626 3.272 5.606 .281 1985-86 1985 2.429 3.492 6.415 .262 1986-87 1986 2.429 3.400 6.608 .300 1987-88 1987 2.429 3.400 7.477 .350 1988-89 1988 2.429 3.800 7.742 .838 1989-90 1989 2.429 4.938 8.451 .621 1990-91 1990 2.729 4.938 8.880 .751 (1) Information was obtained from the City of Clermont Tax Rolls, as prepared by the Lake County Property Appraisers' office (2) Tax rate per $1,000 of taxable valuation 126 TABLE 4 SOUTH LAKE SOUTH LAKE ST. JOHNS RIVER HOSPITAL AMBULANCE WATER MGMNT DISTRICT DISTRICT DISTRICT TOTAL .430 .820 .297 14.471 .370 .710 .290 12.413 .500 1.000 .281 15.072 1.000 1.000 .281 14.066 1.000 1.000 .358 14.956 .942 .942 .491 15.112 1.000 1.000 .517 16.173 1.000 1.000 .281 17.090 1.000 1.000 .346 18.785 1.000 1.000 .358 19.656 127 THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK 128 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA SPECIAL ASSESSMENT COLLECTIONS TABLE 5 LAST TEN FISCAL YEARS FISCAL YEAR COLLECTIONS BALANCE 1981-82 $ 20,449 $ 16,824 1982-83 12,370 4,454 1983-84 1,458 2,996 1984-85 805 2,191 1985-86 1,696 495 1986-87 -0- 495 1987-88 -0- 495 1988-89 -0- 495 1989-90 -0- 495 1990-91 -0- 495 129 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA UTILITY REVENUE BOND COVERAGE - ALL UTILITY REVENUE BONDS LAST TEN FISCAL YEARS (3) OPERATION & FISCAL YEAR GROSS REVENUES MAINTENANCE COSTS 1981-82 $ 650,741 $ 463,973 1982-83 766,042 417,257 1983-84 800,364 443,020 1984-85 854,646 479,728 1985-86 862,865 491,152 1986-87 983,628 512,425 1987-88 1,056,616 607,451 1988-89 1,118,064 627,603 1989-90 11092,768 731,397 1990-91 11062,790 743,715 (1) Excludes interest expense and depreciation (2) Maximum debt service in any subsequent year is $340,259 (3) Excludes interest revenue 130 TABLE 6 (2) DEBT NET SERVICE REVENUE REQUIREMENTS COVERAGE $ 186,768 $ 250,075 .75% 348,785 241,687 1.44% 357,344 332,235 1.08% 374,918 423,537 .89% 371,713 274,573 1.35% 471,203 253,675 1.86% 449,165 310,128 1.45% 490,461 302,628 1.62% 361,371 327,330 1.10% 319,075 335,579 .95% 131 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA DEMOGRAPHIC STATISTICS LAST TEN FISCAL YEARS (2) PER FISCAL (1) (5) CAPITA MEDIAN YEAR POPULATION INCOME AGE 1981-82 5,476 $ 10,184 N/A 1982-83 5,598 10,894 N/A 1983-84 5,745 11,820 N/A 1984-85 5,928 N/A N/A 1985-86 6,114 N/A N/A 1986-87 6,379 N/A N/A 1987-88 6,623 N/A N/A 1988-89 6,642 N/A N/A 1989-90 6,910 N/A N/A 1990-91 6,910 N/A N/A DATA SOURCES: (1) College of Business Administration, University of Florida - Bureau of Economic and Business Research (2) Information available on Countywide basis only. Data was obtained from the Florida Statistical Abstract - Table 5.10 (3) Figures represent Grades K-12 in Public Schools. Source - Department of Education (4) Information available on Countywide basis only. Data was obtained from the Florida Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Market Information. (5) The 1989-90 Fiscal Year Population figure is from the 1990 Census Population Count - Bureau of Census, U.S. Department of Commerce. 132 EDUCATION LEVEL IN YEARS OF FINAL SCHOOLING (3) SCHOOL ENROLLMENT TABLE 7 (4) UNEMPLOYMENT RATE N/A 1,395 12.7% N/A 1,462 15.9% N/A 1,538 13.1% N/A 1,582 12.0% N/A 1,635 8.8% N/A 1,647 7.4% N/A 1,670 6.1% N/A 1,788 7.7% N/A 1,897 6.2% N/A 1,975 8.7% 133 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA PROPERTY VALUE, CONSTRUCTION AND BANK DEPOSITS LAST TEN FISCAL YEARS (2) (2) COMMERCIAL RESIDENTIAL CONSTRUCTION CONSTRUCTION FISCAL #OF #OF YEAR UNITS VALUE UNITS VALUE 1981-82 7 638,000 50 1,514,799 1982-83 4 2,071,040 32 1,424,778 1983-84 10 1,425,910 37 2,432,103 1984-85 10 3,234,000 69 3,102,300 1985-86 4 559,360 30 2,197,400 1986-87 6 1,874,085 75 4,188,500 1987-88 4 270,000 45 2,438,200 1988-89 1 100,000 55 3,323,000 1989-90 7 367,000 48 3,036,250 1990-91 1 480,000 12 1,214,600 (1) Information available on Countywide basis only. Data was obtained from the Florida Bankers Association (2) City of Clermont zoning clearances (3) Taxable assessed valuation per Lake County Property Appraisers' form DR-422 (4) Non -Taxable assessed valuation per Florida Department of Revenue 134 BANK DEPOSITS ASSESSED (3) PROPERTY TAXABLE TABLE 8 TAXABLE VALUE (4) NONTAXABLE $ 561,184,000 $ 73,346,714 $ 34,380,225 633,279,000 77,444,991 36371,903 728,844,000 85,629,953 40:683,419 813,539,000 87,665,327 42,233,196 891,753,000 99,418,831 42,431,755 1,006,641,000 109,948,395 42,053,436 1,084,036,000 116,135,440 43,489,330 1,322,027,000 122,653,430 44,615,271 1,523,941,000 141,793,127 47,279,344 1,624,935,000 148,215,355 47,907,074 135 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA TABLE 9 PRINCIPAL TAXPAYERS I�DO*Dzov�i�a+ ASSESSED OF TOTAL VALUATION ASSESSED TAXPAYER AS OF 1 / 1 / 91 VALUATION John Hurtak $ 4,293,066 2.90% South Lake Plaza/K-Mart 525 N.E. 58th Street Miami, Fla. 33137 Chester C. Fosgate Co. 3,673,461 2.48% P.O. Box 1598 Winter Park, Fla. 32789 Lake Highlands Retirement 2,620,508 1.77% and Nursing Center, Inc. 151 E. Minnehaha Avenue Clermont, Fla. 34711 Patrick G. Kelley, Trustee 2,280,026 1.54% c/o Marvin F. Poer 2301 Lucien Way, Suite 330 Maitland, Fla. 32751 Eastern Shores Mobile Homes 1,453,538 .98% 10 Camino Real Drive Edgewater, Fla. 32032 Florida Citrus Tower 1,294,540 .87% 6175 N.W. 153rd Street Miami Lakes, Fla. 33014 Oceanfront Properties 1,271,644 .86% 5502 Park Avenue W. (Emerald Lakes Shopping Center) New York, New Jersey 07093 Richard Reynolds 1,210,983 .82% Winn -Dixie Shopping Center 13148 Palmer Road Clermont, Fla. 34711 L & F Groves 11171,466 .79% c/o A. E. Langley 6088 Masters Blvd. Orlando, Fla. 32819 Oakridge Apartments 1,151,882 .78% P.O. Box 1811 Lake Mary, Fla. 32746 TOTAL $_ 20,421,114 13.79% Source: 1991 City of Clermont Tax Roll, prepared by the Lake County Property Appraiser's Office. 136 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA TABLE 10 PENSION EXPENSES BY TYPE - ALL PENSION PLANS LAST TEN FISCAL YEARS FISCAL BENEFIT ADMINISTRATION YEAR PAYMENTS REFUNDS FEES TOTAL General Employee Plan 1981-82 $ 8,109 $ -0- $ 2,045 $ 10,154 1982-83 8,009 -0- 2,189 10,198 1983-84 35,755 -0- 2,592 38,347 1984-85 11,565 -0- 2,241 13,806 1985-86 12,529 -0- 4,170 16,699 1986-87 15,667 -0- 3,423 19,090 1987-88 17,840 -0- 12,552 30,392 1988-89 26,586 -0- 7,370 33,956 1989-90 22,649 14,056 17,016 53,721 1990-91 45,240 13,796 16,532 75,568 Police Officers Plan 1981-82 -0- -0- 1,191 1,191 1982-83 -0- -0- 1,198 1,198 1983-84 -0- -0- 1,451 1,451 1984-85 -0- -0- 1,305 1,305 1985-86 -0- -0- 2,564 2,564 1986-87 105 -0- 1,437 1,542 1987-88 -0- 683 8,114 8,797 1988-89 3,671 -0- 3,162 6,833 1989-90 13,240 680 12,059 25,979 1990-91 15,958 734 9,414 26,106 Volunteer Firemen Plan 1981-82 -0- -0- 925 925 1982-83 -0- -0- 638 638 1983-84 -0- -0- 850 850 1984-85 -0- -0- 850 850 1985-86 -0- -0- 1,816 1,816 1986-87 -0- -0- 862 862 1987-88 3,500 -0- 11719 5,219 1988-89 -0- -0- 968 968 1989-90 -0- 6,213 6,148 12,361 1990-91 814 -0- 4,332 5,146 137 THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK 138 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA TABLE 11 PENSION REVENUES BY SOURCE - ALL PENSION PLANS LAST TEN FISCAL YEARS INVESTMENT FISCAL EMPLOYEE EMPLOYER STATE EARNINGS YEAR CONTRIBUTION CONTRIBUTION CONTRIBUTION (LOSS) TOTAL General Employee Plan 1981-82 $ -0- $ 26,775 $ -0- $ 20,726 $ 47,501 1982-83 -0- 40,591 -0- 24,991 65,582 1983-84 -0- 40,994 -0- 29,809 70,803 1984-85 -0- 28,801 -0- 35,602 64,403 1985-86 -0- 41,988 -0- 140,928 182,916 1986-87 -0- 44,367 -0- 102,014 146,381 1987-88 -0- 43,948 -0- 1,887 45,835 1988-89 -0- 45,544 -0- 131,931 177,475 1989-90 -0- 79,746 -0- (22,128) 57,618 1990-91 -0- 82,073 -0- 182,090 264,163 Police Officers Plan 1981-82 -0- 6,331 8,279 15,305 29,915 1982-83 -0- 11,418 9,547 17,010 37,975 1983-84 -0- 11,672 12,660 23,823 48,155 1984-85 -0- 7,665 15,606 26,695 49,966 1985-86 -0- 7,738 17,904 28,773 54,415 1986-87 2,550 760 22,348 59,920 85,578 1987-88 2,714 25,573 26,429 2,302 57,018 1988-89 3,447 -0- 25,539 85,719 114,705 1989-90 3,695 -0- 29,226 (13,030) 19,891 1990-91 4,217 -0- 31,163 116,670 152,050 volunteer Firemen Plan 1981-82 -0- 925 3,550 6,895 11,370 1982-83 -0- 425 3,580 7,159 11,164 1983-84 -0- -0- 3,898 8,490 12,388 1984-85 -0- -0- 5,118 8,945 14,063 1985-86 -0- -0- 5,432 8,949 14,381 1986-87 60 -0- 7,246 18,494 25,800 1987-88 62 -0- 8,137 529 8,728 1988-89 58 -0- 8,870 24,032 32,960 1989-90 68 -0- 12,351 (3,427) 8,992 1990-91 110 -0- 9,594 32,925 42,629 139 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA PENSION TREND DATA - DEFINED BENEFIT PLANS LAST TEN FISCAL YEARS NET ASSETS PENSION AVAILABLE BENEFIT NET ASSETS FISCAL FOR OBLIGATION AS A % YEAR BENEFITS (PBO) OF PBO General Employees Plan 1981-82 $ N/A $ N/A N/A 1982-83 N/A N/A N/A 1983-84 N/A N/A N/A 1984-85 N/A N/A N/A 1985-86 N/A N/A N/A 1986-87 578,304 648,593 89.16% 1987-88 563,380 687,546 81.94% 1988-89 647,116 687,546 94.12% 1989-90 652,038 830,772 78.49% 1990-91 757,437 750,262 100.96% Police Officers Plan 1981-82 N/A N/A N/A 1982-83 N/A N/A N/A 1983-84 N/A N/A N/A 1984-85 N/A N/A N/A 1985-86 N/A N/A N/A 1986-87 414,948 726,356 57.13% 1987-88 457,376 761,746 60.04% 1988-89 565,254 761,746 74.21% 1989-90 559,160 642,442 87.04% 1990-91 685,104 681,911 100.47% Volunteer Firemen Plan 1981-82 N/A N/A N/A 1982-83 N/A N/A N/A 1983-84 N/A N/A N/A 1984-85 N/A N/A N/A 1985-86 N/A N/A N/A 1986-87 125,134 33,116 377.87% 1987-88 128,643 27,194 473.06% 1988-89 160,632 27,194 590.69% 1989-90 157,266 15,130 1039.43% 1990-91 194,749 16,544 1177.16% SOURCE: Annual Pension Evaluations 140 UNFUNDED PENSION BENEFIT OBLIGATION (UPBO) EMPLOYER/ ANNUAL STATE COVERED CONTRIBUTION PAYROLL EMPLOYER CONTRIBUTION AS A % OF COVERED PAYROLL TABLE 12 UPBO AS A $ OF ANNUAL COVERED PAYROLL $ N/A $ N/A $ N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 70,289 14,899 169,117 8.81% 41.56% 124,166 11,760 179,264 6.56% 69.26% 40,430 81805 157,669 5.58% 25.64% 178,734 38,481 134,279 28.65% 133.11% ( 7,175) 38,690 129,278 29.93% ( 5.55)% $ N/A $ N/A $ N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 311,408 23,052 255,000 9.04% 122.12% 304,370 51,990 283,789 18.32% 107.25% 196,492 25,539 349,356 7.31% 56.24% 83,282 29,226 367,590 7.95% 22.66% ( 3,193) 31,163 410,608 7.59% ( .78)% $ N/A $ N/A $ N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A ( 92,018) 7,159 61100 117.36% (1508.49)% (101,449) 8,137 6,174 131.79% (1643.16)% (133,438) 8,870 6,140 144.46% (2173.25)% (142,136) 12,351 6,927 178.30% (2051.91)% (178,205) 9,594 11,531 83.20% (1545.44)% 141 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA SCHEDULE OF INSURANCE COVERAGES SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 POLICY EXPIRATION TYPE OF COVERAGE & INSURER NUMBER DATE LIABILITY Florida Municipal FML 304 09/30/91 Liability Self Insurer's.Program WORKERS COMPENSATION Florida Municipal Self Insurers Fund FM 389 09/30/91 FIRE AND EXTENDED COVERAGE Florida Municipal Property FMP 49 10/01/91 Self -Insurers Program 142 TABLE 13 DETAILS LIMITS General Liability $100,000/Person Bodily Injury Liability $200,000/Occurrence Auto Liability Law Enforcement Liability Specific Excess Liability $1,500,000/Occurrence Public Officials Errors and Omissions Liability $1,500,000/Occurrence Finance Director -Bond $100,000 Public Employees Blanket Bond $5,000 Accidental Death-Police/Fire $50,000 Statutory Workers Compensation $100,000/500,000 Blanket Building per Schedule and Property $7,844,645 143 CITY OF CLERMONT, FLORIDA MISCELLANEOUS STATISTICAL DATA SEPTEMBER 30, 1991 ABLE 14 Date of Incorporation 1916 Present Charter Adopted 1962 Form of Government Council -Manager Number of Councilmen Five (5) TERM OF OFFICE: Mayor/Councilmen Two years (2) City Manager Appointed AREA OF CITY: Municipal Boundaries 4 square miles Miles of Streets 46 Number of Street Lights 699 FIRE PROTECTION: Number of Stations 1 Number of Volunteer Firemen 25 Number of Fire Hydrants 227 POLICE PROTECTION: Number of Stations 1 Number of Police Officers 17 EDUCATION: Number of Schools: Elementary 1 Middle 1 High School 1 Number of Teachers 104 Number of Students 1,975 MUNICIPAL WATER DEPARTMENT: Number of Consumers 2,692 Average Daily Consumption 1,383,600 gallons Miles of Water Mains 45 miles WASTEWATER AND SANITARY SEWERS: Sanitary Sewers 55 miles Storm Sewers 10 miles RECREATIONAL AND CULTURE Number of Parks 22 with 88 acres Number of Libraries 1 Number of Volumes 31,614 TOTAL CITY EMPLOYEES: Full -Time 73 Part -Time 3 144