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CITY OF LITTLE CANADA, MINNESOTA <br />Management’s Discussion and Analysis (continued) <br />Year Ended December 31, 2019 <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />Both of the government-wide financial statements distinguish functions of the City that are principally supported <br />by property taxes and intergovernmental revenues (governmental activities) from other functions that are intended <br />to recover all or a significant portion of their costs through user fees and charges (business-type activities). The <br />governmental activities include general government, housing and economic development, public safety, public <br />works, sanitation and recycling, and culture and recreation. The business-type activities of the City include <br />enterprises for water operating and sewer operating. <br /> <br />Fund Financial Statements – A fund is a grouping of related accounts that is used to maintain control over <br />resources that have been segregated for specific activities or objectives. The City, like other state and local <br />governments, uses fund accounting to ensure and demonstrate compliance with finance related legal requirements. <br />The funds of the City are divided into two categories - governmental funds and proprietary funds. <br /> <br />Governmental Funds – Governmental funds are used to account for essentially the same functions as <br />governmental activities in the government-wide financial statements. However, unlike the government-wide <br />financial statements, governmental fund financial statements focus on near-term inflows and outflows of <br />spendable resources, as well as the balances of spendable resources available at the end of the fiscal year. Such <br />information may be useful in evaluating a government’s near-term financing requirements. <br /> <br />Because the focus of governmental funds is narrower than that of the government-wide financial statements, it is <br />useful to compare the information presented for governmental funds with similar information presented for <br />governmental activities in the government-wide financial statements. By doing so, readers may better understand <br />the long-term impact of the government’s near-term, financing decisions. Both the governmental funds balance <br />sheet and the statement of revenues, expenditures, and changes in fund balances provide a reconciliation to <br />facilitate the comparison between governmental funds and governmental activities. <br /> <br />The fund financial statements present information for each major governmental fund in separate columns. Data <br />from the nonmajor governmental funds are combined into a single, aggregated presentation. Individual fund data <br />for each of these nonmajor governmental funds is provided in the form of combining statements elsewhere in this <br />report. The City adopts an annual appropriated budget for the General Fund and all Special Revenue Funds. <br />Budget-to-actual comparisons for the General Fund and all special revenue funds are provided in this financial <br />report. <br /> <br />Proprietary Funds – The City maintains one type of proprietary fund. Enterprise funds are used to report the <br />same functions presented as business-type activities in the government-wide financial statements. The City uses <br />enterprise funds to account for its water and sewer. <br /> <br />Proprietary funds provide the same type of information as the government-wide financial statements, only in more <br />detail. The proprietary fund financial statements provide separate information for each of the enterprise funds <br />which are considered to be major funds of the City. <br /> <br /> <br />20