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In performing an audit in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards and Government Auditing Standards, we: <br />•Exercise professional judgment and maintain professional skepticism throughout the audit. <br />•Identify and assess the risks of material misstatement of the financial statements, whether due to fraud or error, <br />and design and perform audit procedures responsive to those risks. Such procedures include examining, on a test <br />basis, evidence regarding the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. <br />•Obtain an understanding of internal control relevant to the audit in order to design audit procedures that are <br />appropriate in the circumstances, but not for the purpose of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the <br />City’s internal control. Accordingly, no such opinion is expressed. <br />•Evaluate the appropriateness of accounting policies used and the reasonableness of significant accounting <br />estimates made by management, as well as evaluate the overall presentation of the financial statements. <br />•Conclude whether, in our judgment, there are conditions or events, considered in the aggregate, that raise <br />substantial doubt about the City’s ability to continue as a going concern for a reasonable period of time. <br />We are required to communicate with those charged with governance regarding, among other matters, the planned scope <br />and timing of the audit, significant audit findings, and certain internal control-related matters that we identified during the <br />audit. <br />Required Supplementary Information <br />Accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America require that the Management’s Discussion and <br />Analysis starting on page 27 and the Schedules of Employer’s Share of the Net Pension Liability, the Schedule of Changes <br />in Net Pension Liability and Related Ratios starting on page 86 be presented to supplement the basic financial statements. <br />Such information is the responsibility of management, and although not a part of the basic financial statements, is <br />required by the Governmental Accounting Standards Board who considers it to be an essential part of financial reporting <br />for placing the basic financial statements in an appropriate operational, economic, or historical context. We have applied <br />certain limited procedures to the required supplementary information in accordance with auditing standards generally <br />accepted in the United States of America, which consisted of inquiries of management about the methods of preparing the <br />information and comparing the information for consistency with management’s responses to our inquiries, the basic <br />financial statements, and other knowledge we obtained during our audit of the basic financial statements. We do not <br />express an opinion or provide any assurance on the information because the limited procedures do not provide us with <br />sufficient evidence to express an opinion or provide any assurance. <br />Supplementary Information <br />Our audit was conducted for the purpose of forming opinions on the financial statements that collectively comprise the <br />City’s basic financial statements. The accompanying combining and individual fund financial statements and, are <br />presented for purposes of additional analysis and are not a required part of the basic financial statements. Such <br />information is the responsibility of management and was derived from and relates directly to the underlying accounting <br />and other records used to prepare the basic financial statements. The information has been subjected to the auditing <br />procedures applied in the audit of the basic financial statements and certain additional procedures, including comparing <br />and reconciling such information directly to the underlying accounting and other records used to prepare the basic <br />financial statements or to the basic financial statement themselves, and other additional procedures in accordance with <br />auditing standards generally accepted in the United States of America. In our opinion, the combining and individual fund <br />financial statements and schedules are fairly stated, in all material respects in relation to the basic financial statements <br />as a whole. <br />24