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CliftonLarsonAllen LLP <br />CLAconnect.com <br /> <br />  <br /> <br /> <br />Honorable Mayor and <br /> Members of the City Council <br />City of Lino Lakes, Minnesota <br /> <br />We have audited the financial statements of the governmental activities, the business-type activities, <br />each major fund, and the aggregate remaining fund information of the City of Lino Lakes (the City) for <br />the year ended December 31, 2015, and have issued our report thereon dated REPORT DATE. We <br />have previously communicated to you information about our responsibilities under auditing standards <br />generally accepted in the United States of America and Government Auditing Standards, as well as <br />certain information related to the planned scope and timing of our audit. Professional standards also <br />require that we communicate to you the following information related to our audit. <br />Significant audit findings <br />Qualitative aspects of accounting practices <br />Accounting policies <br />Management is responsible for the selection and use of appropriate accounting policies. The significant <br />accounting policies used by the City are described in Note 1 to the financial statements. <br />As described in Note 1, during the fiscal year ended December 31, 2015, the City changed <br />accounting policies related to its accounting for pensions by adopting Statement of <br />Governmental Accounting Standards (GASB Statement) No. 68, Accounting and Financial <br />Reporting for Pensions, and the related GASB Statement No. 71, Pension Transition for <br />Contributions Made Subsequent to the Measurement Date-an amendment of GASB Statement <br />No. 68. Accordingly, this change in principle resulted in the restatement of beginning net <br />position related to the recognition of the City’s proportionate share of the Public Employees’ <br />Retirement Association of Minnesota General Employees’ Retirement Fund’s and the Public <br />Employees Police and Fire Fund’s net pension liabilities. <br />We noted no transactions entered into by the City during the year for which there is a lack of <br />authoritative guidance or consensus. All significant transactions have been recognized in the financial <br />statements in the proper period. <br />Accounting estimates <br />Accounting estimates are an integral part of the financial statements prepared by management and are <br />based on management’s knowledge and experience about past and current events and assumptions <br />about future events. Certain accounting estimates are particularly sensitive because of their <br />significance to the financial statements and because of the possibility that future events affecting them <br />may differ significantly from those expected. The most sensitive estimates affecting the financial <br />statements were: <br /> Management’s estimate of the useful lives of capital assets is based on authoritative guidance <br />and past experience. We evaluated the key factors and assumptions used to develop the useful <br />lives of capital assets in determining that it is reasonable in relation to the financial statements <br />taken as a whole.