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Long -Term Financial Plan <br />Paqe Thirty -One <br />III. LONG TERM REVENUE PROGRAM <br />A. PUBLIC SERVICES <br />1. Basic Government Services <br />The City Charter specifies that the Long Term <br />Revenue Program shall be a tentative policy for <br />the long term financing of public services and <br />capital improvements. The program is thus a <br />general policy statement outlining the methods by <br />which city services and capital improvements are <br />to be financed. <br />The goal of the City is to finance governmental <br />services provided to the residents entirely from <br />current recurring revenues in order to achieve a <br />balanced budget. Additionally, the City strives <br />to maintain property tax levies at moderate <br />levels. <br />Most governmental services provided by the City <br />are accounted for in the General Fund. Services <br />provided are those which are traditionally ► <br />' associated with municipal Government. They <br />include General Government: City, Council, <br />Commissions, Administration, Elections, City <br />Attorney, Finance and Public Works; Public <br />Safety: Police, Fire, Emergency Services and <br />Nuisance Abatement; Streets; and Parks and <br />Recreation. In 1988 those services were financed <br />from the F _' wing revenue sources: <br />Revenue Source Amount Percent <br />Property Taxes 79E,629 37.60 <br />Licenses and Permits 156,828 7.42 <br />Intergovernmental 923,537 43.71 <br />Revenue <br />Charges for Services 72,859 3.45 <br />Fines and Forfeitures 50,324 2.39 <br />Interest Income 78,826 3.74 <br />Other Revenues 31,391 1.49 <br />2,112, 994 100.00 <br />Property taxes and intergovernmental revenues <br />combined account for 81.51% of the City's General <br />Fund revenues. The level of those two revenue <br />sources are controlled by the State of Minnesota <br />through property tax levy limitation laws and the <br />levels of funding for local government aids and <br />homestead credits; which are the two largest <br />sources of intergovernmental revenue the City <br />receives. In recent years the State Legislature <br />