Finance staff told the March 13 finance committee that the district’s 2023–24 projections are trending positively and that a preliminary year‑end surplus is expected.
The presenter said revenues are running ahead of the adopted budget by roughly $4.2 million driven by stronger interest income, earned income tax and some federal reimbursements; personnel and other expense variances are producing lower expenses, producing an early projected surplus near $6.1 million (administration called these early estimates). "So at this point, I am comfortable making the recommendation to move forward with that transfer as the board had planned in the budget," the presenter said, recommending the planned $3,000,000 transfer to the capital reserve fund.
Administration explained the capital reserve plan includes lists of projects it expects to fund over the next five years and said moving the transfer now keeps options open while the year remains stable. The presenter described the transfer as aligned with the budget and said funding capital projects with cash reduces future borrowing costs.
On assessment appeals, administration described a settlement stipulation for 2101 Welsh Road (the former Prudential building), purchased by BET Investments. The settlement reduces the market value used for taxing purposes to $35 million in the current year and $37 million next year, producing an estimated current-year refund near $748,000. Finance staff told the committee that the district had anticipated the appeal and included that impact in projections, so the refund will be covered without drawing from the committed fund balance.
Committee members asked clarifying questions about timing on tax-year differences among taxing bodies, whether the refund and its timing matched county and township schedules, and asked administration to double-check dates in the stipulation. The committee agreed to move both the capital-reserve transfer recommendation and the settlement stipulation to the legislative agenda for board action.