

The Riverside City Council on Tuesday approved a balanced biennial budget of $1.45 billion each year.
Officials highlighted these areas of financial focus — public safety; housing and homelessness, specifically investments in affordable housing, supportive services and homelessness prevention efforts; infrastructure maintenance, improvement and expansion; significant budget increases for road maintenance; and investments in the city’s economy, job creation and business development.
“This budget reflects a balanced approach to providing services our residents have made clear they want, while also addressing challenges we face as a city,” Mayor Patricia Lock Dawson said in a statement. “We welcome the accountability that comes with these increases and appreciate our residents’ expectations for responsible fiscal stewardship.”
City officials described these key expenditures:
The council’s approval ends a nine-month budget process that started in October, when officials first sought public input by mailing a postcard to residents, posting notices on the city’s social media accounts and inviting residents to budget workshops. The public meetings were dubbed “Your Money, Your Voice” and garnered feedback on services, programs and facilities city residents thought were most important. The city also conducted online surveys and a more extensive Quality of Life survey.
“The budget is based on prudent financial planning and innovative strategies to address critical needs, strengthen the local government and position the City to catalyze transformation in the Riverside community and economy,” according to the city statement. The budget covers the cost of city staff time for studying ways to maximize revenue and recover overhead expenses through measures such as the recent fees and charges study.
Officials said the budget is bolstered by robust property tax revenue that resulted following recent increases in assessed values, in addition to new revenue sources including those from the March JPA revenue-sharing agreement and cannabis tax.
“This budget reflects hundreds of hours of work by the City Council and City staff to capture our community’s desires, aspirations and values,” City Manager Mike Futrell said in a statement. “It is a systemically balanced budget year over year while allowing robust investments in public safety, housing, homelessness response, park and library improvements, funding for the arts and community events — everything that makes Riverside a great place to live, work, and raise a family. This budget reflects Riverside’s strong economy and positions us well for the future.”
Officials said the budget will enable the city to keep providing essential services and buffer against potential economic concerns in the future as rising retirement costs, ongoing maintenance and infrastructure needs and increasing personnel costs remain significant fiscal challenges for Riverside and cities nationwide.
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