This article was created by AI summarizing key points discussed. AI makes mistakes, so for full details and context, please refer to the
video of the full meeting.
Please report any errors so we can fix them.
Report an error »
Soledad, the city’s finance director, told the council that Lindsay’s general fund depends heavily on monthly receipts and that timing makes the first quarter particularly tight for cash flow. She said monthly receipts—sales tax and utility user fees—account for a large share of the general fund while property taxes and some other revenues arrive semiannually or quarterly.
Staff identified two large payments due in July—each described in the presentation as exceeding $1 million—and said those outflows substantially reduce reserves early in the fiscal year. Finance staff said the city is discussing options with insurance brokers to spread the liability‑insurance payment over quarterly installments to reduce the July cash hit.
Council and staff also discussed an outstanding backlog of reimbursements tied to grant‑funded projects. Staff estimated roughly $1.7 million in unreimbursed expenses and urged departments to submit reimbursement requests on a regular schedule so the city does not need to “float” large sums of grant‑funded work on the general fund.
The finance director noted that a midyear budget review in January will provide a more complete picture and reiterated that monitoring revenues and expenses will be critical given the tight approved budget.
View the Full Meeting & All Its Details
This article offers just a summary. Unlock complete video, transcripts, and insights as a Founder Member.
✓
Watch full, unedited meeting videos
✓
Search every word spoken in unlimited transcripts
✓
AI summaries & real-time alerts (all government levels)
Search every word spoken in city, county, state, and federal meetings. Receive real-time
civic alerts,
and access transcripts, exports, and saved lists—all in one place.
Gain exclusive insights
Get our premium newsletter with trusted coverage and actionable briefings tailored to
your community.
Shape the future
Help strengthen government accountability nationwide through your engagement and
feedback.
Risk-Free Guarantee
Try it for 30 days. Love it—or get a full refund, no questions asked.
Secure checkout. Private by design.
⚡ Only 8,059 of 10,000 founding memberships remaining
Explore Citizen Portal for free.
Read articles and experience transparency in action—no credit card
required.
Upgrade anytime. Your free account never expires.
What Members Are Saying
"Citizen Portal keeps me up to date on local decisions
without wading through hours of meetings."
— Sarah M., Founder
"It's like having a civic newsroom on demand."
— Jonathan D., Community Advocate
Secure checkout • Privacy-first • Refund within 30 days if not a fit