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In 21st century local government organizations, program and priority-based budgeting are becoming more sought-after approaches. In contrast to traditional budgeting models, priority-based budgets align resources and funding with community priorities and outcomes. This builds a data-rich budget organized in terms relevant to how residents experience local government services, creating transparency and a better understanding of where funds are used and how they align with what is important to the community.
Local governments have been clinging to the same incremental budgeting approaches for decades. In fact, the practice of line-item budgeting recently passed the 100-year mark. This type of budgeting creates a use-it-or-lose-it mentality and promotes across-the-board budget cuts that don’t consider factors other than a percentage, making it difficult to connect funding with strategic goals or performance metrics.
What Is Priority-Based Budgeting?
At the highest level, priority-based budgeting is a model that supports making budgetary decisions and allocating funds based on community needs.
The primary purpose of priority-based budgeting is to dissociate decision-making from account numbers and line items, instead basing funding allocations on the programs and services that meet specific needs.
Unlike traditional models, priority-based budgeting evaluates each program in various areas to determine its current alignment to the community’s priorities—and provides a price tag for that program to demonstrate how funds are being used to support those priorities.
Advantages of Priority-Based Budgeting
- Offers transparency into what services the government provides and how much it costs to provide them.
- Allows more meaningful comparisons to other service providers when considering options such as outsourcing or shared services.
- Shows how personnel are affiliated with different programs, making it easier to understand where the workforce is spending its time.
- Gives cost context to programs using invaluable data points rather than categorizing them by department.
- Includes program alignment to community priorities to ensure the funded programs reflect community needs.
- Gives decision makers more insight to fund the right programs rather than those that were predefined.
- Directs funds straight to community priorities.
Who Should Attend
This program is for people who have already mastered the fundamentals and want to learn a specific form of budgeting: priority-based budgeting.
Learning Objectives
In this course, participants will work to create program-centric budgets by answering these critical questions:
- What services do we provide?
- How much does it cost to provide these services?
- Do the programs and services we fund align with community priorities?
- How will this new data help local government reimagine decision-making processes to better align services with community results?
- How will machine learning and predicted data accelerate PBB implementation and application?
PBB Mastery: A Clear Path to Applying Priority-Based Budgeting Data
Participants will utilize real-world case studies and exploratory exercises to apply priority-based budgeting data utilizing ResourceX’s Four Levels of Mastery.
- Level One: Communication, Accountability, and Accessibility Skill: The ability to think and speak programmatically
- Practice: Identifying programs and reframing the budget relevant to how elected officials and residents experience public services.
- Level Two: Resource Reallocation and Maximization Skill: Utilize PBB Blue Print to optimize and maximize resources
- Practice: Using budget data and strategic plan to provide an overall price tag and priority alignment for resource needs and utilizing that context for budget evaluations that determine whether to increase or decrease funding.
- Level Three: Fuel Resources Toward the Results of Tomorrow Skill: Connect the budget to the vision and values of your community
- Practice: Planning for the future by tying programs to desired outcomes, such as addressing equity and climate change and charting a course of action.
- Level Four: Leverage All of Your Community’s Resources Skill: The power of shared purpose
- Practice: Using concise, descriptive names that are familiar and can stand alone with no abbreviations or acronyms, compare your inventory with other organizations to discuss opportunities for partnerships.
About the Presenter:
Chris Fabian, Senior Director of Product Strategy for Budgeting at Tyler Technologies
- Chris Fabian is senior director of product strategy for Budgeting at Tyler Technologies. Previously he was the founder and CEO of both the Center for Priority Based Budgeting and Resource Exploration (ResourceX) Technologies, before ResourceX was acquired by Tyler in 2023. As co-founder of ResourceX, Chris Fabian helped more than 300 schools and local governments implement priority-based budgeting. Priority Based Budgeting, powered by ResourceX, is a budgeting application that leverages machine learning and AI to predict and identify priority-based budgeting opportunities. Priority Based Budgeting helps school districts reallocate resources to meet desired outcomes of programs and services while saving money.
Course Schedule:
November 7, 2024
Module One: Building Greater Alignment with Priority-Based Budgeting Data
Module Two: Communication, Accountability, and Accessibility
November 14, 2024
Module Three: Resource Reallocation and Maximization
Module Four: Fueling Resources Toward the Results of the Future
November 21, 2024
Module Five: Leveraging All of Your Community’s Resources
Module Six: Let Data Lead the Way