For the first time in six years, more Michigan communities report that they are better able to meet their fiscal needs this year than those who say they are less able to do so.
A University of Michigan survey polled top elected and appointed officials in the state’s 1,856 units of government and found that 2014 marked a tipping point for them with 36 percent better able to meet financial needs and 24 percent less able to do so.
“Local government fiscal health was in a tailspin at the end of the Great Recession and it got even worse in 2010,” said Thomas Ivacko, CLOSUP administrator and program manager. “But in 2011, the trend of gradual fiscal improvement began and has continued for a fourth year now.”
Still, many communities continue to struggle with shrunken property tax revenue, cuts in state and federal aid and a rise in tax delinquencies and home foreclosures. The 24 percent of jurisdictions in financial decline represents 443 struggling local governments across the state.
The poll, part of the Michigan Public Policy Survey series at the Ford School’s Center for Local, State, and Urban Policy, reports:
Demands for public services continue to rise with 54 percent of all jurisdictions and 82 percent of the largest ones saying they have increased infrastructure needs this year.
As finances improve, more local governments report stable staffing levels and plans to increase pay.
More officials (40 percent) predict that their communities will have good times financially in the coming year than predict bad times (12 percent).