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101 Nat'l Civic Rev. 3 (2012)

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Last year, the National Civic League, the University of Southern
California, and the University of San Francisco entered into a
partnership to conduct a set of four case investigations on lo-
cal government agencies  in the Los Angeles area. The goal was
to explore the impact of leadership in designing strategy to ad-
dress several long-term structural changes in the economic and
institutional environments that have shaped the current fiscal
challenges facing most local jurisdictions in California.

The cases   Los Angeles County,  the cities of Long Beach and
Brea, and  the Whittier Union  High School  District were  se-
lected through a process that involved, among other things, ask-
ing for recommendations  from statewide associations, including
the California State Associations of Counties and the League of
Cities, as well as through discussion with researchers and se-
nior executives with twenty or more years of local government
experience.

Members  of the research team  Shui-Yan Tang  and Mark Pisano
of USC, Richard  Callahan of USF, and Gloria Rubio-Cortes and
I from the National Civic League  interviewed a wide range  of
current and past officials from each of the jurisdictions and drew
on official statements for borrowings, annual budget documents,
as well as  published strategic plans and related documents,
news articles, and academic research publications.

In October 2011, the research team presented initial findings of
the investigation to a panel of experts consisting of researchers
from the California State Library, Public Policy Institute of Cal-
ifornia, several (current and retired) county and city adminis-
trators, and several elected officials. The panel provided the re-
search team with valuable feedback on the presented findings.

Based  on ideas generated from the October 6 event, further dis-
cussions among   team  members,  and  additional interviews for
the cases, the team has now  completed the narrative and anal-
ysis for each case. All four cases, along with an overview of the
research process, are published  in this issue of the National
Civic Review.

During this yearlong research  process, a number  of common
themes  emerged:
1. Leaders  must understand  the full meaning of fiscal sustain-
   ability. The research found that local officials differ in their
   understandings  of what constitutes fiscal sustainability. For
   some,  the term simply  refers to the ability to balance the
   budget  from year to year. Yet we were  reminded  by mem-
   bers of the review panel that annual budgetary balances may
   be achieved by forgoing investments needed  to maintain key
   infrastructures or by cutting back on social and human ser-
   vice programs  that are essential for the community's long-
   term  health. One definition of sustainability refers to abil-
   ity/capacity to keep options open for future generations.


A Publication of the National Civic League


2. Trust is a journey. In an era of low trust in government, from
   local to federal, earning and retaining trust emerged from the
   research as an important theme. The leadership of the Whit-
   tier Union High School  District exemplifies the practices of
   building and rebuilding trust in the community  in both ed-
   ucational quality and the effective management  of financial
   resources. Leadership practices of transparency, meaningful
   engagement,  and effective communication  increase trust.
3. Leaders  change the organizational culture to advance fiscal
   integrity. Organizational culture developed across the cases
   from  practices that ranged from leadership commitment   to
   fiscal integrity, to redefining roles, to engaging key stake-
   holders as problem solvers, to developing administrative ex-
   pertise, and shifts toward risk-adverse fiscal models.
4. When   it comes to innovation, effectiveness, and efficiency,
   leadership is about minimizing  government  by both reduc-
   ing the cost of services and developing  innovative ways to
   maintain  services. The leadership in each of the four case
   studies wrestles locally with the national discussion on the
   right size of government. An additional tension in this na-
   tional debate, noted in the experts' panel review, is whether
   the economic  downturn is temporary, calling for fiscal strate-
   gies that bridge the gap in revenues until an upturn, or if the
   downturn  is permanent,  calling for long-term reductions in
   the size of government and levels of service.
5. Fiscal literacy on the part of elected official and staff is es-
   sential but declining. The complexity of the budgeting pro-
   cess  is increasing because of the structural changes  that
   were  identified in our research. Changes within the inter-
   governmental  financial flows and the variable economic con-
   ditions are making   budgeting  more  difficult and placing
   increased stress on  budgeting decisions and  assumptions.
   These challenges require an increasing fiscal literacy. The ju-
   risdictions in the case studies were dealing with these issues
   but were  concerned  with the effect that term limits would
   have.

In 2011  the board of the National Civic League reaffirmed its
commitment   to make  the issue of local government fiscal sus-
tainability a priority of the organization. As we do so, we will
be  publishing more  reports and case studies in the National
Civic Review  and other venues. We  hope  this issue will spark
an ongoing  dialogue about the fiscal challenges facing Ameri-
can communities  and  how institutions can adapt to meet them.
We  would also like any readers of this issue to reach out and let
us know of interesting examples of local governments addressing
the challenge of fiscal sustainability.

In conclusion, I would like to thank the John Randolph Haynes
and  Dora Haynes  Foundation  for its generous support of this
research project.

                                             Michael McGrath
                                                        Editor

                                  0  2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
      Published online in  Wiley  Online  Library  (wileyonlinelibrary.com)
      National Civic Review * DOI: 10.1002/ncr.21071 * Spring  2012  3

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