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Accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America require that the Management's <br />Discussion and Analysis and the Schedule of Funding Progress, as listed in the table of contents, be <br />presented to supplement the basic financial statements. Such information, although not a part of the basic <br />financial statements, is required by the Governmental Accounting Standards Board, who considers it to be <br />an essential part of financial reporting for placing the basic financial statements in an appropriate <br />operational, economic, or historical context. We have applied certain limited procedures to the required <br />supplementary information in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States <br />of America, which consisted of inquiries of management about the methods of preparing the information <br />and comparing the information for consistency with management's responses to our inquiries, the basic <br />financial statements, and other knowledge we obtained during our audit of the basic financial statements. <br />We do not express an opinion or provide any assurance on the information because the limited procedures <br />do not provide us with sufficient evidence to express an opinion or provide any assurance. <br />Our audit was conducted for the purpose of forming opinions on the financial statements that collectively <br />comprise the City's basic financial statements. The introductory section, combining and individual fund <br />statements and schedules, and statistical section, as listed in the table of contents, are presented for <br />purposes of additional analysis and are not a required part of the basic financial statements. The <br />combining and individual fund statements and schedules are the responsibility of management and were <br />derived from and relate directly to the underlying accounting and other records used to prepare the basic <br />financial statements. The information has been subjected to the auditing procedures applied in the audit <br />of the basic financial statements and certain additional procedures, including comparing and reconciling <br />such information directly to the underlying accounting and other records used to prepare the basic <br />financial statements or to the basic financial statements themselves, and other additional procedures in <br />accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States of America. In our opinion, <br />the information is fairly stated, in all material respects, in relation to the basic financial statements as a <br />whole. The introductory and statistical sections have not been subjected to the auditing procedures <br />applied in the audit of the basic financial statements and, accordingly, we express no opinion on them. <br />A L‘tdif/4 1,4404,/ ew <br />June 1, 2011 <br />