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CC Regular Session 7. 9. <br />Meeting Date: 06/26/2012 <br />By: Diana Lund, Finance <br />Information <br />Title: <br />Adopt Resolution #12-06-XXX Declaration of the City of Ramsey that the City has Adopted the Corresponding 10 <br />Performance Measures developed by the Council on Local Results and Innovation (Created by the Legislature in <br />2010) -This item was moved to the regular Agenda to be discussed as 7.09. <br />Background: <br />In 2010, the Legislature created the Council on Local Results and Innovation. In February 2011, the Council <br />released a standard set of ten performance measures for counties and ten performance measures for cities that will <br />aid residents, taxpayers and state and local elected officials in determining the efficiency of cities in providing <br />services and measure residents' opinions of those services. In February of 2012, the Council created a <br />comprehensive performance measurement systems for cities and counties to implement in 2012. Cities and counties <br />that choose to participate in the new standards measurement program may be eligible for a reimbursement in LGA <br />and exemption from levy limits. <br />A county or city that elects to participate in the standard measures program is eligible for a reimbursement of $0.14 <br />per capita in local goverment aid, not to exceed $25,000 and is also exempt from levy limits for taxes payable in the <br />following calendar year, if levy limits are in effect. <br />Participation in the standard measures program by a city or a county is voluntary. Counties and cities that choose to <br />participate in the standard measures program must officially adopt the corresponding 10 performance benchmarks <br />developed by the council and implement them. <br />The 10 performance benchmarks for cities are as such: <br />General: <br />1. Rating of the overall quality of services provided by your city (Citizen Survey: excellent, good, fair, poor) <br />2. Percent change in the taxable property market value <br />3. Citizens' rating of the overall appearance of the city (Citizen Survey: excellent, good, fair, poor) <br />Police Services: <br />4. Part I and II crime rates (Submit data as reported by the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension. Part I <br />crimes include murder, rape, aggravated assault, burglary, larceny, motor vehicle theft, and arson. Part II crimes <br />include other assaults, forgery/counterfeiting, embezzlement, stolen property, vandalism, weapons, prostitution, <br />other sex offenses, narcotics, gambling, family/children crime, D.U.I., liquor laws, disorderly conduct, and other <br />offenses.) <br />OR <br />Citizens' rating of safety in their community (Citizen Survey: very safe, somewhat safe, neither safe nor unsafe, <br />somewhat unsafe, very unsafe) <br />Output Measure: <br />Police response time (Time it takes on top priority calls from dispatch to the first officer on scene.) <br />Fire Services: <br />5. Insurance industry rating of fire services (The Insurance Service Office (ISO) issues ratings to Fire Departments <br />throughout the country for the effectiveness of their fire protection services and equipment to protect their <br />community. The ISO rating is a numerical grading system and is one of the primary elements used by the insurance <br />industry to develop premium rates for residential and commercial businesses. ISO analyzes data using a Fire <br />