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CITY OF CASSELBERRY, FLORIDA <br />MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS, Continued <br />September 30, 2016 <br />The government -wide financial statements include not only the City itself (known as the primary government) <br />but also legally separate entities known as component units. Component units, which are other governmental <br />units over which the City Commission can exercise influence and/or may be obligated to provide financial <br />subsidy, are presented as a separate column in the government -wide financial statements and as individual <br />activities in the basic and fund financial statements. The City's component units are briefly addressed in this <br />MD&A. <br />Fund Financial Statements <br />A fund is a grouping of related accounts that is used to maintain control over resources that have been <br />segregated for specific activities or objectives. The City, like other state and local governments, uses fund <br />accounting to ensure and demonstrate compliance with finance -related legal requirements. All of the funds of <br />the City can be divided into three categories: governmental funds, proprietary funds, and fiduciary funds. <br />Governmental Funds <br />The City maintains several individual governmental funds. Governmental funds are used to account for <br />essentially the same functions reported as governmental activities in the government -wide financial <br />statements. However, unlike the government -wide financial statements, governmental fund financial <br />statements focus on near-term inflows and outflows of spendable resources, as well as on balances of <br />spendable resources available at the end of the fiscal year. Such information may be useful in evaluating a <br />government's near-term financing requirements. <br />Because the focus of governmental funds is narrower than that of the government -wide financial statements, it <br />is useful to compare the information presented for governmental funds with similar information presented for <br />governmental activities in the government -wide financial statements. By doing so, readers may better <br />understand the long-term impact of the government's near-term financing decisions. Both the governmental <br />funds balance sheet and the governmental funds statement of revenues, expenditures, and changes in fund <br />balances provide a reconciliation to facilitate this comparison between governmental funds and governmental <br />activities. <br />Information is presented separately in the Governmental Funds Balance Sheet and in the Governmental <br />Funds Statement of Revenues, Expenditures, and Changes in Fund Balance for the General Fund, <br />Community Redevelopment Agency, Infrastructure Surtax Fund, and Lake Concord Park Project Fund which <br />are considered to be major funds. The remaining data from the other governmental funds are combined into a <br />single, aggregated presentation. Individual fund data for each of these non -major governmental funds is <br />provided in the form of combining statements in the other supplemental information section of this report. <br />The City adopts an annual appropriated budget for its general fund, debt service funds, and most special <br />revenue funds; and project -length budgets for the active capital projects funds. Budgetary comparison <br />schedules have been provided for these funds to demonstrate budgetary compliance. <br />Proprietary Funds <br />The City maintains enterprise funds as its one type of proprietary fund. Enterprise funds are used to report the <br />same functions presented as business -type activities in the government -wide financial statements. The City <br />uses two enterprise funds to account for the fiscal activities relating to its water and wastewater utilities (Utility <br />Fund) and golf course operation (Golf Club Fund). <br />Proprietary funds provide the same type of information as the government -wide financial statements, only in <br />more detail. The proprietary fund financial statements provide separate information for the Utility Fund, which <br />is considered to be a major fund of the City, and the Golf Club, a nonmajor fund. <br />