What does a town spend? How do they stack up on crime and education? The Taxpayer Accountability & Transparency Project website from the Florida House “gives residents a useful tool to help them make educated judgments and hold elected officials accountable.”

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – A $117,000 website that grades and lets people compares cities and counties based on spending, crime and education was rolled out by the Florida House of Representatives this week.

House Speaker Jose Oliva, R-Miami Lakes, said in a press release the new Taxpayer Accountability & Transparency Project – floridataxpayers.com – “gives residents a useful tool to help them make educated judgments and hold their elected officials accountable.”

The House worked with Sachs Media Group on the project, with some work done in-house – video production, the press release and a social media launch – to save on costs, according to a House spokeswoman. House members approved a bill (HB 7069) in March that included a similar proposal, but the measure died in the Senate. The House then went ahead on its own with the project.

In February, when the grading proposal went before the House Appropriations Committee, Rep. Joe Geller, D-Aventura, wondered if communities could receive a low grade if they incurred debt to provide a higher quality of life.

The local-government grading proposal also drew opposition from the Florida League of Cities and the Florida Association of Counties.

“If you have a city that doesn’t have a lot of residents, they’re heavily tourists or a college town, you’re going to have fewer residents though your budget might be quite high,” Laura Youmans, legislative counsel for the Florida Association of Counties, told the Appropriations Committee. “That budget is going to serve the industry and businesses and the visitors there, so that would skew your numbers and make that city look worse and make cities that may not be doing as well better by comparison.”

The House news release said only “raw and per-capita data” was used, “with no value judgments made regarding the relative importance of any one factor over any other.”

Cities and counties draw grades and rankings based on six-year averages of per-capita spending and debt, spending on government salaries, full-time government employees per 100,000 residents, violent and property crime, local school grades and graduation rates.

Not every municipality is graded. An “N/A” is posted on report cards for some tiny municipalities where no data was available.

Source: News Service of Florida

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