Politics & Government

El Paso Finances Earn 'C' Grade

A new report on the financial condition of the 75 most populous cities ranks El Paso no. 33 in the nation for fiscal health.

A new report on the financial condition of the 75 most populous cities ranks El Paso no. 33 in the nation for fiscal health. The report is based on the cities’ 2017 comprehensive annual financial reports, the most recent data available.

The analysis by Truth in Accounting, a non-profit government finance watchdog group, found El Paso needs $881 million to get out of the red, or $4,500 from each of its taxpayers.

According to the watchdog's annual Financial State of the Cities report, El Paso has $1,512 million in bills and only $631 million in available assets to pay those bills after capital and restricted assets are excluded. This results in a $881 million shortfall, or a $4,500 El Paso Taxpayer Burdenâ„¢, which is each taxpayer's share of the municipal debt after the city's available assets have been tapped. TIA's Taxpayer Burden indicator incorporates both assets and liabilities, including pension debt.

Find out what's happening in El Pasofor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The bottom line is that El Paso does not have enough money to pay its bills, which is why it received a "C" grade for its fiscal health.

You can read the full report here and El Paso's individual report here.

Find out what's happening in El Pasofor free with the latest updates from Patch.

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