Citizen involvement in the county budget process in Georgia.
Alexander, Ross ; Paterline, Brent ; Hulsey, John 等
Introduction and Literature Review
This study addresses a simple research question: How involved are
citizens in the county budget process in the state of Georgia? It also
addresses some secondary research questions: To what degree are citizens
involved in the county governmental process in general? How has the
Taxpayers Bill of Rights affected citizen involvement in the county
budget process in Georgia? How involved should citizens be in that
governmental process? Do budget professionals desire more or less
citizen involvement in the county budget process? How do citizens
participate in that governmental process, and what, specifically, can be
done to increase their involvement? In order to measure the level of
citizen involvement in the county budget process in Georgia, the authors
of this study surveyed budget and finance directors in all 159 counties
in the state because they are the most qualified to comment upon the
level of citizen involvement in the budget process, the effect of their
involvement on the budget process, the various methods of citizen
participation in that governmental process, and whether or not increased
citizen involvement in that aspect of local government is even
desirable.
Many scholars argue that any citizen involvement in local
government (including the budget process) is positive and should be
cultivated and encouraged by both elected and appointed officials. (1)
Others, however, note that citizen participation in the county budget
process does not always have the desired positive outcomes. (2) These
differences aside, most public administration scholars agree that
citizen participation in government is desirable and should be
encouraged, but they concede that such involvement is episodic and
sporadic at best, and can, at times, prove detrimental to the
functioning and administration of government. (3) Sidney Verba, Kay
Scholzman, and Henry Brady contend that while it is important to
understand who participates in the governmental process, it is equally
important to understand what they say and what they desire from
government as a result of their participation. (4) Renee A. Irvin and
John Stansbury argue that citizen participation is almost always
desirable, but there are conditions that determine when it is effective
and when it is not. Consequently, it is the responsibility of managers
and elected officials to facilitate situations whereby citizen
participation can have the most positive impact upon the governmental
process. (5) Kaifeng Yang adds that it is vital that citizens believe
that their participation in government is worthwhile and will have a
substantive effect on policy decisions. Public administrators, in turn,
must trust citizens and believe that their input is both genuine and
meaningful. (6)
Few studies exist which examine the role of citizens in the county
budget process. Most scholars and practitioners agree that citizen
involvement in that governmental process is limited, except when tax
increases are proposed. It appears that the financial intricacies of the
budget often confuse, bore, or simply do not pertain to many citizens.
Nonetheless, these studies agree that citizens should be more involved
in the county budget process. (7) Defining, exactly, what role citizens
should play in that process, however, is more difficult.
This study will contribute to the literature on citizen involvement
in government in several ways. First, it focuses on the budget process
at the county level of government exclusively. Second, its findings
suggest that not only are citizens relatively uninvolved in that
governmental process, but also that many county budget and finance
officials do not particularly desire their input. Third, it finds that
even when county budget and finance officials support and cultivate citizen involvement, their efforts may not translate into increased
citizen participation in government.
Taxpayer's Bill of Rights
The enactment of the Taxpayer's Bill of Rights (TBOR) by the
Georgia legislature in 1999, which seeks to prevent indirect taxation
and to enhance the rights of an individual property owner in opposing a
tax increase, has had a significant impact on the budget process for
county commissioners, budget and finance professionals, school boards,
and city councils. TBOR has directly affected the tax assessor function
of local government, influenced the administration of the budget
process, and heightened the responsibilities of taxing authorities in
Georgia.
Before the adoption of TBOR, local governments could have enacted
"back door" tax increases based on the inflationary growth in
the jurisdiction's digest. County commissions could levy the same
millage in the current fiscal year as they did in the previous fiscal
year and generate additional tax dollars as a result of the inflationary
growth in the digest? TBOR seeks to apprise citizens of such tax
increases, facilitate their participation in the budget process, and
empower them to offer feedback. According to the provisions of the law,
local governments must:
1. calculate a roll back millage rate to compensate for
inflationary growth in digest value
2. in the event of a property tax increase, hold three public
hearings to discuss the increase
3. publish a notice of the increase in the jurisdiction's
legal organ
4. issue a press release to local media explaining the increase.
An additional caveat of this law requires that in the event that
public hearings must be held, one of the three hearings must begin
between six and seven o'clock in the evening. Two of the three
required public hearings, however, might coincide with other mandatory
hearings associated with the millage rate process. Local government
officials must also publish a notice in newspapers a week in advance of
these required public hearings. While this process is ponderous, strict
adherence to these procedures must be observed before the
jurisdiction's digest can be approved by the State of
Georgia's Department of Revenue. TBOR may be riddled with
cumbersome calculations and detailed procedures, but it offers an
opportunity for substantive citizen involvement in the county budget
process. (9)
Methodology
The authors of this study mailed a one-page survey to budget and
finance directors (or the person most responsible for the budget) in all
159 Georgia counties. The survey primarily elicited responses regarding
citizen involvement in the county budget process. It also sought to
measure citizen involvement in the county governmental process in
general. The survey asked respondents to provide demographic data about
their respective counties, including population and annual operating
budget (general fund). It also asked budget and finance officials to
comment on the level of citizen involvement in their county's
budget process, the level of citizen participation in their
county's governmental process in general, the impact of TBOR on the
level of citizen involvement in their county's budget process, the
degree to which citizens should be involved in that process, and whether
or not they would like to see more or less citizen involvement in that
aspect of local government. Next, respondents were asked to rank the
methods of citizen involvement in the county budget process from those
that occur most frequently to those that occur less frequently (e.g.,
phone calls, e-mail, faxes, face-to-face contact, attendance at public
meetings, via elected officials or media). In an open-ended fashion, the
survey also asked respondents what, specifically, could be done to
encourage greater citizen involvement in the county budget process. (10)
Budget and finance officials were chosen to respond to the survey
for several reasons. First, they are most familiar with the county
budget process, including the financial intricacies, nuances, legal
regulations, and political pressures associated with it. Second, they
are most familiar with the impact of TBOR on the level of citizen
participation in the budget process in their respective counties. Third,
they could comment substantively not only upon the level of citizen
participation in the budget process, but also upon the level of citizen
participation in the county governmental process in general, with a high
degree of authority. Finally, budget and finance officials could best
identify the methods by which citizens are currently involved in the
county budget process and can offer solutions or strategies for
increasing citizen participation in that governmental process.
Results
The authors of this study received answers to their survey from 102
county budget and finance directors (out of a possible 159), an
encouraging sixty-four percent response rate. In those responses, one
immediately sees a tremendous variation in both population size and
annual operating budget among the counties. Some counties have less than
5,000 residents while others have more than 1,000,000. (11) Similarly,
some counties have annual operating budgets of less than three million
dollars while others utilize billion dollar budgets. (12) In sum, the
demographic diversity of Georgia counties yielded a wide range of
perspectives, opinions, political pressures and realities, and
priorities among respondents to this survey.
The dependent variable for this study, citizen involvement in the
county budget process, was measured on a Liken-type scale--the higher
the score, the greater the level of citizen involvement in the county
budget process. (13) The variable has a mean of 2.0, a median of 2.0,
and a standard deviation of .92. Seventy-five percent of county budget
and finance officials who responded to the survey reported little
citizen involvement in their county's budget process. Only two
percent stated that citizens were very involved in their county's
budget process.
Six independent variables were used as predictors of the dependent
variable--level of citizen involvement in the county budget process.
These include: (1) county population; (2) the annual operating budget of
the county; (3) citizen involvement in the county's governmental
process; (4) the degree to which TBOR has affected the county budget
process; (5) the county budget or finance director's attitude
toward citizen involvement in the budget process; and, (6) whether or
not county budget and finance officials desired more or less citizen
involvement in the budget process.
Most budget and finance officials reported that citizens in their
county were not very involved in their county's governmental
process in general. Less than three percent stated that citizens had a
great deal of involvement in the county governmental process. A majority
of those surveyed (82.4%) did not believe that TBOR affected the level
of citizen involvement in their county's budget process. Responses
to the query "how involved citizens should be in the budget
process" were mixed. Nearly thirty-four percent believed that
citizens should be involved in a county's budget process;
twenty-nine percent replied that citizens should not participate in that
governmental process. Responses were also mixed concerning the desire of
county budget and finance officials to have more citizen involvement in
the budget process. Forty-five percent favored greater citizen
involvement in the county budget process; twenty-six percent preferred
less.
The zero-order correlation results for all of the variables in this
study are presented in Table One. (14) The strongest predictor of
citizen involvement in the county budget process is the level of citizen
involvement in the county governmental process in general (r = .60).
Those counties that had a higher level of citizen involvement in the
county governmental process in general saw more citizen involvement in
the county budget process. There were three other significant predictors
of citizen involvement in the county budget process. First, counties had
higher rates of citizen involvement in the budget process if budget and
finance officials believed that citizens should be more involved in that
governmental process (r = .43). Second, counties in which budget and
finance officials believed that TBOR affected the level of citizen
involvement were more likely to have higher rates of citizen involvement
in the county budget process (r = .33). Third, counties in which budget
and finance officials desired more citizen involvement also had higher
rates of citizen involvement in the county budget process (r = .21)
In order to fully determine the influence of the independent
variables on the level of citizen involvement in the county budget
process, the authors of this study performed a multivariate regression
analysis. (15) For this analysis, the full range of scores on the
dependent variable of citizen involvement in the county budget process
were utilized, dichotomized variables were treated as dummy variables,
and ordinal measures were treated as interval. Only standardized
regression coefficients were used to assess the relative importance of
each independent variable. The results of the regression model are
presented in Table Two.
The dependent variable, level of citizen involvement in the county
budget process, was regressed upon the aforementioned six independent
variables. The total amount of variance explained by the regression
model is forty-three percent ([R.sup.2] = .43). The results of this
analysis show that the strongest predictor of citizen involvement in the
county budget process is citizen involvement in the county government
process in general (beta = .44). This relationship is significant at the
.01 level. There also is a strong positive relationship between a
budget/finance official's attitude toward citizen involvement and
actual citizen involvement in the county budget process (beta = .41).
Budget and finance officials who supported citizen involvement were more
likely to see a higher level of citizen participation in their county
budget process. This relationship is significant at the .01 level.
Interestingly, budget and finance officials who favored a higher level
of citizen involvement in the county budget process had a lower level of
citizen involvement than those officials who desired less citizen
involvement (beta = -.24). This relationship is significant at the .05
level. None of the other three independent variables--county population,
county budget, or the impact of TBOR--are significant predictors of
citizen involvement in the county budget process.
With regard to the more open-ended, qualitative data, budget and
finance professionals responded overwhelmingly that citizens demonstrate
their involvement in the county budget process primarily through phone
calls, e-mails, faxes, face-to-face contact, and attendance at public
meetings. They participated in the county budget process less frequently
via elected officials or media. These results were relatively constant
among all counties, regardless of population or annual operating budget.
When asked to propose specific methods to increase citizen involvement
in the county budget process, budget and finance officials offered the
following suggestions:
* More meetings with citizens
* More public notices of meetings in media outlets
* Conveying, in understandable terms, how the budget works and what
the budgetary process involves, including offering budget seminars for
citizens
* Creating a citizen panel to offer input into the budgetary
process
* More personal contact between budget professionals and the public
* Surveying citizens to determine budget priorities
* Explaining better how budget issues directly affect citizens
* Threatening to raise taxes
Most budget and finance officials expressed frustration with
citizen involvement in the county budget process, explaining that
citizens only seem to become substantively involved when issues of
taxation or others directly relating to them arose. Many complained
that, despite TBOR requirements for additional public hearings to
discuss proposed tax increases, few citizens participated at all, only
one or two per year in many cases. Budget and finance officials dismiss
these frequent participants largely as "extremists" whose
input they view as harmful to the county budget process. While many
budget professionals stated that they would like to have more citizen
participation in their county's budget process, they complained
that current input is often motivated by self-interest and politics and
usually proves to be irrelevant, uninformed, and, generally, not very
helpful.
Discussion of Results Citizen Involvement in General
Not surprisingly, this study found that citizens are not
significantly involved in the county budget process. Seventy-five
percent of respondents to the survey reported little citizen involvement
in their county's budget process; only two percent claimed that
citizens were very involved in that governmental process. This finding
can be attributed to several factors. First, since citizen involvement
in the local governmental process in general is limited, one would
expect that trend to remain constant with regard to the county budget
process as well. Considering that only three percent of respondents to
the survey reported that citizens were greatly involved in their county
governmental process overall, it would be unrealistic to assume a large
or even moderate level of citizen involvement in the county budget
process. Second, the intricate nature of the budget process is
technical, detailed, and befuddling to many. Even if budget and finance
officials attempt to make the process more "citizen-friendly"
it might still be overwhelmingly technical and confusing to the average
citizen. Third, unless the budget debate focuses on a tax increase, most
citizens consider the process irrelevant or unimportant.
In the open-ended portion of the survey, many budget professionals
explained that citizens elect commissioners to represent their interests
in the county budget process so they do not have to become directly
involved. Many added that as professionals they are required to uphold the public interest in budgetary and finance matters so that citizens
need not involve themselves in the process to a large degree. To be
sure, most budget and finance officials stated that it would be
beneficial for citizens to become more involved in the county budget
process and most would welcome such involvement, but many concede that
this is an unrealistic expectation.
One might explain this finding by examining Georgia's
political culture. Georgia can be characterized as a
'traditional' state whereby many citizens may consider voting
as their only participatory obligation or role in the government
process. They may believe that the actual work of governing should be
left primarily to elected officials who they have chosen or the
professional administrators appointed by those whom they have elected.
In more progressive states (e.g., Minnesota or Wisconsin), citizens have
a stronger tradition of participating in government processes than one
finds in traditional states (e.g., Georgia and many other southern
states). This distinction is worth noting because as state and regional
political cultures vary, the expectation of citizen participation in
government in general may be relatively high in some states but
relatively low in others.
How Involved Should Citizens Be in the Budget Process? (Part One)
Budget professionals offered mixed responses when asked to comment
on how involved citizens should be in the county budget process. Whereas
thirty-four percent stated that citizens should be relatively involved,
twenty-nine percent believed that they should be relatively uninvolved.
This ambiguity tends to support Yang's argument that administrators
do not always trust the motivations of citizens who become involved in
governmental process. (16) Moreover, since most citizens remain
relatively uninvolved in the county government and budget processes,
budget professionals may be wary of those who choose to participate
either wholeheartedly or even sporadically because these officials have
become accustomed to executing their duties with little, if any, citizen
"interference."
Similarly, only forty-five percent of respondents to the survey
expressed a desire to see more citizen involvement in the county budget
process; twenty-six percent favored even less involvement. This hardly
represents a ringing endorsement for citizen involvement efforts at the
county level. Despite an emphasis in the literature and among officials
to the contrary, citizen involvement in the county budget process does
not seem to be a priority among many budget professionals surveyed in
this study. In fact, more than a quarter desire less citizen involvement
in the county budget process, a result that can he described as
significant and one that many would find disconcerting. Many budget and
finance officials may simply view citizen participation in the county
budget process as less than genuine, subversive, irritating, or
counterproductive. Perhaps they do not believe that citizens can
contribute substantively in a positive manner to the county budget
process and thus see increased citizen participation as doing more harm
than good.
Variable Analysis of Predicting Citizen Involvement in the County
Budget Process
County Population
The authors of this study theorized that county population would be
a significant predictor of citizen involvement in the county budget
process. They believed that it would be easier for citizens to
participate in the budget process (and the government process in
general) in smaller counties with less governmental bureaucracy, fewer
employees, and perhaps a "closer" connection between elected
and appointed officials and the public. This assumption proved false;
population did not affect the level of citizen participation in the
county budget process or the degree that budget and finance officials
consider citizen input.
County Yearly Operating Budget
Similarly, budget size did not have an impact on citizen
participation in the county budget process. The authors of this study
theorized that the smaller the budget, the smaller the county, and the
more "direct" the connection between the public and the county
government, the greater the level of citizen involvement in the county
budget process. This assumption also proved to be incorrect; counties
possessing small budgets, intermediate budgets, and large budgets all
considered citizen input about the same, that is, not much.
Citizen Involvement in the County Government Process
The strongest predictor of citizen involvement in the county budget
process was overall citizen participation in the county governmental
process in general. The more citizens were encouraged to participate in
all aspects of county governance, the more they were encouraged to
participate in the budget process. Not surprisingly, if citizens believe
that their participation will have a substantive, positive effect on the
local governmental process, they are more likely to participate in it.
Similarly, if local government officials (including budget and finance
officials) cultivate an environment of participation with palpable rewards, citizens may be more likely to participate in all county
government activities because they realize that their involvement could
reap substantive benefits. Unfortunately, as the results of this study
show, few budget and finance officials actively encourage or cultivate
citizen participation efforts.
Effect of TBOR
According to the findings of this study, TBOR has had little impact
on the level of citizen involvement in the county budget process. An
overwhelming majority of respondents to the survey (82.4 percent)
maintain that the law, which sought to cultivate citizen participation,
had not affected their county's budgetary process either positively
or negatively. Despite formal legislation mandating that counties adopt
measures to make it easier for citizens to participate, including more
public notices and meetings, this effort to guarantee citizens certain
rights, privileges, and recourse on matters of taxation has failed to
increase citizen involvement in the county budget process.
The findings of this study further suggest that for those budget
and finance officials who believe that TBOR has had an affect on citizen
participation (albeit a small percentage of those surveyed), the rate of
citizen involvement in the budgetary process has increased in those
counties. Less than twenty percent view TBOR as important to the
cultivation of citizen participation efforts in the county budget
process. Perhaps more budget and finance officials should view the law
as a tool to aid the county budget process rather than an impediment,
nuisance, or unnecessary statute meant to constrain the execution of
their duties.
How Involved Should Citizens Be in the Budget Process? (Part Two)
As explained earlier, citizens are relatively uninvolved in the
budgetary process at the county level in Georgia. Those counties where
budget and finance officials stated that citizens should be actively
involved in that governmental process enjoyed a higher rate of citizen
participation. Few officials, however, consider citizen participation a
positive contribution to the county budget process. If budget
professionals and county government officials in general considered
citizen input valuable and were less suspicious of the motivations
behind citizen involvement in the governmental process (including the
county budget process), perhaps they would desire greater citizen
involvement in that process and do more to promote it. Based on the
findings of this study, however, this appears unlikely.
More or Less Involvement?
Less than half (forty-five percent) of the respondents to the
survey expressed a desire for greater citizen involvement in the county
budget process; approximately a quarter (twenty-six percent) stated that
they would like to see less citizen involvement in that governmental
process. According to the results of the regression analysis presented
earlier, budget and finance officials who want more citizen involvement
in the county budget process actually reported less citizen
participation than those who do not wish to see increased citizen
involvement in that governmental process. This disheartening finding
shows that despite the best efforts of a dedicated few, their efforts
may be for naught. In other words, an investment in promoting citizen
involvement may have a negative payoff for many budget and finance
officials. It appears that the motivations for citizen involvement and
the behavior of citizens are hard to predict, making it even more
difficult for budget and finance officials to include citizens in the
county budget process. This may explain why few of these budget
professionals encourage citizen involvement, respect the contributions
and motivations of citizens who do become involved, and seek greater
citizen participation in the county budget process. As Vigoda, Kirlin
and Kirlin, Timney, and Yang argue, citizens should be viewed as
partners or valued stakeholders, not adversaries or impediments, in
governmental process. (17)
How Citizens Get Involved
As the qualitative, open-ended results of this study show, when
citizens get involved in the county budget process, they do so through
traditional avenues of participation, that is, phone calls, e-mails,
faxes, face-to-face contact with budget officials, and attendance at
public meetings. Less frequent methods of citizen participation occur
via elected officials or media. Citizens who chose to be involved in the
budget process feel comfortable enough to contact officials directly
whether it be face-to-face, at a public meeting, or through some form of
technology.
When respondents to the survey offered suggestions for improving
the level of citizen involvement in the county budget process, they
emphasized increasing the number and frequency of public meetings and
notices in the media. Many, however, recognized that more meetings and
notices usually does not translate into increased participation. It thus
appears that these 'traditional' suggestions may not meet the
demands of citizens and may waste the time and resources of the county
government. Government officials might offer different, more innovative
(yet realistic and cost effective) strategies for improving the level of
citizen involvement in the county budget process. According to officials
surveyed in this study, increased citizen involvement in the county
budget process can best be achieved through better explaining and
presenting the budget itself and educating the public regarding its
importance in not only the functioning of the county government but in
their lives as well.
In a less technical and confusing format, budget and finance
officials could present relevant budget information in an educational,
citizen-friendly format, explaining budget priorities, impacts, and
strategies. Many budget professionals stated that these seminars could
be an innovative method of increasing citizen involvement in the county
budget process, but most remained skeptical of any efforts to increase
such involvement. Almost every budget/finance official who offered an
open-ended response to the survey noted that the only method of
increasing citizen involvement in the county budget process is by
threatening to raise taxes because citizens only seem to get involved
when their pocketbooks are affected directly. Taking this into account,
budget and local government officials, if they wish to increase citizen
involvement in the county budget process, need to convey that many
issues relating to the budget directly affect the daily lives of
citizens.
Significance of Findings
As this study has shown, citizens are relatively uninvolved in the
process of local government and even less so in the county budget
process. But what effect does this lack of participation have? Is it
damaging to democracy or government service delivery at the local
(county) level? What can citizens gain through active participation in
the county budget process? The answers to the first two questions are
too complex to address here, but this study can address the third query.
As discussed earlier, many citizens, especially those in states
with traditional political cultures, view voting as their primary and
perhaps only obligation in participating in government. They believe
that the work of governing should be left to elected and appointed
officials. Except for those rare occasions when taxes may be raised,
many citizens are either disinterested, uninformed, or unwilling to
participate in the county budget process because they may believe that
it is not their role or responsibility. This may soon change. As
government continues to devolve in the federal system, counties will
have to assume greater fiscal responsibility for service and program
delivery. As counties grow, expand, and develop economically (as is the
case for many counties in Georgia), their budget and finance decisions
and processes will not only involve greater amounts of capital and
resources, but will also affect citizens more so on a daily basis. Given
these pending circumstances, it would benefit citizens to become more
directly involved in the county budget process to ensure that decisions
concerning resource allocations benefit them and their community. In so
doing, citizens can have a voice in determining development and fiscal
priorities in their communities, including the building of new schools
and public buildings, road construction, economic development projects,
green space preservation, and recreation programs.
Conclusion
Several conclusions can be drawn from the findings of this study.
First, citizens are not very involved in the budget process at the
county level in Georgia and many budget and finance officials contend
that they should not be involved. Second, county budget and finance
officials do not value citizen input and participation in the budget
process; in fact, most would like to see even less citizen involvement
in that governmental process. Third, TBOR has failed to encourage
greater citizen involvement in the county budget process. Fourth,
citizen involvement in the county budget process is positively
correlated with citizen involvement in the county governmental process
in general: the higher the rate of participation in the county
governmental process in general, the higher the rate of citizen
involvement in the county budget process. Fifth, the efforts of county
budget and finance officials to encourage citizen participation in the
budget process sometimes result in lower levels of involvement.
In sum, this study presents a bleak picture for those seeking to
increase citizen involvement in the governmental process in general.
Despite the passage of legislation geared towards increasing the level
of citizen involvement in the county budget process in Georgia, citizens
remain uninvolved and/or disinterested in that governmental process.
Perhaps more disheartening or alarming is the realization that many
budget and finance officials do not view this as a negative outcome.
The extent to which the results of this study can be applied to
other cases is seemingly positive. They can be "exported" to
other states that have similar geographic, demographic, political,
economic, and social characteristics as Georgia, which has an extremely
high degree of variation among counties in terms of race,
urban/suburban/exurban/rural distinction, wealth, tax base, political
climate, and economic growth rates. (18) While these results deal
exclusively with Georgia, they might prove useful to scholars and county
administrators struggling with similar problems in other states.
ENDNOTES
(1) See, for example, "Promises of Participation,"
University of Southern California Neighborhood Participation Policy
Brief I (April 2003): 1-5; Maureen Berner, "Citizen Participation
in Local Government Budgeting," Popular Government 66 (Spring
2001):23-30; Aimee Franklin and Brandi Carberry-George, "Analyzing
How Local Governments Establish Service Priorities," Public
Budgeting and Finance 19 (September 1999):31-46.
(2) See, for example, Carol Ebdon and Aimee Franklin,
"Searching for a Role for Citizens in the Budget Process,"
Public Budgeting and Finance 24 (March 2004):32-49.
(3) Richard C. Cole, "Citizen Participation in Municipal
Politics," American Journal of Political Science 19 (November
1975):761-81; Robert Goodin and John Dryzek, "Rational
Participation: The Politics of Relative Power," British Journal of
Political Science 10 (1980):273-92; Michael W. Hirlinger,
"Citizen-Initiated Contacting of Local Government Officials: A
Multivariate Analysis," Journal of Politics 54 (May 1992):55363;
Sidney Verba, Kay Scholzman, and Henry Brady, "Citizen Activity:
Who Participates? What Do They Say?" American Political Science
Review 87 (June 1993):303-19; Mary Timney, "Overcoming
Administrative Barriers to Citizen Participation: Citizens as Partners,
Not Adversaries," in Government is Us: Public Administration in an
Anti Government Era, eds. Cheryl Simrell King and Camilla Stivers (Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage, 1998), 88-101; Eran Vigoda, "From
Responsiveness to Collaboration: Governance, Citizens, and the Next
Generation of Public Administration," Public Administration Review
65 (September/October 2002):527-40; John J. Kirlin and Mary K. Kirlin,
"Strengthening Effective Government--Citizen Connections through
Greater Civic Engagement," Public Administration Review 65
(September 2002):80-85; Renee A. Irvin and John Stansbury, "Citizen
Participation in Decision-Making: Is it Worth the Effort?" Public
Administration Review 64 (February 2004):55-65; Brian Adams,
"Public Meetings and the Democratic Process" Public
Administration Review 64 (February 2004):43-54; Lisa Blomgren-Bingham,
Tina Nabatchi, and Rosemary O'Leary, "The New Governance:
Practices and Processes for Stakeholder and Citizen Participation in the
Work of Government," Public Administration Review 65 (September
2005):547-58; Kaifeng Yang, "Public Administrators' Trust in
Citizens: A Missing Link in Citizen Involvement Efforts," Public
Administration Review 65 (May 2005):273-85.
(4) Verba, Scholzman, and Brady, "Citizen Activity,"
303-19.
(5) Irvin and Stansbury, "Citizen Participation in
Decision-Making," 55-65.
(6) Yang, "Public Administrators' Trust in
Citizens," 273-85.
(7) Ebdon and Franklin, "Searching for a Role for Citizens in
the Budget Process," 32-49; "Promises of Participation,"
1-5; Berner, "Citizen Participation in Local Government
Budgeting," 23-30; Franklin and Carberry-George, "Analyzing
How Local Governments Establish Service Priorities," 31-46.
(8) For details regarding the provisions of TBOR, see Georgia
Department of Revenue, "Property Tax Guide for the Georgia
Taxpayer: Taxpayer Bill of Rights,"
http://www.etax.ptd/adm/taxguide/rights.shtml (accessed April 15, 2006),
125. The Tax Digest is a listing of all property and property values in
the county. It includes real estate, personal property, and exempt
property, and is the basis on which property taxes are calculated.
Millage refers to the calculation to determine property tax rates.
(9) See Georgia Department of Revenue, "Property Tax Guide for
the Georgia Taxpayer: Taxpayer Bill of Rights,"
http://www.etax.dor.ga.gov/ptd/adm/taxguide/rights.shtml (accessed April
15, 2006), 1-25.
(10) The survey asked respondents to answer the following
questions: What is the population of your county? What is the yearly
operating budget of your county? How would you describe the level of
citizen involvement in your county's budget process? How would you
describe the level of citizen involvement in your county's
government process in general? How has TBOR affected the level of
citizen involvement in your county's budget process? In your
opinion, how involved should citizens be in the budget process in your
county? Would you like to see less citizen involvement, the same level
of citizen involvement, or more citizen involvement in your
county's budget process? Rank the methods of citizen involvement in
your county's budget process. What, specifically, can be done to
encourage or facilitate more citizen involvement in the budget process
in your county?
(11) The mean population of the counties surveyed is 54,866.12,
with a median population of 23,324.50, and a standard deviation of
10,140.27.
(12) The mean annual operating budget is $44.97 million, with a
median of $13.97 million, and a standard deviation of $12.92 million.
(13) Likert-type scales generally ask respondents to what degree
they either agree or disagree with a given statement, or to rate the
level of effect of a given variable. The Likert employed in this study
used a range of five responses to rank "level of involvement."
For example, a score of "1" being "not at all
involved," and a score of "5" being "very
involved."
(14) Pearson's Correlation Coefficient was used to determine
the zero-order correlations between the variables in this study. The
instrument is used to measure the linear or straight-line relationship
between two variables with a score of+ 1.00 and -1.00. The coefficient expresses the strength of the relationship, and the direction of the
relationship is indicated by the sign (positive or negative) of the
correlation coefficient. A zero-order coefficient includes no control
variables.
(15) Multiple regression is a statistical technique that allows one
to use two or more independent variables as predictors of a dependent
variable, showing the effects of each independent variable on the
dependent variable while controlling for the effects of each independent
variable. The effect of each independent variable is measured by a
standardized regression coefficient and the variance (R2) tells how well
a set of variables explains a dependent variable.
(16) Yang, "Public Administrators' Trust in
Citizens," 273-85.
(17) Ibid.; Vigoda, "From Responsiveness to
Collaboration," 527-40; Kirlin and Kirlin, "Strengthening
Effective Government--Citizen Connections through Greater Civic
Engagement," 80-85; Timney, "Overcoming Administrative
Barriers to Citizen Participation," 88-101.
(18) For details on the diverse nature of the state of Georgia in
the areas of race, urban/suburban/exurbanrural distinction, wealth, tax
base, political climate, and economic growth rates, see Glenwood Ross,
"Demographics of Georgia I: Population and Projections to
2030," Fiscal Research Center, Andrew Young School of Policy
Studies, Georgia State University, Atlanta, Georgia, Fiscal Research
Center Report No. 120, http://www.aysps.gsu.edu/frc/801.htm (accessed
June 1, 2007), 1-43; Ken Heaghney, "Georgia's Economy: Trends
and Outlook," Fiscal Research Center, Andrew Young School of Policy
Studies, Georgia State University, Atlanta, Georgia, Fiscal Research
Center Report No. 145, http://www.aysps.gsu.edu/frc/801.htm (accessed
June 1, 2007), 1-28; Richard Hawkins, "A Georgia Fiscal History of
the Past Forty Years," Fiscal Research Center, Andrew Young School
of Policy Studies, Georgia State University, Atlanta, Georgia, Fiscal
Research Center Report No. 127, http://www.aysps.edu/frc/475.htm
(accessed June 1, 2007), 1-42.
ROSS ALEXANDER is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at
North Georgia College & State University in Dahlonega, Georgia;
BRENT PATERLINE is a Professor of Criminal Justice at North Georgia
College & State University; JOHN HULSEY is the Finance Director of
Jackson County, Georgia.
Table One
Zero-Order Correlations among Variables (N = 102)
(1) (2) (3) (4)
(1) Citizen Involvement in 1
Budget Process
(2) County Population .01 1
(3) County Budget .02 .97 1
(4) Citizen Involvement in .60 ** .06 .08 1
Government
(5) Taxpayers Bill Affected .33 ** -.05 -.04 .38 **
Involvement
(6) Attitude Toward Citizen .43 ** .09 .10 .43 **
Involvement
(7) Desired Citizen .21 * .05 .08 .37 **
Involvement
(5) (6) (7)
(1) Citizen Involvement in
Budget Process
(2) County Population
(3) County Budget
(4) Citizen Involvement in
Government
(5) Taxpayers Bill Affected 1
Involvement
(6) Attitude Toward Citizen .14 1
Involvement
(7) Desired Citizen .14 .76 ** 1
Involvement
** p < .01
* p < .05
Table Two
Standardized Regression Coefficients for Level of
Citizen Involvement in the County Budget Process
Citizen Involvement
Independent Variables in Budget Process
County Population -.05
County Budget .01
Citizen Involvement in .44 **
County Government
TBOR has Affected Involvement .13
Attitude Toward Citizen Involvement .41
Desired Citizen Involvement -.24 *
** p <.01
* p < .05
[R.sup.2] = .43