Houston city officials on Tuesday advanced new budget and transparency requirements that would require Mayor John Whitmire’s administration to save more money and publicly justify significant changes to infrastructure projects, following warnings about a shrinking city savings account and concerns over sudden project revisions.
Members of a key Houston City Council committee voted to recommend measures that would tighten rules on how the administration manages the city’s reserves and how it modifies capital improvement projects.
The proposed policies would require the Whitmire administration to maintain higher minimum balances in the city’s savings account, according to city budget documents presented to the committee. Budget staff told council members that the city’s financial reserves have declined in recent years and that the new standards aim to strengthen Houston’s fiscal position.
Under the measures, the administration would need to provide more detailed public reporting when it shifts funding among infrastructure projects in the city’s long-term capital improvement plan.
City officials said the transparency provisions would apply to changes involving major infrastructure work, including roads, drainage, and public facilities.
Several council members raised concerns in recent weeks about abrupt adjustments to infrastructure plans and asked for clearer explanations from the administration during public meetings.