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Case Studies San Mateo County's Outcome-Based Management System
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San
Mateo County, California is using performance accountability to transform its
performance measurement and county budget systems.
Starting with the
2000-2001 and 2001-2002 fiscal years, San Mateo County is implementing an The
Outcome-Based Management system intended to integrate three critical
management tools—planning and priority setting; performance measurement, and
budget development—with the goal of focusing available resources toward
specific county-wide outcomes identified through a community visioning process.
See also:CS8 San Mateo County's Children's Summit Moves 350 Participants from Talk to Action 2.12
How do
we identify what works to improve conditions of well-being? |
In late 1999 and early
2000, the County Board of Supervisors initiated a visioning process to ask the
public to help them determine the county’s direction and long-term goals in
four key areas--People, Place, Prosperity and Partnerships. After developing draft
goals, they convened eight public meetings and set up a website to listen to
the communities’ idea on where the
county was and where it should be going. They also worked closely with groups
such as the Children’s Executive Council to incorporate existing measures of
community well-being into the process. Proposed progress measures for each goal were developed in
collaboration with consultants, county departments and other agencies. After
almost a year of discussion, the
Vision Document, including ten countywide Commitments, 25 Goals, Progress
Measures and baseline data is scheduled for final adoption in April 2001.
The next step was to
link ongoing efforts to improve county government performance measurement, and
ultimately, the county budget, to community-wide goals.
In late 1999, the County implemented a pilot phase of Outcome-Based
Management System under the direction of the County Manager, to identify and
measure performance outcomes for 21 county programs as part of the 2000-01
budget process. The County
Manager’s office coordinated training in planning and priority-setting as
well as Performance Accountability, and provided ongoing support to program
and fiscal staff, as they worked through the new process.
The process of defining program
measures, which often included the entire staff of the pilot programs, has
been well accepted. Many staff
appreciated the opportunity to discuss the purpose and impact of their work,
explore how their programs contributed to the county-wide goals, establish
priorities and expectations, and offer suggestions for improvement.
Overall, the first-time effort went well, and
the pilot was expanded to phase in all county programs over a
three-year period.
When fully implemented in FY 2004 county budget, the
Outcome-Based Management section of the budget will include descriptions of
every program with the following elements See
sample budget pages.
·
A Program Outcome Statement
which describes why the program exists, and how it benefits or impacts its
clients or customers.
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Headline Measures showing two
baselines for the most important measures of client well-being.
·
The Story Behind Baseline
Performance summarizing the major activities and achievements over the past
year, and explaining the factors influencing the baselines.
·
What will Be Done to Improve
Performance in the Next Two Years describing upcoming priorities and action
steps to meet performance targets.
·
Resource Allocation Summary,
including estimated spending, sources of funds, and net county cost,
indicating any discretionary portion that can be shifted to other programs
depending on County priorities and needs.
·
Funding Adjustments for the
upcoming two fiscal years, to support implementation of two-year priorities
and action steps to meet performance targets.
·
Summaries of performance
measurements for each program. Performance
measures reflect the four-quadrant performance accountability model, including
What/How Much We Do, How Well We Do It and Is Anyone Better Off.
Over the next ten
years, as the process is refined and early problems with data solved,
performance measures derived from the Outcome-Based Management system will be
used to set budget priorities and
direct funds toward successful programs that contribute to San Mateo
County’s Visioning Goals.
Making significant changes to the county budget process has been a massive undertaking. A Board of Supervisors subcommittee comprised of two Supervisors, the County Manager and three department heads oversees the effort, while a program/fiscal subcommittee of 22 operations and fiscal personnel carries out planning, implementation and evaluation of the initiative. In the County Manager’s office, the Deputy County Manager for the Budget and six Budget and Analysis staff have been involved in the effort, and 25 people throughout county government have assisted with training and support.
Contact:
Reyna Farrales,
Deputy County Manager of Budget
San Mateo County
400 County Center, First Floor
Redwood City, CA 94063
Phone: (650) 363-4130
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Case Study Author: Lynn DeLapp |