City of Harrah Research
City of Harrah Financial, Governance & Residency Briefing
A multi-year, independent review of Harrah’s budgets, debt profile, utility operations, school interdependence, and council residency compliance — compiled from public records to support transparent, data-informed decision-making.
Harrah by the Numbers
Compiled from estimate-of-needs filings, audits, SA&I reports, and school financials.
Why this research exists
This page brings together multiple strands of City of Harrah research into a single, public-facing briefing. The work was initiated in conjunction with an application for the City Manager position and is built around one central question: What is the true financial and governance position of Harrah, once all moving parts are seen together?
- City-side analysis (2011–2024). Reconstructed budget vs. actual trajectories for all major City and public-trust funds, using estimate-of-needs filings, audits, and SA&I data.
- HPWA & utility debt profile. Focused review of Harrah Public Works Authority (HPWA) bond, loan, and utility-debt dynamics, including how cash positions and debt service interact.
- School district & joint burden. Mapping Harrah Public Schools’ financial path (2011–2026) and modeling the combined tax & utility burden on households.
- Residency & representation integrity. Deep dive into Ward 3 residency, precinct coding, and the legal qualifications required for City Council service.
- Plain-language executive briefs. PDF briefings translate complex financials into narrative takeaways that can be understood by residents and policymakers.
- NotebookLM audio threads. Long-form audio walkthroughs accompany key documents for council/board members who prefer listening to reading.
- Interactive app. An AppSheet front-end lets you click into the underlying rows, filters, and supporting documents without needing to manage spreadsheets manually.
Budget, actuals & cash–debt paradox
The Harrah Estimate of Needs dataset consolidates more than a decade of City filings into a single table. It tracks fiscal year, fund type, category, and line item with budget vs. actual amounts, capturing both traditional governmental funds and public-trust entities such as HPWA and HIEDT.
- Coverage. Fiscal years 2011–2024, with detail across General Fund, Street & Alley, Park Fund, Capital Improvements / Capital Projects, HPWA, HIEDT, nonmajor funds, and government-wide totals.
- Magnitude. The table reflects approximately $587.5 million in aggregated actual activity and about $173.2 million in captured budgeted amounts across the period.
- Trend insight. Selected all-funds snapshots (budget vs. actual):
- “Harrah Oklahoma Cash Debt Paradox Risk.” NotebookLM audio examining how cash balances, utility debt, and capital projects interrelate.
- “Harrah’s 13-Year Evolution & Path Forward.” PDF research brief connecting budget trends, population pressures, and infrastructure needs.
- “The Twenty-Three Million Dollar City Utility Debt Secret.” Focused look at HPWA debt obligations and how they flow through the city’s financial story.
- “City of Harrah Full Budget Trajectory Appendix (FY15–FY26).” Appendix summarizing year-by-year all-funds totals for quick reference.
- “City of Harrah – 2643 / 2645 Financial Packets.” Supporting evidence files that ground the aggregate numbers in original source documents.
These documents can be opened directly from the research library below and cross-checked against the underlying estimate-of-needs rows in the interactive app.
Harrah Public Schools & the joint household burden
Harrah residents experience the City, HPWA, and Harrah Public Schools as a single, combined monthly reality — property taxes, utility bills, and school obligations all land in the same mailbox. The research therefore builds a joint picture of city and school finance.
- Harrah Public Schools 2011–2026. A master trajectory pulls together key school financial statements over a 15+ year window.
- Household impact model. The Harrah Joint Household Tax & Utility Burden Model estimates how city rates, HPWA charges, and school levies stack on a typical household budget.
- Interdependency brief. A joint City–School briefing highlights where coordinated planning could ease pressure on residents while still funding core services.
Longitudinal view of school financial statements and major inflection points.
How City and school decisions interact, overlap, and sometimes conflict.
Working model of what a Harrah family actually faces when all obligations are layered together.
Ward 3 domicile, precinct coding & charter compliance
One strand of this research examines whether Harrah’s elected representation actually aligns with the residency rules laid out in the City Charter and Oklahoma law, focusing on the Ward 3 City Council seat and the interaction between precinct coding and municipal boundaries.
- Voter Warehouse record review. Pulls the official Oklahoma Voter Information System (Voter Warehouse) file for the sitting Ward 3 councilmember, including voter ID, precinct, municipality label, school district, and domicile address.
- Boundary and district cross-check. Compares the registered address against Harrah city limits, Harrah Public Schools boundaries, and Choctaw / CNP territory.
- Charter-based legal analysis. Summarizes Harrah City Charter residency requirements (city-wide and ward-specific) and explains how domicile, not precinct labeling, controls eligibility.
Walkthrough of the Ward 3 councilmember’s voter registration record and address.
Explains how a single precinct can serve multiple municipalities, and why a “City of Harrah – At Large” label does not prove legal residency.
Plain-language explanation of how misinterpreting voter database fields can mask charter violations.
A long-form audio walkthrough connecting Harrah’s case to broader state-level residency and data issues.
City of Harrah document & audio library
The cards below highlight a subset of the documents listed in the City of Harrah index sheet. The full index is maintained in Excel / AppSheet and can be exported on request.
Explores how large cash balances and large utility debts can coexist — and what that means for long-term resilience.
Strategic-level narrative connecting the numbers to economic development, infrastructure, and growth.
Unpacks the structure and implications of Harrah’s utility-related obligations.
Reference tables summarizing multi-year budget & actual totals by fund.
Compares adopted budgets to audited results and flags variances that may merit follow-up discussion.
Experimental scenario model for the next five years if current trends continue versus if reforms are adopted.
Shows where City and District decision-making is tightly coupled and where coordination could relieve pressure.
Launch the City of Harrah Research App
For councilmembers, staff, or residents who want to go beyond PDFs and static summaries, the AppSheet app exposes the underlying rows, filters, and cross-links in a mobile-friendly interface.
City of Harrah – Research App
Central hub for estimate-of-needs rows, document index, residency case notes, and more.
How council & staff can work with this material
This page is designed to function as a living research front-door that can be referenced during council workshops, budget retreats, and one-on-one conversations with residents.
- Workshop tool. Use the financial trajectory and residency sections as starting points for facilitated discussion about where Harrah is today and where it needs to go.
- Evidence anchor. Every major claim in the research is grounded in a public document that can be opened directly from the library or the app.
- Onboarding aid. New councilmembers, staff, or advisory board members can use this page to catch up quickly on the last decade of decisions.
- Public transparency. If desired by the City, this page (or a redacted version) can be shared publicly to strengthen trust and invite constructive feedback.
- Continuous improvement. As new audits, SA&I filings, or policy decisions are made, they can be added to the underlying Excel/AppSheet framework and reflected here.
