Page 49 - CityofMansfieldFY23Budget
P. 49

THE CITY OF MANSFIELD, TEXAS



                                           Strategic Fiscal Plan




                   History and Purpose of the Plan

                   Mansfield, Texas, is located in the southern sector of the fourth largest metropolitan area
                   in the United States of America. The City of Mansfield encompasses 36.69 square miles.
                   Current population estimates by  City Planners suggest  that  the City is home  to
                   approximately 77,000 people. In 1980, the City claimed 8,102 residents. Since 1980, the
                   City’s population  has grown  by  nearly 69,000 residents. Mansfield, Texas is the third
                   largest City in the County, and is  third only to Fort Worth and Arlington, Texas in
                   Tarrant County.

                   Population growth  is  expected  to continue in the  Dallas-Arlington-Fort Worth region.
                   The Council of Governments, a coalition of local governments in the metropolitan area,
                   continues to project  growth  in  the population  North Texas and specifically  in Tarrant
                   County over the next three decades. Mansfield City Planners also project growth in the
                   City of Mansfield with an estimated population of 112,000 residents within in the next
                   ten years.

                   In the decade of the 1970s, community leaders recognized the demands of meeting the
                   needs of the new residents within the City of Mansfield, Texas.  Infrastructure was aging
                   and  unable  to support  the  expectations of a new and  increasing  population.   City
                   resources  were limited,  including  limited  professional staff,  limited  infrastructure, and
                   limited funding capacity.   Land use  was  primarily  agricultural.  Community leaders
                   gathered, raised taxes, recruited,  retained professional  staff,  and began  building  a
                   community. These community leaders are still active in the community today.

                   In addressing the service demands of the community, the City of Mansfield jumped in
                   front of the expectations of growth in the decade of the 1980’s and began creating and
                   adopting several planning models to manage and guide in the development of the City’s
                   infrastructure to support  the needs of the  growing community  and its  demand for
                   services. These planning models  included  the  Master Land Use Plan,  the  Master
                   Thoroughfare Plan,  the  Master Drainage Plan,  the  Master  Water & Sewer  Plan,  the
                   Master Parks Plan,  and  the  Master  Fiscal  Plan,  or  the  City’s  Strategic Plan.  Planning
                   models are generally based upon the expectations of future populations and the expected
                   use of infrastructure and services necessary to support the expected populations. These
                   models are carefully designed, and some require the public’s involvement to ensure that
                   these  documents are  consistent  with the interests  of the  vested stakeholders in  the
                   community. Plans change little year after year because of the deliberative processes and
                   the assumptions used in planning for future land use and needed infrastructure. Generally,
                   the primary planning model that drives the rest of the planning models is the land use

                                                                                                       48
   44   45   46   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54