GovMatrix City Score

Westminster gets a plain-language judgment backed by traceable evidence.

The score is not a single opaque number. It rolls up fiscal stability, spending allocation, transparency, procurement risk, anomaly signals, and public burden into one citizen-friendly readout.

Peer group: small CA municipalitiesComparison quality: StrongModel: score_v2

Adopted budget

$131.9M

FY2026

Budget per resident

$1,471

Public-burden framing, not raw-dollar framing

Top vendor share

14.0%

Procurement concentration in tracked payments

Displayed score

66

/100

Watchlist

Confidence: Limited

Top-level judgment

Mixed fundamentals with enough outlier signals to justify active public scrutiny.

GovMatrix compares Westminster against small CA municipalities and compresses the displayed score when source confidence is lower.

Confidence adjustment

Raw model score: 75.3

Limited source coverage means the score is heavily compressed toward neutral and should be treated as directional.

Main reasons

Reserves are trending upward

Westminster shows an improving reserve direction versus recent years.

Some evidence is still low-confidence

0 source documents still need review, which limits precision.

Budget growth remains near peer range

3.2% year-over-year growth is not a major outlier within the peer set.

Financial Stability

82

/100

Improving reserves and 3.2% budget growth shape this pillar.

Spending Efficiency

90

/100

24.7% administrative overhead and consulting growth drive this score.

Transparency

31

/100

0/1 documents are parsed into the current dataset.

Vendor Risk

73

/100

14.0% top-vendor share and 1 no-bid contracts affect this pillar.

Trend / Anomaly

89

/100

Public Works is the biggest growth area at 8.0%.

Public Burden

83

/100

$1,470 per resident frames the current adopted budget.

AI explanation layer

Deterministic facts first, language second

View source profile

In one sentence

Mixed fundamentals with enough outlier signals to justify active public scrutiny.

Benchmarked against 6 nearest jurisdictions using population, geography, and source coverage.

What stands out

Reserve trend: Improving

Reserve direction is used as the durability proxy in the current financial stability model.

Budget-to-actual variance: 2.6%

Higher variance can indicate planning drift or year-end pressure.

Top vendor share: 14.0%

Pacific Infrastructure Group accounts for the largest share of tracked payments.

Questions residents should ask

Why did consulting and outside services grow faster than staffing?

This gets at whether recurring work is being shifted into contracts rather than staffed operations.

Which categories drove the biggest gap between plan and actual spending?

Budget-to-actual drift is where broad totals turn into specific management decisions.

Why does this city spend differently from its nearest peers on administration and contracted work?

A peer comparison forces officials to explain whether the difference is structural or discretionary.

Provenance

Every conclusion should be traceable

How we score

Source coverage

0 documents

0 parsed, 0 OCR-only, 0 review-needed

Last updated 2026-03-16

Evidence links

1 findings

Findings are tied to source documents and used to constrain explanations.

Limited source coverage means the score is heavily compressed toward neutral and should be treated as directional.

Budget allocation with context

Toggle between share of tracked spend, per-resident impact, and year-over-year change.

Infrastructure

$945,000

40.8% of total

Consulting

$573,500

24.7% of total

Operations

$427,500

18.4% of total

Technology

$372,000

16.0% of total

Key normalized metrics

Raw totals are less useful than resident-level and peer-relative framing.

Tracked spend per resident

$26

Sample-based operational lens

Budget growth

3.2%

Year-over-year change in adopted budget

Biggest swing

Public Works

Up 8.0% year over year

Vendor and procurement pressure

Concentration is a risk indicator, not an accusation.

Top vendor share: 14.0%

Pacific Infrastructure Group

59.2% of top-vendor tracked spend • 1 contracts

$1,372,500

Tracked vendor signal

West Coast Fleet Services LLC

40.8% of top-vendor tracked spend • 1 contracts

$945,500

Tracked vendor signal

What deserves a closer look

These are watch indicators surfaced from current payment, contract, and trend data.

Public Works: Westminster contract milestone payment

Finance: Westminster services retainer invoice

Community Services: Westminster change-order support payment

Trend context

Public Works increased 8.0%, while One-time Capital Projects moved -2.5%.

Compare with peers

Comparison

Compare Westminster against similar cities

Benchmarking turns a score into a defensible story.

Open compare view

Strong comparison

Population size, geography, and source coverage make this a strong like-for-like comparison.

Westminster scores 4 points higher than Laguna Niguel primarily because it shows fewer anomaly signals, stronger financial stability, leaner spending allocation.

Westminster leads by 15 points on trend / anomaly.

Westminster leads by 10 points on financial stability.

Westminster leads by 10 points on spending efficiency.

GovMatrix score

Westminster: 66/100Laguna Niguel: 62/100

Administrative overhead

Westminster: 24.7%Laguna Niguel: 24.7%

Top vendor share

Westminster: 14.0%Laguna Niguel: 25.2%

Budget growth YoY

Westminster: 3.2%Laguna Niguel: 6.8%

Budget per resident

Westminster: $1,471Laguna Niguel: $2,263

Confidence

Westminster: LimitedLaguna Niguel: Limited

Status: Watchlist

Admin: 24.7%

Vendor: 14.0%

Budget: 3.2%

Status: Watchlist

Admin: 24.7%

Vendor: 25.2%

Budget: 6.8%

Status: Watchlist

Admin: 16.0%

Vendor: 14.0%

Budget: 4.1%

Status: Watchlist

Admin: 0.0%

Vendor: 29.6%

Budget: 6.6%