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Institutional Capacity Assessment
Population
1.65M
Total Budget
$5.8B
Budget / capita
$3,515
Budget / sq mi
$11.2M
Form of Govt
council manager
Legal Regime
Home Rule
Binding Constraint
Strategic Execution · Primary constraint
Fifth-largest US city (~1.6M) and fastest-growing major US city under council-manager form. Sun-belt growth puts pressure on water resources (CAP Colorado River allocation cuts) and extreme heat infrastructure. Strong professional management tradition.
State Context · Arizona
View Arizona full profile →Innovation assets, the full constraint list, and state signals are on the Arizona profile.
6-Dimension Assessment
Council-manager form enables administrative directives without mayoral approval — strong foundation for operational innovation.
Limited collective bargaining — some workforce flexibility, but must navigate state labor law constraints.
Revenue structure
Triple-AAA bond ratings provide access to the lowest-cost capital in the market — a foundational fiscal asset.
Archetype
sun beltAt this scale, coordination complexity is the primary constraint — 35+ departments cannot all innovate simultaneously.
Climate risks
Anchor institutions
High state preemption risk means local innovation wins can be reversed by state legislation — build coalitions and document outcomes for defense.
Strong innovation foundation — most building blocks in place. Focus on systematizing and deepening.
Portfolio & Coverage
The full array of reform & innovation work, placed by work area and time horizon. Empty work areas are a finding, not a blank.
8 initiatives across 3 of 11 work areas · 8 with no tracked initiatives
| Work area | H1 · now | H2 · next | H3 · later |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fiscal & procurementcoverage gap | — | — | — |
| Workforce & talentcoverage gap | — | — | — |
| Digital services | — | ||
| Data & evidence | — | ||
| Resident engagementcoverage gap | — | — | — |
| Infrastructure & mobilitycoverage gap | — | — | — |
| Health & safetycoverage gap | — | — | — |
| Housingcoverage gap | — | — | — |
| Climate & resiliencecoverage gap | — | — | — |
| Governance & coordination | — | ||
| Economic developmentcoverage gap | — | — | — |
The reform & innovation portfolio the diagnostic tracks — not the jurisdiction’s entire operation. Empty work areas are shown as coverage gaps, not omissions. Click an initiative for its source.
Resident Feedback Loop
Resident Feedback Loop
Operational responsivenessNo structured loop
Intake only
Responsive
Closed-loop
Co-productive
Collects resident input but without a systematic response. Uses Zencity 'Your Voice' online survey (census-weighted but not a probability-sample NCS).
phoenix.gov communications/community-survey; boards.phoenix.gov
Community Context
Community Context
Beyond institutional capacityCost of living
106 (US=100)
Near US avg
Geographic setting
High desert
Inland
Peer Matches
Compare with structural peers →Systematization
101
match score
City of San Antonio shares City of Phoenix's sun belt profile and council manager governance, facing high-growth pressures on planning, infrastructure, and equity outcomes with balanced operating budgets. The constraints that shape City of Phoenix's reform options largely apply here too.
Strategic Execution
84
match score
City of Austin shares City of Phoenix's structural backbone — council manager governance and comparable scale, and has adopted an AI governance framework that survives political turnover. Its experience is transferable precisely because the underlying constraints are the same.
What to copy
City of Austin shares City of Phoenix's structural backbone — council manager governance and comparable scale, and has adopted an AI governance framework that survives political turnover. Its experience is transferable precisely because the underlying constraints are the same.
Strategic Execution
68
match score
City of San Jose shares City of Phoenix's structural backbone — council manager governance and comparable scale, and has adopted an AI governance framework that survives political turnover. Its experience is transferable precisely because the underlying constraints are the same.
What to copy
City of San Jose shares City of Phoenix's structural backbone — council manager governance and comparable scale, and has adopted an AI governance framework that survives political turnover. Its experience is transferable precisely because the underlying constraints are the same.
Pick a pressure to trace its chain — the factor, the pathways that address it, and the mission it feeds. Opt-in; the full profile above is unchanged.
Pressure
Narrow revenue authority
Pathways addressing it
Procurement Reform
Rebuilding procurement to cut cycle time and capture savings on existing spend — directly addressing Narrow revenue authority. Phoenix brings professional council-manager management and its What Works Cities certification, with a budget of $3,515/resident and $11.2M/sq mi to this work.
Policy & Regulatory Reform
Reforming local policy and regulation (land use, fees, codes) to unblock reform — directly addressing Narrow revenue authority. Phoenix brings professional council-manager management and its What Works Cities certification, with a budget of $3,515/resident and $11.2M/sq mi to this work.
Feeds the mission
translation/execution gap (capacity exists but doesn't land) — initiatives selected for delivery routines, performance management, and cross-agency alignment (Cluster A default — no specific archetype keyword detected).
Innovation Pathway Recommendations
Sequenced against City of Phoenix’s binding-constraint stack and fiscal capacity — not a generic cluster template.
Shifting from compliance-based to outcomes-based purchasing — buying for results rather than checking specification boxes. Draws on Harvard Government Performance Lab's problem-based procurement methodology, NASPO cooperative purchasing, and Bloomberg cities' procurement innovation programs.
Why this fits City of Phoenix
Rebuilding procurement to cut cycle time and capture savings on existing spend — directly addressing Narrow revenue authority. Phoenix brings professional council-manager management and its What Works Cities certification, with a budget of $3,515/resident and $11.2M/sq mi to this work.
Do now. The capacity to run this already exists — deploy it against the binding constraint now.
Example solutions
Key organizations
Updating the rules that govern how the city operates — zoning codes, permitting processes, licensing regimes, and business regulations. Draws on regulatory sandbox models, the zoning reform movement, and the Harvard Kennedy School regulatory review methodology.
Why this fits City of Phoenix
Reforming local policy and regulation (land use, fees, codes) to unblock reform — directly addressing Narrow revenue authority. Phoenix brings professional council-manager management and its What Works Cities certification, with a budget of $3,515/resident and $11.2M/sq mi to this work.
Sequence next. Feasible but exposed to state preemption — scope to areas of clear local authority, or pair with state-level coordination.
Prerequisites: State authorization where preempted
Example solutions
Key organizations
Modernizing how government services reach residents — moving from paper-based, in-person processes to digital-first, mobile-accessible interactions. Draws on the USDS playbook, Code for America's approach, and the Bloomberg i-team model.
Why this fits City of Phoenix
Modernizing citizen-facing services (311, online permitting, benefits access) — directly addressing translating institutional capacity into citywide execution. Phoenix brings professional council-manager management, with a budget of $3,515/resident and $11.2M/sq mi to this work.
Do now. Low-complexity foundation that compounds — stand it up early.
Example solutions
Key organizations
Starter AIM Template
Starter AIM — Ambitious Impactful Mission
“By 2031, City of Phoenix will reduce procurement cycle time by 40% and increase contracts to local/small businesses by 25% for all 2M+ residents of the metro region, through Procurement Reform and Policy & Regulatory Reform, building on its What Works Cities Platinum certification.”
A starter mission statement · 7 criteria: forward-looking, strategic, measurable, collaborative, relevant, large-scale, time-bound
Starter Portfolio — Three Horizons
AI Governance Audit
Regulatory Sandbox Program
Participatory Digital Infrastructure
What this AIM addresses on the binding constraint
translation/execution gap (capacity exists but doesn't land) — initiatives selected for delivery routines, performance management, and cross-agency alignment (Cluster A default — no specific archetype keyword detected).
Counterfactual — if not pursued
Without intervention, the city's institutional capacity drift continues — innovation infrastructure stays brittle, vendor relationships entrench, and the gap between aspiration and delivery widens.
Initiative Detail
AI Governance Audit
Audit AI tools in use against the city's governance principles; publish findings and remediation plan within 90 days.
Audit surfaces uninventoried AI tools + governance gaps → remediation plan with named owners → reduced risk + cleaner procurement criteria for future AI tooling.
Modest staffing cost (~$100-300K); risk-reduction value depends on what the audit surfaces.
Audit becomes a one-time document filed and forgotten; no remediation actually changes vendor relationships or procurement criteria.
Regulatory Sandbox Program
Launch a 2-year regulatory sandbox allowing approved partners to pilot emerging solutions in mobility, housing, and sustainability with streamlined review.
Streamlined review process → reduced friction for emerging-tech pilots → measurable solution deployment in housing / mobility / climate → resident outcome improvements at lower cost than full procurement cycle.
Annual operating cost ~$1-3M (sandbox office + legal review). Returns via accelerated solution deployment if used.
Sandbox exists on paper but issues zero participation grants; or, only well-resourced incumbent vendors qualify.
Participatory Digital Infrastructure
Build a city-owned digital deliberation platform enabling 50,000+ residents to meaningfully engage in annual budget and policy decisions.
Resident-facing platform → meaningful participation in budget/policy decisions → improved decision quality (resident knowledge) + institutional legitimacy → durable democratic infrastructure.
Build cost ~$2-5M; annual operating ~$1-2M. Returns are democratic legitimacy + improved policy quality from broader input.
Platform launches but engagement decisions remain advisory; residents disengage when they see their input doesn't bind on actual decisions.
Aligned Funders
Recoding America Fund
Reducing procedural bloat is a named focus area of the Fund — direct alignment with all four clusters.
Arnold Ventures
Major funder of government performance and contracting reform; anchors Recoding America Fund.
Mercatus Center
Regulatory analysis and reform research; technical assistance.
Recoding America Fund
Reducing procedural bloat is a named focus area.
Arnold Ventures
Public-policy reform portfolio includes regulatory and permitting research.
Recommended Delivery Routines
Scaling Strategy
Scale Deep
Cluster A governments have already scaled up and out. The frontier is deepening impact — shifting culture, embedding innovation DNA in career pathways, and sustaining through transitions. Three Horizons H3: behavior and mindset change.
Improve This Assessment
This is a living diagnostic. Spot something wrong or out of date? Suggest a sourced edit, or add context for other public innovators. Contributions are reviewed before they go live — sourced corrections are applied to the underlying data, improving it over time.
Data as of 2026-04-30 · medium confidence
Data as of 2026-04-30 · medium confidence
Sources · Data as of 2026-04-30 · medium confidence
The Civic Infrastructure Diagnostic Framework’s structural elements — the four cluster labels, the six capacity dimensions, and the binding-constraint framing — are licensed under CC BY 4.0. Anyone may use or adapt them with attribution. Tool implementation and full article text © 2026 JTV Advisory LLC.