Starting with the briefing. Same diagnostic underneath — each view selects what to show, and switching never loses data. Want the whole thing? Open the full diagnostic.
Institutional Capacity Assessment
Population
2.84M
Total Budget
$13.2B
Budget / capita
$4,660
Budget / sq mi
$6.80M
Form of Govt
strong mayor
Legal Regime
Home Rule
Binding Constraint
Strategic Execution · Primary constraint
Fiscal / structural deficit~$402M structural deficit against a high service load
Despite deep institutional capacity, Miami-Dade faces a roughly $402M structural budget gap — the binding question is resource allocation and procurement leverage, not capability.
Florida's Save Our Homes 3% assessment cap limits growth of the property-tax base that funds a large metro government's obligations.
Aggressive state preemption narrows the policy levers available to even a high-capacity county government.
State Context · Florida
View Florida full profile →Innovation assets, the full constraint list, and state signals are on the Florida profile.
6-Dimension Assessment
Key veto points
Strong-mayor form concentrates reform authority — high potential during aligned leadership, high transition risk at elections.
Full collective bargaining rights apply — workforce innovation should be pursued collaboratively with union leadership.
Revenue structure
State constraints
Solid bond ratings (Aa2) provide access to capital markets at competitive rates.
Archetype
gateway metroAt 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.
19 initiatives across 9 of 11 work areas · 2 with no tracked initiatives
| Work area | H1 · now | H2 · next | H3 · later |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fiscal & procurementcoverage gap | — | — | — |
| Workforce & talentcoverage gap | — | — | — |
| Digital services | — | — | |
| Data & evidence | — | — | |
| Resident engagement | — | — | |
| Infrastructure & mobility | |||
| Health & safety | — | — | |
| Housing | — | — | |
| Climate & resilience | — | ||
| Governance & coordination | — | ||
| Economic development | — |
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. 16 elected Community Advisory Committees; Thrive305 (2021) was one-time non-random survey
miamidade.gov/global/311/home.page; miamidade.gov/global/government/committees/community-advisory-committees.page; miamidade.gov/initiative/thrive305/countywide-survey.page; NCES CCD FY2022-23
Community Context
Community Context
Beyond institutional capacityPoverty rate
14.0%
Low
Median household income
$68K
Near national avg
Cost of living
112 (US=100)
Above US avg
Industry diversity
85/100
Diversified
Total adopted budget
$13.23B
$8.58B op + $4.66B cap
Five-year outlook
Unbalanced
Deficit starts FY2026-27
Long-term liabilities
$29.40B
Bonds & loans $20.50B
Emergency reserve
$82M
Target $100M
Structural deficit drivers (OMB)
Overall vacancy: 3.3%. Departments below are >10% under-staffed against budgeted positions (open data payroll vs. adopted budget headcount).
| Department | Filled | Budgeted | Vacancy | Avg salary |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Housing and Community Develop | 302 | 467 | 35.3% | $92K |
| Regulatory & Economic Resource | 784 | 1,048 | 25.2% | $102K |
| Board of County Commissioners | 224 | 294 | 23.8% | $99K |
| Comm, Information & Technology | 910 | 1,130 | 19.5% | $123K |
| People and Internal Ops | 798 | 954 | 16.4% | $92K |
| Strategic Procurement | 153 | 183 | 16.4% | $113K |
| Seaport | 446 | 518 | 13.9% | $83K |
| Homeless Trust | 25 | 29 | 13.8% | $106K |
| Animal Services | 265 | 304 | 12.8% | $68K |
| Corrections and Rehabilitation | 2,705 | 3,086 | 12.3% | $90K |
| Aviation | 1,552 | 1,762 | 11.9% | $88K |
| Transportation & Public Works | 3,771 | 4,241 | 11.1% | $77K |
| Solid Waste Management | 1,047 | 1,172 | 10.7% | $72K |
| Internal Compliance | 152 | 170 | 10.6% | $116K |
Total $42.16B across 8+ programs · Top 3 (Aviation, Transportation and Public Works (Transit), Water and Sewer) = 74% of capital · Unfunded needs $20.16B
14 fiscal and operational risks identified across the budget corpus. Severity reflects OMB disclosure + synthesized analysis. Horizon marks when each risk bites.
FY 2026-27 General Fund shortfall
H1 · nowOMB states Countywide & UMSA General Fund forecasts are NOT balanced beginning FY 2026-27
Source: Five-Year Outlook PDF p.62-64
Federal/state funding cliff
H1 · nowFederal/state grants -$87M (-18%) YoY; ARPA fully expended by Dec 2026
Source: Revenue trend
Property tax growth deceleration
H2 · nextOMB cuts growth from ~12% recent to 7% (FY26-27), 5.5% (FY27-28), 5% thereafter
Source: Revenue Forecast PDF
Sales tax exemption legislation
H2 · nextNew state law adopted July 2025 excluding certain commodities — impact not fully quantified
Source: Revenue Forecast PDF
Aviation $12B capital program execution risk
H3 · laterSustained $1B+/year program ramp; cost overruns on past airport projects industry-wide
Source: Appendix I
Tax Increment Financing diversion
H2 · next$116.5M FY26 to 15 CRAs; OMB flags as structural drag on Countywide priorities
Source: Five-Year Outlook + Appendix F
Peer Matches
Compare with structural peers →Strategic Execution
90
match score
City of Philadelphia shares Miami-Dade County's gateway metro profile and strong mayor governance, facing scale-driven coordination complexity and high-stakes service delivery. The constraints that shape Miami-Dade County's reform options largely apply here too.
Strategic Execution
80
match score
City of Los Angeles operates inside Miami-Dade County's same gateway metro context, and has built a What Works Cities Silver-grade performance system. Its experience is transferable precisely because the underlying constraints are the same.
What to copy
City of Los Angeles operates inside Miami-Dade County's same gateway metro context, and has built a What Works Cities Silver-grade performance system. Its experience is transferable precisely because the underlying constraints are the same.
Strategic Execution
76
match score
City of New York operates inside Miami-Dade County's same gateway metro context, and has built a What Works Cities Platinum-grade performance system. Its experience is transferable precisely because the underlying constraints are the same.
What to copy
City of New York operates inside Miami-Dade County's same gateway metro context, and has built a What Works Cities Platinum-grade performance system. 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
~$402M structural deficit against a high service load
Despite deep institutional capacity, Miami-Dade faces a roughly $402M structural budget gap — the binding question is resource allocation and procurement leverage, not capability.
Pathways addressing it
Procurement Reform
Rebuilding procurement to cut cycle time and capture savings on existing spend — directly addressing ~$402M structural deficit against a high service load. Miami-Dade County brings concentrated mayoral authority and an established CIO/innovation office, with a budget of $4,660/resident and $6.80M/sq mi to this work.
Evidence-Based Policymaking
Using data and evaluation to steer spending toward what works — directly addressing ~$402M structural deficit against a high service load. Miami-Dade County brings concentrated mayoral authority and an established CIO/innovation office, with a budget of $4,660/resident and $6.80M/sq mi to this work.
Feeds the mission
Fiscal architecture under Amendment 10 structural mandate ($402M annual deficit) compounded by coordination overhead across 34 municipalities — both of which face regression risk through the 2026 mayoral transition if reforms are not institutionalized before the handoff.
Innovation Pathway Recommendations
Sequenced against Miami-Dade County’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 Miami-Dade County
Rebuilding procurement to cut cycle time and capture savings on existing spend — directly addressing ~$402M structural deficit against a high service load. Miami-Dade County brings concentrated mayoral authority and an established CIO/innovation office, with a budget of $4,660/resident and $6.80M/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
Using data, research, and rigorous evaluation to inform government decisions — from budget allocations to program design. The What Works Cities methodology is the primary framework, drawing on Results for America's Invest in What Works Standard.
Why this fits Miami-Dade County
Using data and evaluation to steer spending toward what works — directly addressing ~$402M structural deficit against a high service load. Miami-Dade County brings concentrated mayoral authority and an established CIO/innovation office, with a budget of $4,660/resident and $6.80M/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 Miami-Dade County
Reforming local policy and regulation (land use, fees, codes) to unblock reform — directly addressing Save Our Homes constrains property-revenue growth. Miami-Dade County brings concentrated mayoral authority and an established CIO/innovation office, with a budget of $4,660/resident and $6.80M/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
Starter AIM Template
Starter AIM — Ambitious Impactful Mission
“By 2031, Miami-Dade County will close the $402M structural deficit while sustaining innovation momentum through Mayor Levine Cava's planned 2026 transition, by re-engineering procurement across the $11.7B operating budget and consolidating shared services with the 34 in-county municipalities — building on the County's AAA bond rating and What Works Cities certification, and protecting against the regression risk of an unaligned post-2026 administration.”
A starter mission statement · 7 criteria: forward-looking, strategic, measurable, collaborative, relevant, large-scale, time-bound
Starter Portfolio — Three Horizons
Procurement Reform — Aviation, Transit, Solid Waste
Inter-Municipal Shared Services Consortium
Charter Reform to Codify Innovation Infrastructure Through Transition
What this AIM addresses on the binding constraint
Fiscal architecture under Amendment 10 structural mandate ($402M annual deficit) compounded by coordination overhead across 34 municipalities — both of which face regression risk through the 2026 mayoral transition if reforms are not institutionalized before the handoff.
Counterfactual — if not pursued
Without these initiatives, the $402M structural deficit grows ~3-5% annually as Medicaid local share, pension obligations, and inflation compound. By 2031 it reaches ~$500-600M, forcing service cuts in Jackson Health (already in fiscal stress), Transit, and Parks. AAA bond rating faces downgrade pressure as rating agencies discount the political durability of cost-discipline initiatives. The What Works Cities-trained delivery culture erodes under fiscal triage; institutional knowledge departs with retirements; cumulative progress on the binding constraint approaches zero across the 2026 administration change.
Initiative Detail
Procurement Reform — Aviation, Transit, Solid Waste
Apply outcomes-based contracting to the three highest-spend departments (~$2.8B combined annual procurement). Establish vendor scorecards, time-to-award targets under 90 days, and small-business participation floors. Direct ROI within first fiscal year through cycle-time reduction; cumulative savings through cleaner contract renewals.
Outcome-based contracts → vendor performance differentiation → broader adoption → measurable spend reduction (5-10%) + service-quality improvement. $2.8B pilot × 5-10% = $140M-$280M annual savings if scaled across the three departments — alone absorbs 35-70% of the structural deficit.
One-time setup: ~$3-5M (procurement office staffing + vendor scorecard tooling). Expected ongoing savings: 5-10% of pilot departments' procurement spend ($140M-$280M annually) within 18-24 months. Payback under 12 months. Funding source: County reserves + Bloomberg Philanthropies procurement reform grant if pursued.
'Modular procurement' or 'performance contracting' language gets adopted into existing compliance-bound RFPs without changing evaluation criteria, contract length, or incumbent vendor relationships. Same firms win with newer vocabulary; savings reported on paper but not realized in next year's budget. The H2+ test is whether the vendor pool actually broadens and the procurement-cycle-time KPI actually shortens.
Inter-Municipal Shared Services Consortium
Negotiate a binding shared-services consortium with the 34 in-county municipalities covering IT, payroll, benefits administration, and fleet management. Use an existing institutional vehicle (Greater Miami Service Cooperative or equivalent) to avoid creating new bureaucracy; pursue legislative-authority backstop to make commitments enforceable across jurisdictions.
34 jurisdictions × duplicated IT/HR/payroll functions → consolidated consortium with binding fiscal authority → 30-40% admin cost reduction across members → $50M-$150M annual savings to the County alone (municipalities save proportionally). Reduces the coordination overhead that compounds the structural deficit.
24-36 month build; expected $50M-$150M annual savings to County at full scale, with proportional savings to participating municipalities. Requires upfront capital (~$10-15M) for integration platform + governance structure. Net positive within 36 months. Funding: blended state digital modernization grant + County reserves + member contributions.
Consortium becomes a coordination committee without binding budget authority; each municipality insists on customizations that defeat economies of scale; cost reductions don't materialize; consortium dissolves quietly within 5 years (the Florida pattern with regional planning councils). The H2+ test is whether participating jurisdictions actually retire duplicate back-office functions, not just attend joint meetings.
Charter Reform to Codify Innovation Infrastructure Through Transition
Pursue charter amendments codifying the core innovation infrastructure — Chief Innovation Officer position, performance management office authority, open-data mandate, evidence-based budget process — so they survive any post-2026 administration's priorities. Inspired by Long Beach's charter changes protecting Innovation Team funding through political cycles.
Charter codification → reforms survive electoral cycles → cumulative progress against binding constraint compounds rather than resetting at each administration change → 5-10 year horizon makes structural deficit closure achievable and sustainable beyond the original mayoral champion.
Charter amendment process cost ~$500K-$1M (legal review, ballot preparation, voter education). Indirect fiscal protection: roughly $10-20M annually in innovation infrastructure that would otherwise be vulnerable to political disinvestment by a hostile administration. Returns are protective, not generative — but without it, the other two initiatives' savings are at high regression risk.
Charter amendment passes but enforcement mechanisms are weak; future administrations reduce funding even within mandate language; the Innovation office becomes nominal — a name without staff or authority. The H2+ test is whether the charter language includes specific enforcement triggers (minimum staffing levels, budget allocation floors, performance reporting requirements) rather than purely aspirational language.
Aligned Funders
Bloomberg Philanthropies (What Works Cities)
Miami-Dade already in the WWC network; procurement reform + performance management at the County scale fits the WWC technical-assistance thesis directly.
Arnold Ventures
Government performance research portfolio supports outcomes-based contracting + performance contracting work at the major-county scale.
Knight Foundation
Miami-Dade is a Knight resident city; civic-infrastructure investments aligned with cross-municipal coordination + charter reform.
Recoding America Fund
Procurement reform is a named focus area; County-scale demonstration valuable for the Fund's broader theory.
Recommended Delivery Routines
Scaling Strategy
Scale Deep
Miami-Dade has already scaled up (County size: 2.8M, $11.7B budget) and out (34-municipality coordination is already attempted). The frontier is scaling deep — embedding fiscal discipline and innovation infrastructure into the institutional bones of the County and its municipal partners through codified governance reform. Three Horizons H3: behavior and structural change that outlives the originating administration.
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 2026-05-22 · high confidence
Data as of 2026-05-22 · high confidence
Sources · Data as of 2026-05-22 · high 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.