Centralizing the city’s collection process and making departments more accountable for following collection guidelines were part of the recommendations by the Commission on Revenue Efficiency to bring more money into city coffers. The seven-member commission had spent some six months hearing from various city officials and department heads on how to better collect money owed to it from fees and fines and looking at new sources of revenue. The 109-page report released Oct. 4 by the commission concluded that 76 percent of the $541.1 million non-tax receivables are more than 120 days past due. That amount does not include what is owed to proprietary city departments such as the airports and water and power. “Piecemeal approaches to fixing collections have proven ineffective,” the commission said in the report. “The time for business as usual has passed; we seek nothing less than a change in the culture of City Hall to one in which everyone in city government makes revenue a priority.” The commission set out a blueprint to reform revenue collection, which includes recommendations that can be implemented immediately. Among those recommendations are to appoint an inspector general to oversee the collections process; having the Office of Finance automatically transfer collection to secondary collection vendors as soon as time allotted to primary collection has expired; and expediting a non-tax amnesty program proposed by the Office of Finance for the 2010-2011 budget. The immediate steps could bring in between $10 million and $25 million in the next fiscal year, the commission’s report said.