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Latest public records across all tracked municipalities.
On April 16, 2024, the Parsippany-Troy Hills Township Council received a 2024 municipal budget presentation focused on correcting past financial issues and placing the township on sound financial footing while minimizing resident tax burden. The budget prioritizes public safety, efficient service delivery, responsible development, and new revenue streams, while facing challenges from nationwide economic impacts including 4.1% inflation, declining office leasing volume in Northern New Jersey, and reduced commercial property tax revenue. The township also confronts unfunded mandates including affordable housing obligations and infrastructure costs related to lead and galvanized pipe replacement.
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This document is the State of New Jersey's FY2024 Budget in Brief, prepared by Governor Philip D. Murphy's Office of Management and Budget in February 2023. The budget document outlines the governor's spending and policy priorities across multiple areas including pre-K-12 education, higher education, economic growth, healthcare, transportation, and infrastructure. The document serves as a comprehensive overview of the state's fiscal plan, with detailed sections addressing affordability, responsibility, and various departmental initiatives, though specific budget figures and detailed policy changes are not visible in the provided excerpts.
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Resolution 22-409, approved by the Jersey City Municipal Council on June 15, 2022 by an 8-0 vote, formally introduces the Calendar Year 2022 Municipal Budget. The resolution was sponsored by the Council and recommended for approval by the City's Department of Finance (Director Carmen Gandulla), the Corporation Counsel, and the Business Administrator. A public hearing will be scheduled following the resolution's approval to allow for public comment on the budget document.
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Jersey City's 2025 Municipal User Friendly Budget document presents the city's tax structure and financial overview, with a total estimated tax levy of approximately $1.097 billion based on a total taxable valuation of $47.014 billion as of October 1, 2024. The budget breaks down tax allocations across municipal purposes (36.34% of total levy), regional school district (43.33%), county purposes (17.85%), and other services including library, open space, and arts and culture programs. The average residential taxpayer impact is projected at $10,760.83, with the municipal purpose tax rate at 0.811 and the regional school district tax rate at 0.968, under the leadership of Mayor Steven M. Fulop and Chief Financial Officer John Mercer.
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This is the 2023 Municipal Data Sheet for the Borough of East Newark, Hudson County, New Jersey, certifying the municipal budget and capital budget approved by the Governing Body on August 9, 2023. The document identifies municipal officials including Mayor Dina M. Grilo, Municipal Clerk Kenneth Louis, Chief Financial Officer Juan B. Uribe, Tax Collector Anthony Blasi, Municipal Attorney Kenneth Sheehan, and Registered Municipal Accountant Joseph J. Faccone. Governing Body members include Jeanne Zincavage, Rose M. Evaristo, Kenneth J. Graham, Jessica Diaz, and Christopher Reis, with terms expiring between December 31, 2024 and December 31, 2025. The document certifies that anticipated revenues equal total appropriations and that the budget complies with New Jersey's Local Budget Law (N.J.S.A. 40A:4-1 et seq.).
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The FY 2025 Appropriations Act (P.L.2024, c.22) enacted a total budget of $56,635,803 thousand in appropriations and $63,124,330 thousand in total resources, representing a $705,433 thousand increase from the Governor's Budget Message. Major revenue sources include Gross Income Tax at $19,694,602 thousand, Sales Tax at $13,769,128 thousand, and Corporation Business Tax at $4,338,044 thousand. The budget established an unreserved balance of $6,420,515 thousand and designated $308,159 thousand for Open Space Reserved funds. The document was prepared by the Office of Legislative Services with a report date of July 1, 2024.
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NULL The document is a municipal budget certification form for Ocean Township, Ocean County for fiscal year 2025, approved by resolution on May 20, 2025. However, the document contains only certification language, signature blocks, and administrative headers without disclosing the actual budget amounts, line items, appropriations, revenue figures, or specific departmental allocations that would constitute substantive budget information. The specific dollar amounts referenced in the adoption resolution (items 2, 3, 4, and sheets 43-44) are not populated in this excerpt.
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The City of Newark's annual budgets serve as financial blueprints allocating municipal resources to public safety, community development, housing, health services, and public works while maintaining fiscal responsibility. The document provides links to budgets from 2008 through 2025, along with tax rate certifications for 2022 and 2023 and municipal budget levy cap calculation guidance. However, specific dollar amounts, departmental allocations, and detailed line items are not included in this index document.
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The Fiscal Year 2018 Citizens' Guide to the Budget is a transparency document released by New Jersey Governor Chris Christie's administration in November 2017 to explain how state resources are allocated in the FY 2017-2018 Appropriations Act. Governor Christie presented and signed a balanced state budget for the eighth consecutive year, prioritizing protection of taxpayers and critical services through responsible resource management. Assembly Bill 5000, the Appropriations Act, was passed by the Legislature on July 4, 2017, and the Governor exercised line-item veto authority when signing it the same day. The guide includes budget highlights, charts and graphs, economic overview, revenue forecasts, and detailed appropriations summaries organized by core mission areas, with contributions from the Governor's staff, Treasurer's Office, Office of Management and Budget, and department managers.
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