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3 results for “hiring” · budget

  • Greenvillecountysc

    Greenville, SC
    Budget

    Greenville County's 2024-2025 budget document includes historical background on the county's origins and development from its establishment in 1786 through its evolution from a textile manufacturing center to a modern business and technology hub. The county operates under a Council-Administrator form of government, where an elected Council hires a professional administrator responsible for budget preparation, operations management, and policy implementation. The document establishes the governmental and historical context for the county's budget planning.

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    budgetcounty governmentfiscal planning
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Dallas County Fiscal Year 2021-2022 Budget Cover Page

Dallas, TX
Budget

Dallas County's Fiscal Year 2021-2022 budget raises property tax revenue of $29,394,729 more than the prior year, representing a 5.13 percent increase, with $13,637,722.62 from new properties added to the tax roll. The governing body voted 5–0 in favor, with County Judge Clay Jenkins, Commissioners Dr. Theresa Daniel, JJ Koch, John Wiley Price, and Dr. Elba Garcia supporting approval. The property tax rate decreased to $0.227946 per $100 of valuation from $0.239740 in the prior year, while total debt obligation secured by property taxes is $116,665,000. The budget was developed in response to ongoing COVID-19 pandemic challenges affecting service delivery, employee hiring and retention, and economic conditions including a June 2021 unemployment rate of 6.0% and a 29.06 percent increase in single-unit residential housing sales year-over-year.

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  • METROPOLITAN GOVERNMENT OF NASHVILLE AND DAVIDSON COUNTY JOHN COOPER

    Nashville, TN
    Budget

    Mayor John Cooper presented Nashville's FY 2022 operating budget, characterized as an "investment" budget following the previous year's "crisis" budget that implemented hiring and spending freezes during the COVID-19 recession. The budget includes historic commitments to public education, transportation, community safety, and workforce development, enabled by strong property value growth that reduces the effective property tax rate to $3.288—the lowest among major Tennessee cities and more than $1.00 below the 25-year average. Metro projects over 5% better-than-expected revenues from activity taxes plus federal stimulus funds, allowing for approximately $180 million in strategic investments while prioritizing equitable prosperity across all Nashville neighborhoods.

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    budgetproperty taxpublic educationtransportationpublic safety
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