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14 results for “property addressing” · budget

  • WORCESTER COUNTY FY2026 Budget Schedule Tuesday, April 1, 2025

    Apr 1, 2025

    ·Worcester, MA
    Budget

    Worcester County's FY2026 budget process is scheduled from April through June 2025, with a public hearing on May 6 and final budget adoption votes occurring on June 3 (General Fund) and June 17 (Enterprise Funds). The requested operating budget totals $286.8 million in expenditures against estimated revenues of $284.6 million, leaving a $2.3 million shortfall that must be addressed through spending reductions, additional revenues, or both. Anticipated revenues increased 9% over the current year to $284.6 million, driven primarily by a $18 million increase in net property tax revenues and a projected $53 million in income tax revenue at the current 2.25% rate.

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    budgetproperty taxrevenue forecast
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  • Mayor's 2023 Proposed Budget

    Nov 2, 2022

    ·Spokane, WA
    Budget

    Mayor Nadine Woodward's 2023 proposed budget, presented November 2, 2022, addresses a $37 million revenue loss from the pandemic while forgoing a 1% property tax increase for household financial relief. The budget prioritizes people-focused investments including increased shelter space, homelessness services, public safety, sanitation, garbage collection, and workforce retention in a competitive labor market. Sales tax revenue is projected to increase 5.9% overall in 2023, though gains are not expected to continue due to anticipated recession.

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    budgetproperty taxpublic safetyhomelessness servicessanitation
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  • State

    State College, PA
    Budget

    House Bill 1300 amends the Fiscal Code to implement the 2023-2024 budget and includes provisions across multiple areas including COVID-19 response programs, mental health funding, and tenant protections. The bill allocates significant funds including $360.2 million from the Tobacco Settlement Fund for FY 2023/24, $100 million in Department of Human Services mental health funding ($34 million for workforce programs, $31.5 million for criminal justice initiatives, and $34.5 million for mental health services expansion), and creates protections prohibiting Senior Citizens' property tax and rent rebate assistance from being used as lease payments, with penalties for violating landlords including full reimbursement plus 25% additional penalties. The bill also addresses unclaimed federal ARPA funds in education and continues community economic development programs, with fiscal impacts ranging from no impact for directed appropriations to indeterminate impacts for new enforcement provisions.

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    budget allocationmental health fundingtenant protectionjudicial fundingtobacco settlement
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  • 2026-2027 Budget - City of Knoxville

    Knoxville, TN
    Budget

    Mayor Indya Kincannon proposed a balanced, $499 million net budget for fiscal years 2026-2027 with no new taxes, maintaining the city's property tax rate at $2.1556 per $100 of assessed value—the lowest since 1974. The budget prioritizes public safety ($102.1 million for police and firefighter salaries and benefits), affordable housing ($8 million investment including support for the Transforming Western partnership), and parks and quality-of-life services, while withdrawing $6 million from reserves to address inflationary pressures that are outpacing revenue growth. Despite budgetary challenges from 2.2 percent sales tax growth forecasts against 3 percent anticipated inflation, Knoxville maintains strong financial reserves of $114.6 million in its General Fund Balance and holds all-time high bond ratings with the lowest debt per capita among Tennessee's six largest cities.

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    budgetpublic safetyaffordable housingproperty taxparks and recreation
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  • FY 06-07 Adopted Budget - Download (PDF)

    Evanston, IL
    Budget

    The City of Evanston adopted its 2006-2007 budget under Mayor Lorraine H. Morton and City Manager Julia A. Carroll, with elected leadership including nine aldermen representing distinct wards. The document is a comprehensive 642-page budget document containing the City Manager's budget message, executive summary, detailed general fund budget allocations, revenue estimates, and departmental appropriations. The budget includes sections addressing organizational structure, budget policy, property tax levies, revenue sources and trends, and expenditure summaries across divisions including Fire, Health and Human Services, Legal, City Clerk, and administrative departments. The document outlines the city's strategic plan and budgetary basis of accounting alongside detailed fund descriptions and departmental schedules.

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  • fy2025 - proposed budget

    Charlotte, NC
    Budget

    Charlotte's FY2025 proposed budget totals $4.2 billion across all funds, with a general fund of $898.2 million that is structurally balanced without requiring policy-driven compensation increases in FY2026. The budget addresses workforce challenges through targeted recruitment and retention strategies across public safety, operations, and administrative roles, including pay plan adjustments, new incentives, and career development programs such as tuition assistance and coaching. Charlotte maintains the lowest property tax rate among North Carolina cities with populations over 250,000 at $0.2604 per $100 valuation, having made no property tax increases in the past five years while managing growth, inflation, and service expectations.

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    budgetproperty taxworkforcepublic safetypay plan
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  • city of fort worth, texas fiscal year 2024-2025 annual budget

    Fort Worth, TX
    Budget

    The City of Fort Worth's Fiscal Year 2024-2025 Annual Budget proposes raising property tax revenue by $16,918,339 (a 2.31 percent increase) with a recommended tax rate of $0.6773 per $100 of assessed valuation, compared to the current FY2024 rate of $0.6725. The budget includes $26,172,914 in revenue from new property additions to the tax roll. This comprehensive budget document contains organizational information, executive messaging, and budget processes and policies to address the city's fiscal planning and strategic vision.

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    budgetproperty taxtax increasefiscal planningrevenue
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  • City of Spokane 2025-2026 Budget Overview Executive Summary

    Spokane, WA
    Budget

    The City of Spokane's 2025-2026 biennial budget totals $2.5 billion and addresses a projected $60 million General Fund deficit inherited by the new administration through conservative revenue assumptions, a 1% property tax increase, and a 22 FTE position reduction to manage costs without depleting reserves. Key budget priorities include public safety, housing, and economic development, with personnel costs comprising 85 percent of operating expenses across 2,434.5 FTE positions serving over 230,000 residents. The budget assumes passage of a Community Safety Sales Tax initiative and projects conservative sales tax growth of 2% in 2025 and 2.9% in 2026, with the General Fund comprising approximately 22 percent ($535.2 million) of the total budget.

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    budgetproperty tax increasepublic safetyhousingeconomic development
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  • Chapter-24-Taxation-2023.pdf

    Pottsville, PA
    Budget

    This 2023 taxation chapter from Ontelaunee Township, Berks County, Pennsylvania establishes the comprehensive regulatory framework governing multiple tax categories including real estate tax, earned income tax, local services tax, and realty transfer tax. The document sets the tax collector's compensation at $3.00 per real estate tax bill collected (including street light assessments) and $3.00 per interim tax bill collected, effective January 1, 2020. The chapter also addresses tax administration procedures, penalty structures, exemptions, and delinquent tax collection mechanisms across nine articles covering collector compensation, real estate taxation, earned income tax, local services tax, realty transfer tax, per capita tax repeal, delinquent tax collection, and economic stimulus tax exemptions.

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    property taxearned income taxtax administrationtax collectionlocal services tax
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  • BUDGET.PA.GOV EXECUTIVE BUDGET 2025-2026

    Pottsville, PA
    Budget

    Pennsylvania's Governor presented the Executive Budget for 2025-2026, submitted February 4, 2025, emphasizing continued bipartisan investments in K-12 education, property tax relief for seniors, public safety, and economic development. The budget builds on prior-year accomplishments including historic education investments, the largest targeted senior tax cut in two decades, and infrastructure improvements, while proposing new funding for higher education competitiveness, workforce development, and innovation-focused economic strategies. The administration frames the budget as continuing its "get stuff done" approach to address key priorities of safe schools, economic opportunity, and community safety.

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    budgeteducation fundingproperty tax reliefpublic safetyeconomic development
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  • 2008-2012 COUNCIL RESOLUTIONS Res # Considered Summary Repeal/Amended 5075

    Eugene, OR
    Budget

    This document is a table of contents listing Eugene city council resolutions adopted between 2008 and 2012, with resolution numbers, consideration dates, and brief summaries of each measure. Notable items include Resolution 5075 (supplemental budget for FY 2012-13), Resolution 5063 (calling an election on a $43 million general obligation bond measure for street and bicycle/pedestrian projects), Resolution 5060 (adopting the FY 2012-13 budget and property tax levy), and several resolutions addressing low-income housing property tax exemptions, land annexations, and environmental policies. The list does not provide detailed discussion or decision outcomes, serving primarily as an index of legislative actions taken during the five-year period.

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    budgetgeneral obligation bondstreet infrastructurebicycle infrastructureproperty tax
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  • Mayor's Budget Message

    York, PA
    Budget

    The City of York submitted its proposed $104 million budget for 2017, which includes a General Fund of over $45 million and a 2% property tax reduction while remaining on track for a 15% reduction over five years. To balance the budget amid rising healthcare and pension costs, the city froze or eliminated vacant positions and held department budgets firm, while also implementing a 10% sewer fee increase and 3.9% refuse fee increase due to infrastructure maintenance and contract costs. Mayor C. Kim Bracey emphasized the structural financial challenges facing Third Class Cities in Pennsylvania and called on state legislators to address the inadequate revenue system that forces municipalities to over-rely on property taxes.

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    budgetproperty taxsewer feerefuse feepension costs
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  • Volume 1 General Fund Revenues MAYOR TODD GLORIA Adopted Budget Fiscal Year

    San Diego, CA
    Budget

    The City of San Diego's Fiscal Year 2022 Adopted Budget projects General Fund revenues of $1.74 billion, representing a $122.6 million (7.6 percent) increase from FY 2021. The four major revenue sources—property taxes, sales taxes, transient occupancy taxes, and franchise fees—account for 67 percent of General Fund revenues and are projected to increase 9.6 percent, primarily driven by accelerated economic recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic. The budget also includes $149.3 million in federal Coronavirus State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds from the American Rescue Plan Act to address ongoing pandemic impacts, with these revenues supporting essential city services including police, fire, homeless services, libraries, and parks and recreation programs.

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    budgetgeneral fund revenuessales taxproperty taxfederal funding
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  • Budget - City of Knoxville

    Knoxville, TN
    Budget

    Mayor Indya Kincannon proposed a balanced $499 million net operating budget for 2026-2027 with no new taxes, maintaining the city's property tax rate at $2.1556 per $100 of assessed value—the lowest since 1974. The budget prioritizes public safety ($102.1 million for police and firefighter salaries and benefits), affordable housing (over $8 million in investments including $4.5 million for the Transforming Western partnership), and parks and quality of life services, while addressing inflationary pressures that exceed modest sales tax revenue growth of 2.2 percent. The city's General Fund Balance reserves total approximately $114.6 million with all-time high bond ratings and the lowest debt per capita among Tennessee's six largest cities.

    AI summary

    budgetpublic safetyaffordable housingparks and recreationproperty tax
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