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6 results for “property transfer” · budget

  • Moore Township 2026 BUDGET Proposed: November 10, 2025

    Nov 10, 2025

    ·Moore Township, XX
    Budget

    Moore Township's 2026 budget was proposed on November 10, 2025, and adopted via Resolution 2025-28 on December 19, 2025. The budget projects total fund equity of $11,104,500 as of January 1, 2026, distributed across nine funds including the General Fund ($1,174,500), Highway Aid Fund ($210,500), Land Preservation Referendum Fund ($7,938,100), and Capital Improvement Reserve Fund ($1,500,000). Revenue sources include Real Property Taxes of $2,105,000, Local Enabling Act (Act 511) Taxes of $2,945,800, Intergovernmental Revenue of $851,700, and Licenses & Permits of $123,800. The budget document shows beginning balances and fund transfers totaling $4,486,900 across all funds.

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  • City of Evanston Treasurer’s Report For Year Ended December 31, 2023

    Dec 31, 2023

    ·
Evanston, IL
Budget

The City of Evanston's Treasurer's Report for fiscal year 2023 documents municipal revenues across the General Fund, with major sources including property taxes ($32.97 million), retailer and service occupation tax ($13.33 million), state income tax ($12.56 million), and home rule sales tax ($10.40 million). The report also itemizes revenues from various licenses, permits, utility taxes, and state/federal grants, with the complete Comprehensive Annual Financial Report and additional financial information available on the city's transparency website. This financial statement represents the city's revenues for the year ended December 31, 2023, exclusive of transfers and bond proceeds.

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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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  • 1 BUFFALO FISCAL STABILITY AUTHORITY

    Buffalo, NY
    Budget

    The Buffalo Fiscal Stability Authority's third-quarter analysis of the Buffalo Municipal Housing Authority (BMHA) for fiscal year 2024-25 shows the agency operating within its overall consolidated budget as of March 31, 2025, with revenues of $47.3 million (79.2% of budget) and expenses of $45.7 million (78.9% of budget). However, the Marine Drive Apartments property is significantly underperforming, with actual expenses at 113% of budget resulting in a $1.1 million net operating loss—$1.0 million worse than projected—driven by elevated general, maintenance, administrative, and utility expenses, though partially offset by $0.5 million in favorable rental revenues. Additional notable items include a $2.05 million transfer of Fosdick Field to the Buffalo City School District and a 17.2% employee vacancy rate across BMHA, with the Capital Improvements department experiencing a particularly high 42.9% vacancy rate.

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    municipal housingbudget analysisfiscal stabilityproperty managementemployee vacancy
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  • City of Wilmington Tax Rates for Fiscal Year 2022

    Wilmington, DE
    Budget

    The City of Wilmington established tax rates for Fiscal Year 2022 across eight revenue categories. The rates include a 1.25% wage tax on resident and non-resident earned income, a 1.25% net profit tax, a property tax of $1.995 per $100 of assessed value (based on 1983 valuations), a $15 monthly head tax per employee (for businesses with 6+ employees), a 1.50% real estate transfer tax, franchise taxes of 2% on electricity and 5% on cable television, a 2% natural gas tax, and a 2% lodging tax on hotel room rentals within city limits.

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    tax ratesbudgetproperty taxwage taxfranchise tax
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  • Lebanon Pa - Home

    Lebanon, PA
    Budget

    The City of Lebanon, Pennsylvania presented its 2025 General Fund Budget to City Council on November 1, 2024, proposing no tax increase—marking the 10th consecutive year without an increase—while maintaining the millage rate at 4.581 mills. Key revenue projections include a modest 1.07% increase in real estate property tax receipts (rising $41,358) due to assessed property value increases of approximately $2.17 million, with an average property owner continuing to pay $475 annually. The budget narrative notes that most city employees are represented by unions with contracts expiring December 31, 2025, and discusses anticipated revenue from real estate transfer taxes and earned income taxes based on housing market conditions and economic factors.

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    budgettax ratereal estate taxmunicipal financerevenue projection
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