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12 results for “rate structure” · budget

  • 1 For the Fiscal Year beginning October 1, 2023 and ending September 30, 2024

    Oct 1, 2023

    ·Dallas, TX
    Budget

    Dallas County's FY2024 budget covers the fiscal year from October 1, 2023, through September 30, 2024, and this Budget-in-Brief document summarizes the county's major financial and operational planning decisions. The document provides an overview of Dallas County's organizational structure, departmental budgets across categories including Justice Administration, Law Enforcement, Health and Social Services, and Parkland Hospital, along with revenue and expenditure trends. Dallas County's government structure consists of a Commissioners Court with one County Judge elected at large and four County Commissioners elected from districts, which sets the county tax rate, adopts the budget, and oversees county administration.

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  • For the Fiscal Year beginning October 1, 2022 and ending September 30, 2023

Oct 1, 2022

·Dallas, TX
Budget

This Dallas County FY2023 budget document (October 1, 2022 – September 30, 2023) is a summary overview of the county's annual financial and operational planning. The document provides a table of contents covering departmental budgets across Justice Administration, Law Enforcement, Health and Social Services, Juvenile Services, Community Services, Management Services, Capital and Technology, and Parkland Hospital, along with financial policies and revenue and expenditure trends. Dallas County's governing structure consists of a Commissioners Court with one County Judge elected at large and four County Commissioners elected from districts, responsible for setting the tax rate, adopting the budget, and overseeing administration. The full detailed budget, Performance Measures Reports, and line item detail budget are available through the Dallas County Office of Budget and Evaluation at 500 Elm Street, Suite 5400, Dallas, Texas 75202, or by contacting (214) 653-6384.

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  • ANNUAL COMPREHENSIVE FINANCIAL REPORT FOR THE YEARS ENDED

    Allentown, PA
    Budget

    The Lehigh County Authority Comprehensive Annual Financial Report presents audited financial statements for the water and wastewater utility serving Allentown, Pennsylvania for the fiscal years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019. The report, prepared by Chief Financial Officer Edward C. Klein, Controller Todd A. Marion, and Accounting Supervisor Linda M. Eberhardt, includes detailed financial statements covering net position, revenues, expenses, cash flows, and fiduciary accounts across the Authority's suburban and city divisions. The document encompasses required supplementary information on pension and other post-employment benefit (OPEB) liabilities, along with statistical sections analyzing financial trends, revenue capacity by source, rate schedules for both water and wastewater services, and debt capacity metrics. The Authority operates separate water and wastewater service areas with distinct rate structures for its suburban and city divisions.

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  • MUNICIPALITY OF ANCHORAGE, ALASKA ...

    Anchorage, AK
    Budget

    The Municipality of Anchorage, Alaska issued $125,000,000 in General Obligation Tax Anticipation Notes with a maturity date of December 15, 2023, an interest rate of 4.250%, and a yield of 2.750%, rated SP-1+ by S&P Global Ratings. The Notes are full faith and credit obligations backed by the Municipality's unrestricted taxing power and are structured as book-entry securities with a minimum purchase amount of $25,000. Interest on the Notes is excludable from federal gross income for tax purposes under existing law, though it is subject to the federal alternative minimum tax for applicable corporations for tax years beginning after December 31, 2022, and is not subject to Alaska income tax on corporations.

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  • FY2025 Budget Snapshot 3 -1-.pdf

    Dallas, TX
    Budget

    This FY2025 Budget Snapshot document provides an overview of Dallas County's budget process, organization, and financial structure. Dallas County government operates under a Commissioners Court structure consisting of one County Judge elected at large and four County Commissioners elected from respective districts, which sets tax rates, adopts budgets, and oversees county administration. The County Judge serves as both executive administrator and presiding officer without judicial duties. The document explains that Texas counties, including Dallas County, focus on judicial systems, health and welfare services, law enforcement, and road construction, and do not manage schools, utilities, or commercial airports. The snapshot references an adopted budget summary and property tax information, with additional details available through the Dallas County Office of Budget and Evaluation at 500 Elm Street, Suite 5400, Dallas, Texas 75202, or by calling (214) 653-6384. Dallas County's vision statement is "Improving People's Lives," guided by core values of professionalism, customer focus, and diversity and inclusion.

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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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  • Authority Budget of:

    Jackson, MS
    Budget

    The Jackson Municipal Utilities Authority submitted its fiscal year 2026 budget (January 1–December 31, 2026) to the State of New Jersey Division of Local Government Services. The budget received conditional approval on November 17, 2025, contingent upon the Authority's adoption of a fiscal year 2026 Rate Structure Resolution, after which the adopted budget and rate structure must be submitted to the Division for final approval. The document includes certification pages indicating the budget complies with New Jersey law and Local Finance Board regulations under N.J.S.A. 40A:5A-11. The narrative section requires the Authority to provide a brief statement comparing fiscal year 2026 proposed revenues and appropriations to the fiscal year 2025 adopted budget, with explanations for any variances exceeding plus or minus 10 percent for individual line items.

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  • phoenix - community budget guide

    Phoenix, AZ
    Budget

    The Phoenix Community Budget Guide outlines the city's fiscal structure and challenges. Phoenix's 2025-26 General Fund faced a baseline deficit of $36 million, with projected shortfalls of $83 million in 2026-27 and $6 million in 2027-28, primarily caused by state legislative actions eliminating residential rental sales tax (SB 1131) and reducing the individual income tax rate to 2.5 percent (SB 1828). On March 18, 2025, the City Council approved budget balancing strategies including an increase to the Transaction Privilege Tax and Use Tax rate from 2.3 percent to 2.8 percent, effective July 1, 2025, resulting in a projected one-time General Fund surplus of $17 million for 2025-26. The document describes the city's budget structure, revenue sources, operating costs for public safety and community services, and the budget process including a planned City Council adoption in June 2026 with community input opportunities at phoenix.gov/budget.

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  • Year: 2025 Municipal User Friendly Budget MUNICIPALITY: 2 Government Type: 4

    Jersey City, NJ
    Budget

    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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  • FY 2025 - adopted FINAL.pub

    Charlotte, NC
    Budget

    Charlotte's FY 2025 adopted budget totals $4.17 billion, with a $896.8 million (7.6%) increase to the General Fund and represents the city's first property tax increase in six years, comprising a 1.37¢ increase designed to support public safety (0.82¢), capital investments in housing and mobility (0.24¢), and arts and culture (0.31¢). The structurally balanced budget prioritizes employee compensation with 5% salary increases for hourly workers and 4% merit pools for salaried staff, while maintaining Charlotte's position as having the lowest tax rate among North Carolina cities with populations over 75,000. The budget aligns with City Council's strategic priorities of well-managed government, equity, safe communities, transportation planning, and workforce development.

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  • LEON COUNTY, FLORIDA FISCAL YEAR 2024/2025 BUDGET IN BRIEF PEOPLE FOCUSED.

    Tallahassee, FL
    Budget

    Leon County, Florida adopted a fiscal year 2024/2025 budget of $377,886,993, representing an 8.1% increase from the prior year, while maintaining a constant property tax millage rate for the thirteenth consecutive year. The budget encompasses the county's 702 square miles and population of approximately 301,724 people, with 99,891 in unincorporated areas and 201,833 in city limits. The County Administrator and Board of County Commissioners, led by Chair Carolyn D. Cummings, structured the budget around the FY 2022–2026 Strategic Plan priorities, including septic-to-sewer conversion in the Primary Springs Protection Zone, sidewalk and trail construction, parks and community center enhancements, affordable housing support, and homelessness reduction. The budget reflects the county's commitment to maintaining low per-capita spending and employee counts relative to comparable counties.

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  • CITY OF PROVIDENCE FY23 BUDGET

    Providence, RI
    Budget

    The FY23 City of Providence budget totals $567,341,359, representing a 5.15% increase, and is structured as a balanced budget emphasizing investments in youth, city services, and infrastructure. Key allocations include $100,323,373 for pension fund payments, $498.8 million for major infrastructure improvements over FY23-27, $1,526,715 for police and fire training academies to recruit up to 50 new officers and firefighters, and $721,176 for a behavioral health crisis response program. The budget also reflects tax rate adjustments across residential, commercial, tangible, and motor vehicle categories, with residential tax rates decreasing by $6.06 per $1,000 valuation, and the city achieved its first rainy day fund reserve goal of 5% since 2008 with a current balance of $28,818,000.

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