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8 results for “tax code” · budget

  • 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.

    AI summary

    budget allocationmental health fundingtenant protectionjudicial funding
tobacco settlement
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  • 0 Fiscal Year 2024 ALL FUNDS APPROVED BUDGET IN BRIEF CINCINNATI, OHIO

    Cincinnati, OH
    Budget

    Cincinnati's Fiscal Year 2024 Approved Budget addresses the city's core challenge of delivering services with constrained resources due to pandemic-driven changes in work patterns and reliance on income tax revenue. Operating highlights include funding for 60 police recruits (beginning June 2023) and 50 police recruits (January 2024), two 50-member fire recruit classes (June 2023 and February 2024), $4.415 million in leveraged support funding across 30 organizations, 9.0 FTEs for a Buildings & Inspections code enforcement unit, and 2.0 FTEs for dental services at Roberts Academy. Capital investments include $19.7 million for street rehabilitation to cover 39 lane miles of pavement with preventative maintenance on 31 additional lane miles (combined with $2.0 million in grants), $4.7 million for deferred capital maintenance at city facilities, and $3.5 million toward Western Hills Viaduct replacement.

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  • ON-RESIDENT HOOL DISTRMUNICIPALITPSD CODE TWP SCH DIST TOTAL RATE MUNICIPAL

    Carlisle, PA
    Budget

    This document presents a comprehensive tax rate schedule for multiple school districts and municipalities in Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, listing earned income tax rates (ranging from 0.50% to 0.60%), local services tax rates (ranging from 0.90% to 1.50%), combined rates, and non-resident school district fees (typically $5.00 to $52.00). The table organizes tax information across nine school district regions including Big Springs, Camp Hill, Carlisle, Cumberland Valley, East Pennsboro, Mechanicsburg, Shippensburg, South Middleton, and West Shore, with specific codes assigned to each municipality or township within those districts.

    AI summary

    tax ratesschool districtmunicipal taxearned income taxlocal services tax
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  • TCD CODE COUNTY OF ORIGIN SD/MUNI NAME PSD CODE Resident Non Resident $'s/Year

    Lancaster, PA
    Budget

    This document is a tax rate reference table for Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, detailing Earned Income Tax (EIT) rates and Local Services Tax (LST) amounts across multiple school districts and municipalities for 2025. The table lists resident and non-resident EIT tax rates (mostly 1.00%, with two notable increases to 1.60% for Lancaster City annexes in Conestoga Valley and Lampeter-Strasburg school districts marked as new for 2025) and annual LST fees (primarily $52.00 or $10.00, with some municipalities having no LST or requiring direct contact). The document serves as a comprehensive tax collection guide managed by the Lancaster County Tax Collection Bureau (LCTCB).

    AI summary

    earned income taxlocal services taxtax ratesmunicipal tax
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  • 721 Unionville Road Kennett Square, PA 19348

    Kennett Square, PA
    Budget

    East Marlborough Township submitted a balanced 2024 Budget to its Board of Supervisors on December 4, 2023, with no tax rate increases while maintaining quality services and amenities. The budget was developed with focus on fiscal responsibility, social equity, and environmental sustainability, following a three-pronged approach of respecting past initiatives, serving present needs without increasing debt, and building reserves for future taxpayers. The budget process, mandated under Pennsylvania Second Class Township Code, began in August with departmental budget requests reviewed individually by the Township Manager.

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    budgettax ratefiscal planningenvironmental sustainability
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  • Worksession re FY 2024 Proposed Budget – Assembly ...

    Anchorage, AK
    Budget

    This document presents three proposed budget amendments to the FY 2024 budget discussed at an Assembly worksession on November 9, 2023. Brawley Amendment No. 1 GG allocates $100,000 recurring to the Planning Department for communications and educational materials about development code changes, funded from tax capacity and recommended by the Housing Action Summit. Brawley Amendment No. 2 GG appropriates $100,000 one-time to Legislative Services for policy convening and communications around Assembly priorities, including planning major convening events by fall 2024, also funded from tax capacity. Rivera Amendment No. 3 GG provides $150,000 recurring to the Legislative Branch to support the Assembly's housing initiative and Housing Strategic Action Plan through contractor and staff support for media, research, legal drafting, and project-based needs.

    AI summary

    budgethousing initiativeplanning departmentlegislative servicestax capacity
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  • 2026 Budget

    Mahanoy City, PA
    Budget

    The Borough of Mahanoy City's 2026 Annual Budget was presented to Council on November 21, 2025, and approved on December 16, 2025, with no proposed tax increase; the millage rate adjusts to 5.99 mils due to reassessment, allocated across General Fund (4.3 mils), Debt Reduction Fund (0.8 mils), Street Lighting Fund (0.65 mils), Fire Tax Fund (0.16 mils), Sinking Fund (0.021 mils), and Library Fund (0.059 mils). The 2026 General Fund Operating Budget projects $655,000 less revenue than 2025, primarily due to $400,000 in one-time grant income from 2025 project completions and $300,000 in transfers related to the completed B Street Project. Real estate tax revenue is calculated using a 72% collection rate for current-year taxes, supplemented by delinquent tax income from Schuylkill County Tax Claim Bureau, and the borough continues a 1% Earned Income Tax under Home Rule Charter authorization with projected receipts increased compared to 2025. Staffing includes five council members, one borough manager, three public works employees, two office workers, one part-time treasurer, one code officer, and five full-time police officers.

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  • City of Dearborn Budget Adoption 2025-2026 List of Documents Page(s)

    Dearborn, MI
    Budget

    The City of Dearborn adopted its 2025-2026 budget with total revenues of $392.2 million and expenditures of $380.6 million across all funds, representing a 2% increase from the prior year. The General Fund revenues increased by $3.6 million (2%) to $151.8 million, while expenditures rose by $3.4 million (2%) to $151.4 million, resulting in a projected fund balance addition of $416,689. The budget maintained all tax millage rates unchanged at a combined total of 22.9 mills, with revisions made since April 1, 2025, including adjustments for Community Development Block Grant funding for code enforcement and economic development initiatives.

    AI summary

    budget adoptionmunicipal budgetrevenue allocationtax millagecommunity development
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