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20 results for “tax fund” · other

  • 10/3/2018 1 UNDERSTANDING THE TOWNSHIP BUDGET PROCESS BRYAN E. SMITH

    Oct 3, 2018

    ·Springfield, IL
    Other

    On October 3, 2018, Bryan E. Smith, Executive Director of Township Officials of Illinois, presented an educational overview of the township budget process covering definitions, legal requirements, and procedures. The presentation explained that a budget/appropriation ordinance provides legal authority to spend money and establishes the township's financial plan, with budgets divided into separate funds based on property tax allocations for specific purposes. Key procedural requirements include preparing a tentative budget, making it available for public inspection at least 30 days before final action, publishing newspaper notice, conducting a public hearing, and filing the adopted budget with the county clerk within 30 days, with separate timelines for township and road district budgets.

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    township budgetappropriation ordinancepublic hearingproperty taxfinancial planning
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  • Fiscal Year 2023-25 Overview of the City Budget Process City of Oakland

    Oakland, CA
    Other

    The City of Oakland's fiscal year 2023-25 budget overview describes the city's biannual budget process, which runs from January to June and must result in a balanced budget by June 30. Oakland's total annual budget is approximately $1.7 billion, comprising 62 percent Restricted Funds (grants and voter-approved bonds designated for specific purposes) and 38 percent General Purpose Funds (primarily tax-supported and flexible). Revenue sources include taxes (51 percent), service charges, fines, licenses, and permits (15 percent), bonds and other sources (14 percent), transfers (12 percent), and grants and subsidies (8 percent). The largest departmental allocations are Non-Departmental (23.9 percent), Police Department (21.2 percent), Fire Department (11.5 percent), Oakland Public Works (10.3 percent), and Human Services (7 percent). Property taxes contribute less than 26 cents per dollar to the city, with the remaining amount distributed to other government agencies including Alameda County, Oakland Unified School District, AC Transit, and others.

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    budget processfiscal year 2023-25public safetymunicipal revenuebudget allocation
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  • Finance | Newark, NJ

    Newark, NJ
    Other

    The Newark Department of Finance oversees all fiscal operations and asset management for the city, including employee and vendor payments, revenue collection, tax billing, and financial reporting, under the leadership of the Director of Finance/Chief Financial Officer. The department comprises several divisions: the Director's Office maintains custody of city assets including cash, investments, and capital authorizations; the Employee's Retirement Systems manages pension enrollment and retiree payments; the Office of Tax Abatement and Special Taxes collects and enforces revenue from payroll taxes, parking, hotel occupancy, and business licenses and permits; Assessments determines real property and personal property taxability and maintains tax maps; Accounts and Control records financial transactions across all city funds; and Revenue Collections handles property tax billing and citywide revenue collection and reporting.

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    tax billingbudget managementrevenue collectionpension administrationfinancial reporting
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  • The Budget Process in PA (PDF)

    Carlisle, PA
    Other

    This document is a search results page listing Pennsylvania Commonwealth budget documents and publications from the Office of the Budget, spanning fiscal years 2008-09 through 2024-25. The page includes references to multiple governors' executive budgets and "Budget in Brief" summaries, with notable items such as $87.6 million allocated for Pennsylvania Pre-K Counts in 2008-09 and property tax relief measures discussed in the 2010-11 budget. The Commonwealth budgets referenced were signed by Governor Wolf across multiple fiscal years, with specific signing dates provided for several budget approvals.

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    budgetproperty tax reliefpre-k fundingexecutive budgetfiscal planning
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  • Houston City Council - Committees and Agendas - Budget and Fiscal Affairs Committee

    Houston, TX
    Other

    The Houston City Council's Budget and Fiscal Affairs Committee, chaired by Council Member Sallie Alcorn, reviews monthly financial reports and oversees matters related to the city's annual budget, debt model, and financial policies. Meeting agendas from 2025 and 2026 show the committee addressed topics including quarterly overtime reports, audit plans, the five-year financial forecast, capital improvement plans, stormwater fund spending, property tax updates, and disaster preparedness funding. The committee frequently holds joint meetings with other city councils committees and produces reports and recommendations for the Mayor on fiscal matters.

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    budgetfinancial planningproperty taxcapital improvementsstormwater infrastructure
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  • Did you know that Carroll Township is the only township in

    Carlisle, PA
    Other

    Carroll Township, Perry County does not levy a real estate tax on residents, instead funding services through earned income tax (1.70%), fire tax (0.034 mills), per capita tax ($5.00), and real estate transfer tax (1.0%). The Spring 2023 newsletter announced a Spring Cleanup event scheduled for May 13, 2023, accepting tires, metal, and bulk trash with specific limits and fees, and noted that the Community Center is undergoing repairs funded by COVID relief funds, with furnaces installed and roof replaced, pending water system permitting.

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    earned income taxfire taxcommunity center repairswaste managementcovid relief funding
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  • Bethlehem-Pa.gov

    Bethlehem, PA
    Other

    Bethlehem is a city of 75,000 people in eastern Pennsylvania presenting itself as undergoing economic and cultural renaissance. The city operates a community website offering access to multiple municipal functions including community recovery funding, permits, city council meetings, recreation programs, taxes, and procurement. Current recreation offerings include Volleyball Nights at Fairview Park (Wednesday nights starting June 17th for adults), the 2026 Family Park Program (June 15th–July 23rd), Fitness in the Garden (3rd Tuesday monthly, April–September), and Trail Tuesdays (1st Tuesday monthly, April–October). The website also hosts notifications of seasonal closures, such as the ice rink closure notice, and provides community event information and voluntary water conservation messaging.

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    community recoveryrecreationwater conservationpublic eventscity services
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  • Basic Accounting for Townships and Districts

    Toledo, OH
    Other

    This document is a training presentation on basic accounting procedures for township fiscal officers in Ohio, presented by Justin W. Sloan in January 2024. The course covers fundamental accounting concepts including the budgetary process, revenues, expenditures, purchase orders, and bank reconciliations, with an emphasis on incorporating fund accounting principles into practical application. Key topics include the tax budget process prescribed by the Ohio Revised Code, which begins with the fiscal officer preparing a budget presented to the Board of Trustees by June 1st and adopted by July 15th, along with related certificates and appropriation resolutions required for township financial management.

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    accountingbudgetfiscal managementrevenueexpenditure
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  • ANNUAL REPORT OF THE Town of Stamford VERMONT

    Stamford, CT
    Other

    This is the 2023 annual report for the Town of Stamford, Vermont, covering the fiscal year ending December 31, 2023. The document contains town governance information, voting details, town officer listings, and comprehensive financial statements including revenue and expenses, tax information, and reports from various departments and funds such as the fire department, library, cemetery, and equipment replacement funds. The report serves as an official public record of the town's operations, finances, and departmental activities for the calendar year.

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  • Fiscal Year 2021-23 Overview of the City Budget Process City of Oakland

    Oakland, CA
    Other

    Oakland's Fiscal Year 2021-23 budget overview describes the city's biennial budget process conducted from February to June, requiring a balanced budget by June 30. The city's total annual budget is approximately $1.7 billion, funded through taxes (51%), service charges, fines, licenses and permits (15%), bonds and other sources (14%), transfers (12%), and grants and subsidies (8%). The budget is divided into Restricted Funds (62%), which must be used for specific purposes mandated by grants and voter-approved bonds, and General Purpose Funds (38%), which are tax-supported and flexible for various city services including public safety. Of every property tax dollar paid, the City of Oakland receives approximately 26 cents, with the remaining 74 percent distributed to other government agencies including Alameda County, OUSD, AC Transit, and BART.

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  • Public Funding of Evanston's Local Reparations Program - Alderman Rainey

    Evanston, IL
    Other

    Evanston's City Council designated a 3% Cannabis Retailers' Occupation Tax on adult/recreational cannabis sales as the sole funding source for the city's Reparations Program, projecting $10 million in revenue over ten years. The tax became effective July 1, 2020, with revenue remitted to the city quarterly; based on sales from January 1 through the document date, the tax would have generated approximately $450,000 minus state administrative fees. Evanston had one dispensary operating at the time, with Illinois planning to issue 75 new dispensary licenses statewide (delayed due to COVID-19 and tied applicant ratings), of which a 9-county region including Evanston was allocated 47 licenses; the document notes that 1–2 additional Evanston dispensary licenses would significantly boost reparations program funding. Illinois also scheduled issuance of 40 craft grower and 40 infuser licenses in July.

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  • Budget & Management | City of Cleveland Ohio

    Cleveland, OH
    Other

    The Division of Budget and Management in Cleveland's Department of Finance prepares, implements, and monitors annual operating budgets and financial plans to fund City services. The General Fund Operating Budget, funded primarily by a 2.5% City Income Tax on all workers in Cleveland, supports Safety Forces (Police, Fire, and EMS), Waste and Recycling Pick Up, City Parks, and Neighborhood Resource and Recreation Centers. Enterprise Funds operate as self-supporting services including Water, Water Pollution Control, Cleveland Public Power, the Airport, Cemeteries, Golf Courses, City Parking Facilities, Public Auditorium, and West Side Market. The City also funds capital improvements and infrastructure through debt, restricted funds, and grants, including Community Development Block Grants (CDBG) from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development that must support projects eliminating blight and assisting low- and moderate-income residents in housing, public improvements, and land use areas. Budget documents are available for fiscal years 2023 through 2026, along with an interactive budget portal and comprehensive financial reports.

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    municipal budgetpublic safetywater infrastructurecommunity developmentcity services
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  • Finance | Portland, ME - Official Website

    Portland, ME
    Other

    The City of Portland, Maine received $46,290,625 in American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funding in two equal tranches (May 2021 and May 2022) to address COVID-19 pandemic impacts and replace lost revenues. The Finance Department oversees multiple functions including budget management, capital improvement planning, the Finance Committee's budget review process, municipal purchasing, and treasury services such as tax collection and vehicle registration. This webpage serves as a navigation hub providing access to Portland's financial documents, policies, and related government services.

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  • About the City Budget Information Series on the City of Madison Budget

    Madison, WI
    Other

    This informational series provides an overview of the City of Madison's budget structure and processes. The document explains that Madison maintains two separate budgets—a capital budget funding long-term infrastructure projects (roads, housing, building improvements) financed primarily through borrowing, and an operating budget supporting daily city services (police, fire, libraries, sanitation) funded mainly through property taxes. The series is designed as a public education tool covering budget fundamentals, the city's structural deficit, financial policies, and revenue options, with all budget phases publicly available on the city website.

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    budgetcapital projectsproperty taxcity servicesinfrastructure
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  • City of Worcester Financial Overview Timothy J. McGourthy

    Worcester, MA
    Other

    This financial overview document presents Worcester's fiscal structure and priorities as delivered by Chief Financial Officer Timothy J. McGourthy. The city operates under significant state-mandated constraints, with approximately $920 million in FY25 budget revenue derived from limited sources (state aid, property taxes, local fees), while discretionary municipal operations comprise only 22% of total spending due to mandatory obligations in education, debt service, and pension costs. Worcester maintains a Financial Integrity Plan established since 2006 that includes a general fund reserve of 10.7% for FY25, an irrevocable OPEB trust, and a net free cash policy directing funds toward bond rating stabilization, OPEB obligations, and operations, with an average residential tax bill of $5,266 funding services ranging from K-12 education and public safety to libraries and public health services.

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  • Sandra Fisk Vlahanoy City Borough Manager 239 E. Pine St.

    Mahanoy City, PA
    Other

    Mahanoy City Borough, Pennsylvania, has experienced significant population decline from 15,936 residents in 1910 to 3,912 in 2021 due to the collapse of the coal mining industry, resulting in numerous abandoned properties throughout the municipality. To address blight, the Borough established a Blight/Demolition Fund in 2014 funded by real estate taxes (approximately 1.5 mils) and $50,000 annually in earned income tax revenue, supplemented by Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) allocations totaling $96,056 in 2021, of which $45,146 was allocated to demolition projects. The Borough faces potential loss of CDBG funding in 2022 due to Act 179 population requirements and has secured additional grant funding, including approval for $133,000 to demolish three properties.

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  • The Budget Process in PA (PDF)

    Lansford, PA
    Other

    This document is a search results page from the Pennsylvania government website listing budget-related publications and documents spanning multiple fiscal years (2008-2025). It contains references to various Commonwealth budgets signed by Governor Wolf, including the 2020-21 budget (signed November 23, 2020), 2024-25 budget, and earlier fiscal year budgets, along with links to budget briefs and executive budget documents from the Office of the Budget. The page also references specific budget initiatives such as Pennsylvania Pre-K Counts ($87.6 million) and property tax relief programs, though detailed policy changes and comprehensive budget figures are not fully articulated in this search results format.

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    state budgetproperty tax reliefeducation funding
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  • CITY OF JERSEY CITY

    Jersey City, NJ
    Other

    Mayor Steven M. Fulop introduced Jersey City's FY 2026 budget on April 18, 2025, proposing zero municipal tax rate increase for residents while maintaining full city services—marking the ninth of eleven budgets under his administration with tax increases of 2% or less. The budget includes $66 million in debt service paydown, $6 million for union contract settlements, new police and firefighter hires, full pension fund funding with cost-of-living adjustments, and investments in affordable housing and infrastructure, while managing challenges including rising insurance premiums and reduced federal and state grant funding. The municipal portion of average property tax bills has decreased to 35% from 48% over two years, with $1.6 billion in new ratables added to the tax rolls through economic development efforts.

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    budgettax increasepolice hiringinfrastructureaffordable housing
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  • ANNUAL REPORT

    Tampa, FL
    Other

    The Tampa Bay Chamber of Commerce's 2024 Annual Report highlights a year of significant achievements across its three strategic pillars: serving as a catalyst for business success, operating as an inclusive organization, and functioning as a hub for business development. Key accomplishments include securing $256 million in transportation funding for Hillsborough County, passing two tax referendums for education and infrastructure, generating over $39 million in gross sales through the Minority Business Accelerator program (which created 286 jobs), hosting 180 events, and providing $100,000 in professional training. The Chamber maintained its position among the top 2% of chambers nationally with a 5-star U.S. Chamber of Commerce rating, while a nationwide study found that 90% of surveyed businesses recognized the direct link between chambers and job creation and economic growth.

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    transportation fundingtax referendumeconomic developmentbusiness supportjob creation
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  • Bethlehem-pa

    Bethlehem, PA
    Other

    Article 151 of the City of Bethlehem's ordinances establishes and governs the Firemen's Pension Fund, created under authority of the Third Class City Code. The fund charges paid Fire Department members 7% of their pay, plus an additional 1% to cover benefits for surviving spouses and children under age 18 of retired, killed, or deceased members. The City must annually appropriate to the fund no less than one-half of one percent of all City taxes levied (excluding debt service taxes), beginning in 1949 and continuing thereafter. The fund is invested and merged with joint funds under Article 156 of the City's ordinances, with annual appropriations made in accordance with Pennsylvania's Act 205 of 1984 (Municipal Pension Plan Funding Standard and Recovery Act). Membership in the fund is voluntary for all paid firemen employed in the Bureau of Fire.

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    pension fundfire departmentmunicipal benefitsemployee contributions
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