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30 results for “tax processing”

  • July 1, 2026 Meeting Agenda

    Jul 1, 2026

    ·Hazleton, PA
    Agenda

    The City of Hazleton Government Study Commission held a meeting on July 1, 2026, at 5:00 PM at Hazleton City Hall with seven members present: Chairperson Allison Keegan, Vice Chairperson Rossanna Gabriel, and members Philip Bonafair, Thomas Bruno, Jeffrey Cusat, Joseph Yannuzzi, and Joseph Zeller III. The agenda included approval of June 24, 2026 meeting minutes and continuation of a solicitors' presentation on a proposed Accountability, Conduct, and Ethics Article. Old business items addressed a Taxpayer Protection Tax Revenue Growth Rate, determination of a preamble process, public meeting discussion, and translation services. The meeting included provisions for public and member comments.

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    government study commissionethicstax revenue
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  • O-160-26: AN ORDINANCE AMENDING LOUISVILLE/JEFFERSON COUNTY METRO GOVERNMENT CODE OF ORDINANCES (“LMCO”) CHAPTER 153 REGARDING THE PROCESSING OF APPLICATIONS FOR ZONING MAP AMENDMENTS AND CONDITIONAL USE PERMITS IF THERE ARE DELINQUENT TAXES OR VALID LIENS HELD BY LOUISVILLE METRO THAT ARE UNPAID.

    Jun 3, 2026

    ·Louisville, KY
    Proposal
    Source
  • November 18, 2025 Meeting Minutes

    Nov 18, 2025

    ·Hazleton, PA
    Minutes

    The City of Hazleton Government Study Commission met on November 18, 2025, to discuss potential adoption of a Home Rule Charter, with six of seven commissioners present. Mayor Panto of Easton (population 30,504, annual budget $74 million) presented details on Easton's 2008 Home Rule Charter adoption, which expanded its city council from 5 to 7 members and enabled alternative revenue sources beyond property taxes. Jim Perry, President of Hazleton City Council with 11 years of service, testified that the current government structure limits revenue to property taxes and that a Home Rule Charter would provide options such as earned income tax to support city services. Commissioners Tom Bruno and Joe Zeller expressed support for pursuing a Home Rule Charter based on the need for alternative revenue mechanisms and community benefit, while the Commission heard a presentation from Pennsylvania Economy League consultant Fred Redding on the charter drafting process.

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  • CITY OF OAKLAND BUDGET ADVISORY COMMISSION

    Oct 22, 2025

    ·Oakland, CA
    Agenda

    This is an agenda for a City of Oakland Budget Advisory Commission meeting scheduled for Wednesday, October 22, 2025, from 6:00 PM to 8:00 PM in Council Chambers. The seven-member Commission, comprising Mandela Bliss, Larisa Casillas, Mike Forbes, Ben Gould, Mike Petouhoff, Jane Yang, and Stephisha Ycoy-Walton, will address commissioner appointments and elections, review the adopted FY25-27 budget, and consider a Council Finance & Management Committee report on options to raise an additional ongoing $40 million in General Purpose Fund revenues. The agenda also includes discussion of a Community Engagement Ad Hoc assessment on the 2025-2027 budget process and a Consolidated Fiscal Policy amendment recommendation regarding real estate transfer tax revenues. The Finance Department will provide updates, and the public may observe via KTOP Granicus, Zoom webinar, or in person.

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    budgetrevenuefiscal policyreal estate transfer taxpublic meeting
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  • October 7, 2025 Meeting Minutes

    Oct 7, 2025

    ·Hazleton, PA
    Minutes

    The City of Hazleton Government Study Commission held a meeting on October 7, 2025, with six of seven members present to evaluate the city's current form of government over a planned 9-month study period. The Commission will decide whether to recommend retaining the current government structure or draft a Home Rule Charter, with the latter extending the process by an additional 9 months and requiring voter approval via referendum. Regular GSC meetings are scheduled for the 1st and 3rd Tuesday of each month at 4:30 PM at City Hall Conference Room A, with agendas and minutes to be posted on the city website. The Commission is conducting interviews with current and former mayors, city council members, and department heads, and subcommittees held virtual discussions with representatives from Lancaster and Williamsport, both Pennsylvania municipalities with full-time mayors that adopted Home Rule Charters; Lancaster used Home Rule to increase its Earned Income Tax to fund public safety and public works.

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  • Select Budget Committee — Minutes 2025-09-25

    Sep 25, 2025

    ·Seattle, WA
    Minutes

    The Select Budget Committee held a meeting on September 25, 2025, to review the Mayor's Proposed 2025 and 2026 Budgets through department overview presentations from the City Budget Office and department directors. The committee heard information items on budget process overview (Inf 2732), the CBO's 2026 proposed budget overview (Inf 2733), and federal backfill (Inf 2734). The committee also discussed Council Bill 121083, which proposes imposing a local sales and use tax to fund criminal justice investments and amends Seattle Municipal Code sections 5.60. The meeting was chaired by Councilmember Strauss with seven members present during the afternoon session, beginning at 9:31 a.m. and adjourning at 4:32 p.m.

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  • 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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  • CB 120957: AN ORDINANCE relating to publicly-financed election campaigns; providing for the submission to the qualified electors of the City at an election to be held on August 5, 2025, of a proposition authorizing the City to levy regular property taxes for up to ten years in excess of the limitation on levies in chapter 84.55 RCW for the purpose of funding the cost and administration of the City’s Democracy Voucher program and other City purposes; outlining a process for contemplation of changes to the program; applying RCW 84.36.381’s senior citizens and disabled persons exemption to such levy; and ratifying and confirming certain prior acts.

    Mar 2, 2025

    ·Seattle, WA
    Proposal
    Source
  • CITY OF SAN JOSÉ BUDGET OVERVIEW San José Youth Commission November 25, 2024

    Nov 25, 2024

    ·San Jose, CA
    Budget

    The San José Youth Commission received a budget overview on November 25, 2024, from Deputy Budget Director Claudia Chang presenting the adopted 2024-2025 city budget of $6.1 billion, comprised of $4.5 billion in operating budget and $1.6 billion in capital budget across 137 funds and 6,994 positions. The General Fund ($1.8 billion) is primarily funded by property tax (23.2%), fund balance carryover (27.1%), and sales tax (16.5%), with major operating expenditures directed to Environmental and Utility Services ($1.06 billion), Neighborhood Services ($900.6 million), and Public Safety ($900.6 million). The budget development process incorporates the Mayor's March Budget Message, City Council priorities, and principles focused on budgeting for equity.

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    budgetyouth commissionmunicipal fundingpublic safetyenvironmental services
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  • 1651-2024: To determine that satisfactory provision has been made for the public improvement needs of the parcels within certain tax increment financing areas previously adopted in an ordinance of the City under division (B) of Section 5709.40 of the Ohio Revised Code; to include additional public improvements made, to be made, or in the process of being made within the City in support of urban redevelopment within the meaning of Section 5709.41 of the Ohio Revised Code; to amend each of the TIF Ordinances identified in Exhibit A to this Ordinance; and to declare an emergency.

    Jun 3, 2024

    ·Columbus, OH
    Proposal
    Source
  • City of St. Petersburg

    Feb 8, 2024

    ·St. Petersburg, FL
    Agenda

    The St. Petersburg Housing, Land Use, & Transportation Committee held meetings on January 11 and scheduled February 8, 2024, to address affordable housing initiatives and governance matters. Key agenda items included the reappointment of Derek Keys to the Housing Authority Board, tenant protections for city-owned and subsidized housing, and an update on the implementation of the Affordable Housing Tax Relief Ordinance. The January meeting also discussed potential amendments to the Affordable Housing Lot Disposition Program, including proposed changes to the request for qualifications process to allow upfront developer prequalification.

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    affordable housinghousing authorityland usetenant protectiontax relief
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  • Select Budget Committee — Minutes 2023-11-30

    Nov 30, 2023

    ·Seattle, WA
    Minutes

    The Select Budget Committee met on November 30, 2023, with seven members present and one excused absence. The Committee unanimously recommended (8–0) that City Council adopt Resolution 32116, which updates the city's biennial budgeting processes and establishes guidelines for mid-year budget changes and data sharing requirements, superseding prior Resolutions 28885 and 31954. The Committee also unanimously recommended passage of Council Bill 120716, establishing a Fiscal Transparency Program requiring periodic reporting of budgetary and financial information to the Council and public. Additionally, the Committee unanimously recommended passage of Council Bill 120717, requiring that appropriated money for human services contracts be used exclusively for wage increases beyond inflationary adjustments for human services workers. Council Bills 120602 and 120601, relating to water business taxes and capital asset excise taxes respectively, were discussed but no recommendations were recorded.

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  • CITY OF SAN JOSÉ ANNUAL BUDGET San José Youth Commission November 27, 2023 8

    Nov 27, 2023

    ·San Jose, CA
    Budget

    The City of San José adopted a $6.1 billion annual budget for 2023-2024, comprising a $4.5 billion operating budget and $1.6 billion capital budget across 137 funds. The General Fund ($1.9 billion) is primarily funded by property tax (22%), fund balance carryover (30.1%), and sales tax (16.1%), with major spending areas including Public Safety (24.3%), Environmental and Utility Services (28.1%), and Strategic Support (16.8%). The document was presented to the San José Youth Commission on November 27, 2023, and outlines the city's budget development process, departmental allocations, and capital projects across community services, infrastructure, and public safety.

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    budgetpublic safetyproperty taxcapital projectscity spending
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  • O-054-23: AN ORDINANCE CREATING A NEW SECTION TO LOUISVILLE/JEFFERSON COUNTY METRO GOVERNMENT CODE OF ORDINANCES (“LMCO”) CHAPTER 153 REGARDING THE PROCESSING OF APPLICATIONS FOR ZONING MAP AMENDMENTS IF THERE ARE DELINQUENT TAXES OR VALID LIENS HELD BY LOUISVILLE METRO THAT ARE UNPAID.

    Mar 14, 2023

    ·Louisville, KY
    Proposal
    Source
  • 22-1537: A resolution approving a proposed Fourth Amendatory Agreement between the City and County of Denver and Tyler Technologies, Inc. to reflect both the renegotiated pricing and continued need for the software application supporting property tax processes. Amends a contract with Tyler Technologies, Inc. by reducing the amount by $996,090 for a new total of $13,745,584 and by adding 18 months for a new end date of 11-30-2026 to reflect both the renegotiated pricing and continued need for the software application supporting property tax processes, citywide (TECHS-201521806/ TECHS-202265409-04). The last regularly scheduled Council meeting within the 30-day review period is on 1-3-2023. The Committee approved filing this item at its meeting on 11-29-2022.

    Nov 21, 2022

    ·Denver, CO
    Proposal
    Source
  • City Council Meeting Minutes November 14, 2022 Approved November 28, 2022

    Nov 14, 2022

    ·Coatesville, PA
    Minutes

    The Coatesville City Council met on November 14, 2022, to advance the 2023 budget approval process, with key highlights including a balanced General Fund for the fourth consecutive year with no tax increase for the eighth year and no use of reserves. The council approved accounts payables and voted to advertise the preliminary 2023 budget, which includes $4.5 million in capital infrastructure investments and $400,000 in paving through the Liquid Fuels fund, with a public forum scheduled for December 5 before final approval on December 12. Finance Director Rich Troutman also reported on the city's Chester tax commission meeting, noting the city receives several million dollars annually in Earned Income Tax while contributing just over $700 to the commission's budget.

    AI summary

    budgettaxinfrastructurecapital projectsroad maintenance
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  • 2022-0364: Communication from City Controller Michael Lamb submitting a Performance Audit of Department of Finance, Tax and Fee Collection Processes with emphasis on the 2021 Real Estate and Parks Tax Collection, dated May 2022.

    May 13, 2022

    ·Pittsburgh, PA
    Budget
    Source
  • O-113-22: AN ORDINANCE CREATING A NEW SECTION TO LOUISVILLE/ JEFFERSON COUNTY METRO GOVERNMENT CODE OF ORDINANCES (“LMCO”) CHAPTER 153 REGARDING THE PROCESSING OF APPLICATIONS FOR ZONING MAP AMENDMENTS IF THERE ARE DELINQUENT TAXES OR VALID LIENS HELD BY LOUISVILLE METRO GOVERNMENT THAT ARE UNPAID (AS AMENDED).

    Mar 15, 2022

    ·Louisville, KY
    Proposal
    Source
  • Charleston Land Reuse Agency February 9, 2021 2:00 pm ...

    Feb 9, 2021

    ·Charleston, WV
    Minutes

    The Charleston Land Reuse Agency met on February 9, 2021 via Zoom with all board members present. The Treasurer reported revenues of $468.56 since the last meeting, with a fund balance of $243,624.82 and no expenditures. The board decided not to pursue purchase of the property at 808 Hendrix Avenue from the 2019 county tax sale, received a $2,000+ redemption check for 924 2nd Street, and discussed ongoing efforts regarding 2020 tax sale properties and a property adjacent to Cato Park where the process server was unable to serve notice to the owner.

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    land reuseproperty acquisitiontax salefund balance
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  • 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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  • 2026-27 Budget Document

    Pottsville, PA
    Budget

    Pennsylvania Governor presents a balanced 2026-27 budget proposal, emphasizing accomplishments from his first three years including historic education investments, seven tax cuts totaling $193 million in new credits for working families, and economic growth initiatives that created tens of thousands of jobs. The administration highlights fiscal responsibility through two credit rating upgrades, $200 million in borrowing cost savings, and streamlined permitting processes, while noting gun violence reductions and improved public safety outcomes. The budget document represents continued focus on delivering economic growth, supporting education and workers, and efficient government operations.

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    budgeteducation fundingtax creditseconomic growthpublic safety
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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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  • FY 2017 Adopted Budget - Download (PDF)

    Evanston, IL
    Budget

    This is the Fiscal Year 2017 Adopted Budget for the City of Evanston, submitted by City Manager Wally Bobkiewicz and Mayor Elizabeth B. Tisdahl. The document is a comprehensive 255-page budget document containing the City Manager's Budget Message, revenue estimates, departmental budgets, and summary information across multiple funds. It includes detailed line-item breakdowns for the General Fund covering nine departments: City Council, City Clerk's Office, City Manager, Law Department, Administrative Services, Community Development, Police, Fire, Health and Human Services, Parks and Recreation, and Public Works Agency. The document also references Other Funds budgets and includes analysis tools such as a fund balance summary, property tax levy information, and budget process policies.

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  • City of Evanston Local Reparations

    Evanston, IL
    Proposal

    In December 2020, the City of Evanston's Reparations Subcommittee recommended that the City Council discuss a proposed restorative housing program as part of the city's local reparations initiative. The proposal drew on N'COBRA and NAARC definitions of reparations as a process of repairing and restoring communities harmed by institutional injustice, emphasizing that remedies must be defined by those who suffered the harm and managed through independent structures. The city had established the Reparations Fund in November 2019 with $10 million in funding from a 3% Municipal Cannabis Retailers' Occupation Tax, tasking the Reparations Subcommittee with conducting a feasibility study on housing assistance programs and economic development opportunities for Black residents to address historical wealth and opportunity gaps.

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    reparationshousing programeconomic developmentcannabis taxracial justice
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  • 2012 The City of San José’s Budget Crisis INSIDE Introduction The City’s Budget

    San Jose, CA
    Budget

    San José, Northern California's largest city with nearly one million residents, faces ongoing multi-year budget shortfalls with expenses outpacing revenues over the past decade. The city's general fund relies primarily on property and sales taxes, though San José receives only a small percentage of taxes collected (9% of property taxes and 12% of sales taxes), with 61% of expenditures dedicated to public safety and community services. The city is required by charter to approve a balanced budget annually by June 30 through a nine-month community-based process that includes multiple opportunities for public input.

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  • Land Records & Land Redemption | Jackson County, MS

    Jackson, MS
    Other

    The Jackson County Chancery Clerk's Land Records office is responsible for creating and maintaining public land record indexes and volumes, receiving filing fees, and processing tax property redemption payments. The office charges recording fees for various document types, including $26.00 for the first five pages of warranty deeds, deeds of trust, and similar documents, with $1.00 per additional page, and $27.00 for assignments and releases with the same additional page cost structure. Oil and gas recording fees follow a similar tiered structure at $26.00 for the first five pages, while mineral stamp fees for leases range from $0.03 per acre for 0–10 year terms to $0.08 per acre for terms over 20 years. The office also provides certified copies at $1.00 per document and copy services ranging from $0.25 to $2.00 per page depending on the method.

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  • Baltimore County, Maryland Public Records Lookup | BaltimoreRecords.us

    Baltimore, MD
    Other

    Baltimore County maintains public records pursuant to Maryland's Public Information Act § 4-101, which establishes presumptive public access to government documents created or received by county agencies. The county's records span ten categories: court records (civil, criminal, traffic, and family cases from the Circuit Court), property records (deeds, mortgages, liens, plats, and tax assessments), vital records (birth certificates from 1939-present, death certificates, marriage licenses, and divorce decrees), business records (licenses, permits, and fictitious business registrations), tax records, voting records from the Board of Elections, government proceedings (Council meeting minutes, agendas, and video recordings), financial documents (budgets, expenditure reports, and statements), law enforcement records (with restrictions), and land use records (zoning maps, building permits, and development plans). The Baltimore County Circuit Court Clerk's Office maintains court and land records, while the State Department of Assessments and Taxation and Maryland Department of Health Division of Vital Records hold respective property and vital records. Baltimore County complies with Maryland's Open Meetings Act and operates a public information portal and dedicated request process to provide digital access to commonly requested documents.

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    public recordsproperty recordsvital recordszoningbudget
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  • WILMINGTON TOWNSHIP 669 Wilson Mill Road New Castle Pa 16105

    Wilmington, DE
    Minutes

    Wilmington Township Supervisors met on February 3rd, 2025, and approved multiple expense payments totaling approximately $54,457 across general fund, payroll, park maintenance, state fund, and realty transfer accounts. The supervisors discussed traffic safety concerns at several intersections and committed to contacting PennDOT to include additional signage in planned 2025-2026 construction projects in those areas. The board also approved a salt contract for 250 tons, authorized advertisement for bids on a Phillips School Road Culvert Replacement Project, and passed Resolution #1 of 2025 for 2024 tax processing.

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    budgettraffic safetyroad maintenanceinfrastructuretax processing
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  • Budget and Tax Reports - Oklahoma City

    Oklahoma City, OK
    Budget

    The City of Oklahoma City follows a fiscal year budget cycle running July 1 to June 30, with the budget process beginning in March and culminating in Council adoption in June. The fiscal year 2026 budget was introduced to Council on April 29, 2025, presented again on May 13 and May 27, and adopted by City Council on June 3, 2025, following a March 4 budget workshop featuring a five-year economic forecast. Sales tax and use tax are the primary revenue sources for the General Fund supporting day-to-day operations, with monthly sales and use tax reports prepared throughout the fiscal year. Hotel tax, collected on a per-night basis for hotel stays, supports infrastructure and tourism and convention efforts in Oklahoma City. Budget books and detailed financial reports are available for fiscal years 2022 through 2027.

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    budgettax revenuefiscal planningpublic financehotel tax
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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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