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View Full Version : Nashville Dem Mayor Proposes 32% Property Tax Increase Amid Pandemic



Teh One Who Knocks
04-29-2020, 12:25 PM
Breaking 911


https://i.imgur.com/4NErsEN.png

Nashville Mayor Cooper today filed the city’s recommended operating budget for fiscal year 2021 with the Metro Council.

The Democratic Mayor wants to hike the city’s property tax by 32% to recover.

Metro Finance estimates that the city will experience a $470 million revenue decline over a 16-month time frame due to the impact of COVID-19 and the March tornado. The decline in revenue during Q4 of fiscal year 2020 required Metro to cut expenditures and spend down remaining fund balances, leaving Metro with only $12 million of fund balances at the end of FY20.

The financial impact of the tornado and COVID-19 on Q4 and FY21 require a budget that increases the property tax rate by $1.00, raising the current rate of $3.155 up to $4.155. Over the past 25 years, Metro’s combined GSD/USD property tax rate has averaged $4.30.

In the five years prior to the current historically low rate that began in FY2018, the combined rate averaged $4.545.

The proposed FY21 operating budget totals $2,447,489,500. Management actions produced over $234 million in savings, reductions, or spending deferrals. The property tax increase will restore $100 million in fund balances, make up for $216 million in net revenue losses, and fund $16 million in net operating needs for a “continuation of effort” budget. In addition to other new revenue generated by Mayor Cooper’s office and with the help of departmental savings, Metro services will continue without interruption. Metro employees will forgo pay raises or cost of living adjustments, but this budget avoids the layoffs and pay cuts set to occur in hundreds of other cities nationwide.

“This is an unprecedented and difficult time for all Nashvillians,” said Mayor Cooper. “Thousands of residents have lost their jobs during the pandemic, and that makes the necessary decision to raise taxes all the more difficult. And as I mentioned during the State of Metro address, the city has thinned its cash reserves to a point where we find ourselves without a rainy-day fund during a stormy season. This is a crisis budget – not a discretionary budget – that will ensure Metro and Metro Nashville Public Schools can continue to meet our community’s needs.”

“Nashville is stronger than our current challenges,” added Mayor Cooper. “This is the operating budget that will get us through this crisis and prepare for a return to prosperity.”

“While this budget does not include the many new investments I had hoped to make in a full deployment of body cameras, affordable housing, transportation, social and emotional learning, and much more, this budget will provide needed financial stability to Metro Government,” said Mayor Cooper. “Nashville’s growth will return once again, our economy will flourish as it did before the storm, and we will not lose sight of the good work we’ve set out to do on behalf of all Nashvillians.”

Teh One Who Knocks
04-29-2020, 12:26 PM
It's coming....

DemonGeminiX
04-29-2020, 07:25 PM
32%? That's a bit excessive.

PorkChopSandwiches
04-29-2020, 08:19 PM
Amazing

PorkChopSandwiches
04-29-2020, 08:19 PM
Dont cut spending, just tax more

Griffin
04-29-2020, 08:23 PM
I wonder how many people are going to pay more property tax on a mortgage they can no longer pay because they are no longer working?

perrhaps
04-30-2020, 07:18 PM
32%? That's a bit excessive.

Agreed, but to be fair, if my reading comprehension is intact, taxes would still be lower than what they were in 2013. I could live with that.

DemonGeminiX
04-30-2020, 09:48 PM
Agreed, but to be fair, if my reading comprehension is intact, taxes would still be lower than what they were in 2013. I could live with that.

It would be more fair if they cut some unnecessary spending. I'm betting you could live with that as well.

perrhaps
05-01-2020, 09:35 AM
It would be more fair if they cut some unnecessary spending. I'm betting you could live with that as well.

I'd like free ice cream on Sundays too. But that also ain't going to happen.


It looks like Nashville was only carrying a reserve of @25% of annual expenditures, which is probably too low. Back in the late 1990s, when I served 2+ years as a Township Supervisor, we were advised that ideally we should have annually carried forward a reserve slightly more than a year's expenses as a hedge against a catastrophic calamity.

Godfather
05-03-2020, 11:26 PM
It would be more fair if they cut some unnecessary spending. I'm betting you could live with that as well.

My city is complaining they could go broke... we have the highest property transfer tax in the country, and while our actual property taxes are relatively low - the assessments of homes/condos in Vancouver are the highest in the country so our relative tax rate is extremely high. I wrote an email to the Mayor and CC'd our local federal member of parlamaint asking how the hell we're the first city in Canada to be whining? How do they expect their people to save for a rainy day if the municipal government can't miss a single paycheque. Meanwhile 2/3 bridging going into our downtown core have overbuilt bike lanes (which nobody uses), and construction on the 3rd bridge bike lanes continues... It's disgusting.

RBP
05-04-2020, 01:18 AM
People are dying. DYING. This is no time to discuss economics. :hand:

lost in melb.
05-04-2020, 05:24 AM
People are dying. DYING. This is no time to discuss economics. :hand:

:serious:

:dance: