Saturday, May 13, 2017

St. Augustine, St. Augustine Beach officials concerned about homestead expansion (SAR)

Raising impact fees on developers is necessary and proper -- no more excuses are desired or required. There are no impact fees at all in the itty-bitty cities, where developers long ruled compliant Commissioners. St. Johns County and the cities must internalize the external costs of development.




Posted May 12, 2017 12:02 am
By SHELDON GARDNER sheldon.gardner@staugustine.com
St. Augustine, St. Augustine Beach officials concerned about homestead expansion

Thanks to the Florida Legislature, voters will decide in November 2018 whether to increase the homestead exemption by $25,000, which could save the average homeowner $200 to $300 a year.

If passed, homestead exemption increases would likely take a chunk out of city budgets in St. Augustine and St. Augustine Beach.

“I fully anticipate [it] passing,” said Mark Litzinger, director of financial services for St. Augustine.

City officials have already started looking at potential effects.

If successful, the exemption expansion would be in effect starting Jan. 1, 2019, and would be felt in the fiscal year budgets that begin Oct. 1, 2019, Litzinger said. The exact financial impact is unclear because property tax values and other factors change with time.

The St. Johns County Property Appraiser estimated the impact to the city’s property tax revenue, based on properties now eligible for homestead exemptions, would be $450,000 in lost revenue, according to Litzinger.

The city budget is about $50 million with adjustments made for transfers in the city, and the city expected to bring in about $9.7 million in ad valorem taxes this fiscal year, according to the city’s budget summary.

St. Augustine officials are also dealing with property value adjustments because of Hurricane Matthew damage.

The hurricane damage led to a loss in the city’s taxable value by about $11 million, which is a property tax revenue loss of about $82,500, according to Litzinger. Still, the city’s taxable value has increased by $25 million over the current fiscal year, and that the loss from the hurricane should be recovered as people repair damages.

As for the homestead exemption, Mayor Nancy Shaver said property tax revenue reduction would put local governments in “an extraordinarily difficult situation.” Florida’s cities and counties have few means to bring in revenue, and she said she hopes people understand it will affect quality of life if passed.

“Do you consider raising the millage rate? Do you reduce services? Those are our two choices,” Shaver said.

Meredith Breidenstein, city budget director, said city officials will consider revenues and the homestead exemption impact at a City Commission budget meeting in June.

In St. Johns County, officials are expecting the homestead exemptions change to make a more than $9 million dent in the county’s revenue.

St. Augustine Beach could see a 4 to 5 percent reduction in property tax revenue based on current data and property values, according to Melissa Burns, the city’s chief financial officer. Applied to the city’s current budget for property tax revenue, that would be about a $126,000 loss, according to Burns.

The ad valorem tax revenue expected this fiscal year was about $2.5 million, and the city’s expenses were expected to be about $9.4 million, according to the beach’s budget.

Also, the impact of added homestead exemption is expected to be tempered by property value increases, but it’s possible the city might have to make some adjustments, according to Burns.

“The city is experiencing growth at the current time, but this trend will diminish over the next couple of years. However, the demand for and cost of services provided will remain at an increased level,” according to Burns. “With the reduction in property tax revenue, the city might have to increase/implement user fees to meet the demand for services.”

St. Augustine Beach Mayor Rich O’Brien expressed a mixed opinion on the issue, and he said the city’s goal in general is to avoid increasing the millage rate and maintain the services people in the city want.

“I think any time we can give property taxpayers a relief, it’s a good thing,” he said. “The other side of the coin is that it will produce less tax revenue, which of course is the goal on one side. But it will give the city less resources to work with, and I think most people want the same quality of life or better that they enjoy today, and that involves revenue to accomplish.”

5 Comments

Tom Reynolds
Old Commissioner/Mayor Rich O'Brien could not be too concerned. After all he just took a 179 % raise in the form of no cost to him and his spouse Health Insurance. The Heath Plan is the Rolls Royce of Health Insurance. Also Vice Mayor Undine George and spouse Eddie George. just took the Heath Insurance at a cost to City Taxpayers of $1,100.00 a MONTH. So between between the O'Brien s and the George s the City of St Augustine Beach Taxpayers are spending over $25,000.00 a year for just those two and their Spouses ! Add in the other three with spouses and there is around another $65,000.00 loss to the City coffers. The Commissioners gave themselves a REAL SWEET DEAL for a 15 to 20 hours a month job. Plus the Commission salaries of almost $40,000.00 a year. WOW $100,000.00 a year for five people who work less than 20 hours a month.

Sponger2 Harvell
That's right Tom. And not only that, those taxes help keep the development machine purring (the very antitheses of what most of the long time residents want), because the Bailey group and all who benefit from development will need "MO' school dallas" to continue build the schools for the thousands more little Marvin's arriving annually. Plus every county employee from the broom handler, through the teachers, and finally the upper "management" (if you could call it that) will continue to have their hands out for raises and the cushy benefit packages they enjoy. I personally don't care if little Marvin or Sally have a football team or a cheer leading squad. Triple the taxes for new development and give the residents who have lived here twenty years or more the exemption.

K O
To tax a specific group at a higher rate and exempt another group is kinda illegal. Don't like it , move to a more rural area

Sponger2 Harvell
It was more rural, until corrupt county officials changed the zoning in conflict with the land use map, (at the behest of developers; real estate companies, and insurance companies like the Bailey Group, which underwrites the school system insurance) and approved the building of 70,000 new homes without the developers providing for infrastructure such as schools, hospitals, water, police, fire, roads, and other essential services. In other words, they shouldn't be here.

gerry robison
too bad...services ain't much in this county anyway....might be an improvement...

1 comment:

Warren Celli said...

"As for the homestead exemption, Mayor Nancy Shaver said property tax revenue reduction would put local governments in “an extraordinarily difficult situation.” Florida’s cities and counties have few means to bring in revenue, and she said she hopes people understand it will affect quality of life if passed.

“Do you consider raising the millage rate? Do you reduce services? Those are our two choices,” Shaver said."

This is a Baloneyspeak Supreme Sandwich from the gangster government's head mobster.

If you can hijack a city and turn it into a road side joint state alcohol and tobacco cartel tourist trap to enrich a few self serving scum bags you should also be able to tax the drinks of all of the drunks you attract here that negatively impact the quality of life, or maybe make the merchants clean up after their slob customers, or maybe charge them a mitigation fee for all of that steam cleaning and street sweeping of the streets in front of their businesses that tuns the city into an unpleasant germ warfare zone every morning, or fine loud music state drug dealer joints $10.000 per violation, or attract more socially positive sustainable industries that do not require bringing millions of customers here that contribute to dumping over 466,000 metric tons PER DAY of aviation jet fuel all over the planet, or.... etc.!

Saint Augustine needs a limited choice thinking phony gangster politician enema!

http://saintaugdog.com/