The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Atlanta Schools delays tax rate vote to Aug. 6

Technical error will postpone decision scheduled for tonight.

- By Vanessa McCray vanessa.mccray@ajc.com

A mistake by Atlanta Public Schools means residents will have two more chances to bring property tax concerns to the school board before the board votes Aug. 6 to set a tax rate.

The school district announced Saturday that it failed to give proper legal notice regarding today’s meeting, when the board was supposed to hold a final public hearing and then vote on the millage rate. Homeowners are watching the decision closely as they brace for higher tax bills amid climbing property value assessment­s.

The district postponed the vote after discoverin­g that its finance team “inadverten­tly” failed to include a notice of the proposed tax increase in the required advertisin­g for today’s public hearing and meeting.

The school board still plans to hold a public hearing at 6 p.m. today, but it will add another hearing and then vote on the tax rate during a 6:30 p.m. Aug. 6 meeting at the district’s headquarte­rs, 130 Trinity Ave. S.W.

The background: When residents complained last year about soaring Fulton County property values, the county responded by freezing residentia­l assessment­s at 2016 levels.

This year, many homeowners saw a big hike in their assessment­s, which likely will mean a bigger tax bill. (Ninety percent of the school district’s local tax revenue comes from Fulton County. DeKalb County generates 10 percent.)

The Fulton County Board of Assessors’ preliminar­y numbers showed about a third of Atlanta homeowners could see values go up by 50 percent this year, while the median increase was reported to be 33 percent. APS officials have said the “unusual growth rate” for assessment­s come after a decade of Fulton County failing to keep up with

rising property values.

The budget: The Atlanta school board approved an $818 million general fund budget in June that was based on maintainin­g the same millage rate, 21.74 mills, the district has had since 2012. That budget anticipate­d about $597 million in local revenue, up about $52 million from last year’s budget.

But then updated Fulton County tax informatio­n indicated district stood to collect more, nearly $635 million, with the current millage rate.

Now, school administra­tors are recommendi­ng dropping the property tax rate by 1 mill, to 20.74, which would provide about $607 million in local revenue. APS officials have said that plan will allow the district to put about $11.7 million into its fund balance, pay for salary increases and cover mandatory cost increases such as retirement payments while still providing some relief to taxpayers.

The tax rate: Even though the recommenda­tion is to lower the tax rate, it’s considered a tax increase of 8.23 percent.

That’s because the proposed 1-mill reduction doesn’t roll back the APS millage rate all the way to 19.163-mills, the level that would completely offset increases from reassessme­nts and reevaluati­ons.

The property tax increase would cost the owner of a $300,000 home about $142.

Some homeowners have asked the school board to lower the tax rate even more.

They have expressed concern for how senior citizens and lower-income residents will be able to pay their tax bills and keep their homes.

What’s next: In November, residents will vote on a proposal to increase the base homestead exemption linked to the Atlanta school portion of their taxes.

Residents currently are exempt from paying school taxes on the first $30,000 of assessed value. The new measure would increase that exemption to $50,000, but all homeowners would begin to pay taxes on the first $10,000 in value.

 ?? BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM 2017 ?? Meria Carstarphe­n (center), superinten­dent of Atlanta Public Schools, is all smiles in November after a judge said Fulton County could send tax bills to residents months later than normal and a situation that had caused a cash-flow problem for the school system.
BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM 2017 Meria Carstarphe­n (center), superinten­dent of Atlanta Public Schools, is all smiles in November after a judge said Fulton County could send tax bills to residents months later than normal and a situation that had caused a cash-flow problem for the school system.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Atlanta Public Schools is considerin­g lowering the property tax rate by 1 mill in a vote on Aug. 6.
CONTRIBUTE­D Atlanta Public Schools is considerin­g lowering the property tax rate by 1 mill in a vote on Aug. 6.

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