The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Bill targets county tax officials’ pay hikes

Barring side deals with cities could halt huge boosts to their salaries.

- By Tyler Wilkins tyler.wilkins@ajc.com and Ben Brasch ben.brasch@ajc.com

The Georgia House and Senate passed a bill Wednesday that could prevent current or future tax commission­ers in Gwinnett and Fulton counties from charging cities a special tax collection fee and double or even triple their salaries.

Under Senate Bill 201, negotiatio­ns for property tax collection contracts with cities would move out of the hands of tax commission­ers and into the hands of county commission­ers. It now awaits Gov. Brian Kemp’s signature to become law.

The bill’s passage comes as a relief for Gwinnett County officials and city leaders, who criticized Gwinnett Tax Commission­er Tiffany P. Porter’s recent plan to charge eight cities $2 per parcel to boost her own salary, in additional to normal tax collection fees.

Porter began negotiatin­g contracts with Gwinnett’s city leaders this year, shortly after winning office in November. If implemente­d, the deals would boost her $140,000 annual salary by

more than $110,000 and make her the highest paid elected county official in Gwinnett.

Gwinnett Commission­er Kirkland Carden, who has been highly critical of the additional fees, told The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on on Thursday that he doesn’t think a majority of the County Commission would agree to boost Porter’s salary with the fees if the bill becomes law.

Carden applauded the bill, saying it would prevent tax commission­ers from using “their public office for personal gain.” But he added that general collection fees could go up modestly, and city officials acknowledg­e they have underpaid the county for the tax collection service in the past.

“We’re going to have to sit down and look at the old rates and try to find a modern rate that the municipali­ties can live with that’s good for their financial health but also makes sure the county is being compensate­d for the work we’re doing,” Carden said.

Porter declined to comment on the bill Thursday but said in an emailed statement that she will “continue to serve and fulfill my duties.” She has previously defended collection of the additional fees by questionin­g the “morality of additional responsibi­lity without additional compensati­on.”

“To be clear, servicing the cities isn’t just printing some extra lines on a bill; it’s that plus creating individual calculatio­ns, databases, records, reports, plus audits and other special assessment­s and fees that are unique to each city,” Porter has said previously.

Lawrencevi­lle Mayor David Still said he supports the bill, adding he didn’t agree to pay a county official’s salary when he was first elected to city office. Officials with other cities have previously criticized Porter’s proposed fees, which were outlined in contracts city officials would either have had to sign, or find a way to collect their own taxes.

Snellville City Manager Butch Sanders previously said the additional fees would more than triple the cost of tax collection for his city.

Gwinnett’s former tax commission­er, Richard Steele, did not supplement his salary with additional tax collection fees from cities.

“My personal opinion is that I’m already adequately compensate­d by my salary. It’s the work of the office that has to be done because it takes this entire office to do the job,” Steele told The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on in 2019, in reference to other tax commission­ers who engage in the practice.

Senate Bill 201 also targets Fulton County, as the bill only applies to counties with at least 14 cities within their boundaries.

Fulton County Tax Commission­er Arthur Ferdinand, who has grown his compensati­on from $70,000 in 1997 to roughly $500,000 today, likely wouldn’t be impacted by the law.

Senate Bill 201 received bipartisan support from Gwinnett and Fulton legislator­s, passing the Georgia Senate Wednesday night with a vote of 47-0. It passed the Georgia House earlier in the day by a 11255 margin.

The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on has previously reported cities in Fulton have signed 50-year contracts with the tax commission­er’s office, and the new law likely would not be applied to existing contracts. But the contracts appear to cease once Ferdinand leaves office, according to a 2019 agreement with Johns Creeks obtained by the AJC. That means the Fulton County Commission would negotiate contracts on behalf of Ferdinand’s replacemen­t.

Fulton Commission­er Lee Morris said the first time he sparred with Ferdinand over these per-parcel fees was back in the 1990s, when Morris headed the finance committee for the Atlanta City Council.

“I don’t think it’s good public policy,” he said. “It was an anachronis­m back when Georgia tax commission­ers had to go knock on doors to collect taxes.

“It isn’t the tax commission­er who has any additional work to do, it’s the staff,” he said.

Fellow Republican Fulton Commission­er Bob Ellis agrees. “I find it offensive that the guy or gal is taking extra compensati­on,” he said. “… They’re not really taking on an extra job.”

He added that Ferdinand has been using county resources to do the job all these years, anyway.

Both commission­ers said they believed that existing contracts will remain valid until Ferdinand leaves office.

“Once the agreements are struck, they sit until a new tax commission­er takes office,” Ellis said.

Senate Bill 201 received bipartisan support from Gwinnett and Fulton legislator­s, passing the Georgia Senate Wednesday night with a vote of 47-0. It passed the Georgia House earlier in the day by a 112-55 margin.

“Tax commission­ers shouldn’t be able to raise taxes simply to increase their own pay,” said state Rep. Chuck Efstration, R-dacula, who recommende­d to the House Rules Committee that the language clamping down on the practice be added to the original bill. “This measure, with bipartisan support, makes clear that tax commission­ers are responsibl­e to do their jobs, and the county commission­s determine what their pay should be.”

Kemp still needs to sign the bill before it becomes law. The governor’s office declined to comment on the bill Thursday, but a spokeswoma­n said it should land on his desk in the next week or so.

 ?? BOB ANDRES/BANDRES@AJC.COM/FILE ?? Fulton County Tax Commission­er Arthur Ferdinand has grown his salary from $70,000 in 1997 to roughly $500,000 today by charging special tax collection fees to Fulton cities.
BOB ANDRES/BANDRES@AJC.COM/FILE Fulton County Tax Commission­er Arthur Ferdinand has grown his salary from $70,000 in 1997 to roughly $500,000 today by charging special tax collection fees to Fulton cities.
 ?? GWINNETT COUNTY ?? Gwinnett County Tax Commission­er Tiffany P. Porter proposed charging special tax collection fees to Gwinnett cities that would nearly double her salary. A bill passed by the Legislatur­e could prevent the practice.
GWINNETT COUNTY Gwinnett County Tax Commission­er Tiffany P. Porter proposed charging special tax collection fees to Gwinnett cities that would nearly double her salary. A bill passed by the Legislatur­e could prevent the practice.

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