New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Tax rate could decrease for sixth consecutiv­e year

- By Bill Bloxsom william.bloxsom@hearst mediact.com Twitter: @blox354

“If the Board of Aldermen adopts the recommenda­tion it will be the sixth year in a row that Milford residents and businesses have seen a tax cut. I think it has never happened anywhere, at least in the state of Connecticu­t.” Mayor Ben Blake

MILFORD – For the sixth consecutiv­e year the city of Milford tax rate will decrease if the Finance Board proposal of a $221,899,961 is approved by the Board of Alderman in its April meeting.

The Finance Board’s unanimous recommenda­tion after it me on March 10 results in a mill rate of 27.67 off last year’s rate of 27.68. The city side of the budget makes up $122,165,586 with $99,734,375 going toward education. The addition to the budget is $2,199,619. Seventy percent of the budget is pre-set by contract.

The Board of Aldermen will meet with city department heads and grantbased agencies before voting to adopt the budget in mid-May.

Board of Finance Chairman Brian Lema (D) guided board members Scott Moulton (R) Ray Arnold (D), Lauren Ranges (R) and Ben Gettinger (D) through the 100-plus page proposal.

“The Board of Finance did a great job making some adjustment­s on the budget they received. Its sets up for another responsibl­e year of budgeting,” Mayor Ben Blake said. “If the Board of Aldermen adopts the recommenda­tion it will be the sixth year in a row that Milford residents and businesses have seen a tax cut. I think it has never happened anywhere, at least in the state of Connecticu­t.”

Moulton asked whether COVID-related monies expected from the state could help reduce the budget but after discussion it was decided restrictio­ns on use of funds made it practical to move the proposal forward.

Blake said: “We don’t get a lot of our revenue from state grants, about 4 percent. When I first (2012) began doing budgets about 15 percent of our revenue came from the state so it is less of a factor now. But it is still important.

“What we predict and plugged in are last year’s numbers so the state will hold us harmless,” he stated. “I’m hopeful that will come into play because revenues at the state level are pretty high. We don’t know the exact budget that the legislatur­e will ultimately adopt but the Governors’ budgets holds us harmless from last year, no more no less.”

The city’s grand list increased by 92.9 million to $6,751,219,520 over the Oct. 1, 2020 total.

Blake believes Milford is on a good path, pointing to 467 new businesses coming into the city in 2020.

“We’ve had another huge growth in our grand list. Those businesses decided to make their home in Milford at a time when we were in a pandemic. This was astonishin­g to me because the economy was tops and turvy across the world,” Blake said.

Restaurant­s took the biggest economic hit, but Blake is hopeful.

“Overall, a lot of businesses had to adjust and be creative. There was a lot of pain for business owners and they had to work double-time to make it work. There are some restaurant­s that temporaril­y closed that are opening,” he said. “7 Seas, a Milford institutio­n going back over 50 years, I know they are opening after being closed for several months. I suspect there are other restaurant­s and businesses that had to go on pause.”

Blake reported that the Finance Board added a Deputy Health Director ($81,165) and contributi­ons to the pension fund. The Police Department request of $15,219,793 was reduced in the Mayor’s proposal to $13,908.167. Line items for two safety dispatcher­s were eliminated. A computer request of $96,000 was lowered to $42,000. Police cruisers ($296,000) and dash cam video camera ($252,931) were also eliminated.

Finance chair Lema thanked Joe Fitzpatric­k, who has resigned, for his years of service and welcomed Gettinger to the Board.

 ?? Google / Contribute­d photo ?? Milford City Hall
Google / Contribute­d photo Milford City Hall

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