The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Dacula to collect its own property taxes next year

City will stop paying fees to county official to handle collection.

- By Tyler Wilkins tyler.wilkins@ajc.com

Three cities agreed earlier this year to pay Gwinnett County’s tax commission­er a new fee for tax collection that will supplement her salary. But one of those cities doesn’t intend to fork over the dollars in the future.

At a Thursday meeting, Dacula City Council unanimousl­y voted to install software that will allow city staff to handle their own tax billing starting next year.

The decision came after Dacula paid Gwinnett County Tax Commission­er Tiffany Porter a $2-per-parcel fee for collecting the city’s taxes, in addition to paying the county $1.80 per parcel. Dacula paid $10,871 for both those collection fees in 2021, of which slightly more than half will supplement the county tax commission­er’s salary.

In order to prepare its own property taxes in the future, the city will pay a one-time fee of $18,000 to install the software from RDA Systems, then $2,750 annually after the first year for support and updates.

It will take approximat­ely 10 weeks for Dacula to install the software, Finance Director Heather Coggins said. The city didn’t have enough time to start in-house collection­s before this year’s property taxes needed to be mailed out in August, she said.

“It was a better move financiall­y to go ahead and pay the extra (fee) and move forward seamlessly ... than to put the brakes on everything,” Dacula Mayor Trey King said.

The state Legislatur­e hastily enacted a bill that aims to prevent the tax commission­ers in Fulton and Gwinnett counties from supplement­ing their salaries with fees from cities in their jurisdicti­ons. It only affects counties with 14 or more cities located wholly or partially within it.

Lawrencevi­lle, Lilburn, Snellville and Sugar Hill chose to collect taxes on their own. Berkeley Lake agreed to pay a $1-per-parcel fee for the Gwinnett tax commission­er to collect, while Dacula and Peachtree Corners paid $2-per-parcel fees. The fees from the three cities will raise Porter’s annual pay by more than $34,000.

Handling its own tax billing will save Dacula dollars in the future, Coggins said. The cost was significan­tly cheaper than what other cities paid to set up their own tax billing, she said, as Dacula’s staff already used the company’s software for other purposes.

King worried that it could’ve cost the city more in the long run had it chosen not to contract with the tax commission­er this year. “Wewere really looking at it from a business standpoint,” he said.

Porter’s office did not respond to The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on’s requests for comment on Dacula’s decision.

Porter initially proposed charging eight Gwinnett cities the $2-per-parcel fee for collecting their taxes, in addition to a $1.80-per-parcel fee to the county. The personal fee would have boosted her $141,098 base salary by more than $110,000.

Other tax commission­ers in Georgia participat­e in the same practice. Porter contends that she deserves additional compensati­on for handling municipal collection­s, as she was elected in 2020 to collect on behalf of Gwinnett County, not its cities.

Grayson, the only Gwinnett city to test the new law, entered an agreement with the county and without Porter that seeks to obligate her to collect the city’s taxes without a personal payment. The city filed a lawsuit in July after Porter declined to collect.

Now, Porter is challengin­g the constituti­onality of the state law enacted earlier this year.

 ?? PHOTOS COURTESY CITY OF DACULA ?? Dacula plans to implement software that will allow city staff instead of the Gwinnett County tax commission­er to handle collection of municipal taxes.
PHOTOS COURTESY CITY OF DACULA Dacula plans to implement software that will allow city staff instead of the Gwinnett County tax commission­er to handle collection of municipal taxes.
 ??  ?? Dacula’s City Council voted to stop the practice of paying the Gwinnett County tax commission­er fees for billing and collection of property taxes from the city’s residents, beginning next year.
Dacula’s City Council voted to stop the practice of paying the Gwinnett County tax commission­er fees for billing and collection of property taxes from the city’s residents, beginning next year.

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