Property Tax Rate
Set At $1.4987;
Building Code
Will Be
Adopted
ByTOMYANCEY
StaffWriter
The
Greene County Commission narrowly approved an $82.63 million budget for the 2008-09 fiscal year that
began July 1, and set a property tax rate of $1.4987, the same as the state-certified
rate.
The approved budget gives non-school county employees a 2.3 percent
raise, and does not raise taxes above the rate calculated to bring in the same amount of revenue as
the 2007 rate, which was $2.11.
The budget actions came in three
separate votes, after considerable debate, much of it about whether the commission could provide
more funds to the county school system for pay raises and
electricity.
The commission also voted to adopt the International
Building Code, effective Jan. 1. (Please see accompanying
article.)
County Director of Schools Dr. Joe Parkins asked the commission
to raise taxes by 5 cents for raises and higher electricity costs. An increase was never actually
discussed, though a motion was made to reallocate 2 cents without increasing the overall rate. The
motion never came to a vote, however. (Please see another accompanying
article.)
The total levy approved Monday for property outside the city
limits of Greeneville is $1.4987 per $100 of assessed valuation. This is the same levy that was set
by the state's Board of Equalization in June, after the five-year reappraisal of county property was
completed this past spring. Last year's "outside" rate was $2.11.
The
total county levy for property inside Greeneville is $1.3066 in the new budget. Of this total
"inside rate" levy, $0.5015 is to be allocated to the county's general fund, $0.1287 to the county
Highway Department, $0.5534 to the General Purpose School Fund, $0.365 to general debt service,
$0.025 to the Self-Insurance Fund (which covers liability and buildings), and $0.0615 to the Solid
Waste Department.
Property owners outside of Greeneville also pay this
rate, but in addition are also taxed for constructing county schools. This year, a levy of $0.1921
goes into the Education Debt Service Fund for school use, and when combined with the $1.3066 equals
the $1.4987 "outside" rate. (Last year, 25 cents of the $2.11 property tax rate went to fund school
construction.)
The vote on the tax levy, the first on the agenda, passed
18-3, with only three commissioners, Kevin Morrison, Clark Justis and John Waddle Jr. voting in
opposition.
The vote on the appropriations budget was 11-10, the
narrowest possible majority, and the vote on the county government's contributions to non-profit
agencies was 15-6.
The vote was 11-10, with "no" votes from Jerry Weems,
Fred Malone Jr., Tim White, John D. Carter, Kevin Morrison, Clark Justis, John Waddle Jr., Betty
Ruth Alexander, Jan Kiker and Brenda Grogan.
Voting "yes" were: Bill
Brown, John Cox, William Dabbs, Alex Edens, Margaret Greenway, Rennie Hopson, Phil King, Robbie
Morgan, Bill Moss, Sam Riley and Hilton Seay.
Before the vote, some commissioners who are
employed by the county read a statement declaring that their votes reflected their conscience or the
views of their constituents.
The vote on the county's contributions
to non-profit agencies followed almost immediately, and was approved 15-6, with only Carter,
Morrison, Morgan, Edens, Waddle and Grogan voting "no."
Road
Funding Approved
In a related move, the county commission then voted
unanimously to issue $390,000 in six-month capital outlay notes. The action will make that amount of
money available to the Greene County Highway Department, for purchasing badly-needed
asphalt.
After the meeting, Road Superintendent David Weems said the
$390,000 would be about enough to pave four miles of roads with hot-mix asphalt two inches thick.
But Weems said the asphalt would most likely be used for patching, which would enable it to cover 12
miles or more of county roads.
Weems cut about $800,000 out of his
chronically-underfunded budget during the budget-making process this summer, after cutting about a
million out early in the process. The capital-outlay note was an attempt by the budget committee to
make amends, and provide at least some funding that the Highway Deprtment can use for asphalt this
summer.
The note is to be paid for out of the general debt service fund,
and retired in six months.
Voting
Sequence
The resolution setting the tax levy was approved 18-3 with
little discussion. Commissioner John Waddle Jr. asked County Sheriff Steve Burns if the four
employees moved from the county detention center to the patrol division would require new cars.
Burns said no new cars will be needed, and most of those employees will move into dispatching
jobs.
The next item on the agenda was the appropriations budget, which in
essence is the entire budget document.
Commissioner Morrison spoke at
length when this resolution was introduced, pointing out that the undesignated fund balance had
fallen from $6.2 million in fiscal 2006-07 to just over $4 million last year, and is projected to be
$3.39 million this year.
Later, Budget Director David Lawing said that
once the 2007-08 budget (which ended June 30) is completely closed, the undesignated balance will
probably rise to about $5 million.
Lawing also pointed out that part of
the reason for the drop was use of that funds to build the new driver license station (which will
generate revenue until it is purchased from the county by the state) and to remodel and enlarge the
county Health Department building (to accommodate larger numbers of primary care patients because of
reductions in TennCare (Medicaid) coverage in recent years).
In response
to a question from Commissioner Waddle, Lawing said that no major capital projects are in the new
budget.
Morrison and others pointed out that the new budget uses $686,000
from "our savings account," meaning from the undesignated balance, to make the county's overall
2008-09 budget balance.
"We're robbing our savings account," Morrison
said.
He asked, "Who gives raises out of the savings account? Raises are
perpetual."
Morrison said the budget, as presented, "is not balanced,
it's 'balanced' with money out of our savings account," and said that practice can only continue
until the savings is depleted. "A tax increase is coming," he
said.
Later, Commissioner John Cox asked Budget Director Lawing if it is
factual to say that money for raises came out of savings. Lawing said this is "somewhat" true, but
gasoline and diesel prices have risen sharply, as have the prices of food served to prisoners.
"You can blame it on employee raises, but the majority (of the spending
increase) is for electricity, gasoline" and inflation in many prices, the budget director
replied.
Lawing agreed with Morrison's point about a property tax
increase down the road, saying that it has been five years since the county schools got an increase
in the property tax levy, and six years since the other departments received an
increase.
He said other county departments are being hit just as hard by
increases in the cost of fuel, food and electricity, and "the property tax is not going up with
inflation," because it is designed not to increase, by state
law.
Morrison said his own home was appraised $229,000 higher this year.
But Lawing pointed out that the rate by which the new appraisal is multiplied "went down," as it did
for every property owner.
The property tax is "generating a constant
amount in an inflationary period," Lawing said.
If inflation continues,
it will force the county government to reduce services it provides, or raise revenues, the budget
director said while pointing out that few county services can be cut without creating dangerous
situations.
Cox said he "never signed up" to spend money that is not
being replaced "on a recurring basis."
Commissioner Jerry Weems said,
however, "That's what we did," last year, and this year.
Weems asked
Lawing if it was accurate to say that the county government spent more money than it took in last
year, and will do the same this year.
Lawing replied that is the case.
"We absorb inflation that way," using the fund balance, Lawing said. "The only other option is to
start cutting services."
Morrison said that, "for the last two budget
cycles, appropriations were outrunning revenues, and that can't happen for
long."
Morrison then proposed changing the tax levy to give 2 cents to
the school system, from the 50 cents allocated for the general
fund.
Lawing said that action would remove more than $250,000 from the
general fund, because a penny at the new tax rate generates about
$127,000.
When County Mayor Broyles asked Morrison how he would handle
that decrease, Morrison said he believes the $5 million said to be in the fund balance will cover
it.
Broyles said, however, if the increase in electricity costs is as
high as now anticipated, then the county's general fund will have to cover increases for all county
departments, as well as increases in fuel costs that are already hitting the Sheriff's Department
and Emergency Medical Services.
Morrison made a motion to move two
pennies from the general fund to the school system, and it was seconded by Commissioner Jan
Kiker.
Because the tax levy had already been approved as presented, and
Morrison's motion to amend the levy came during discussion of appropriations, not levy, it was not
immediately apparent how best to proceed.
Mayor Broyles asked for a short
recess to allow time to ask advice. After about 15 minutes, Broyles reconvened the meeting, said he
had made calls and decided the best course would be to go ahead and vote on budget appropriations.
In the event that the vote on appropriations failed, he said, then the
commission could consider a motion to rescind the tax levy resolution, and then to amend it as
Morrison proposed.
This decision had the effect of turning the vote on
appropriations into a referendum of sorts on Morrison's motion about giving two additional pennies
of the levy to schools.