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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From the County Board of Legislators (EDITED) December 23, 2010:
The County Legislature today voted 16-1, overriding County Executive Rob Astorino’s vetoes to deliver a 2011 County budget that delivers a 2% tax reduction for all County taxpayers
However that overall county tax reduction may actually result in some communities in a tax increase, depending on where you live. It is impossible to tell until the actual tax rates come out and tax bills received. WPCNR reported that his actually happened last year in White Plains
In 2009, the county touted a 1.77% property tax increase but in White Plains County Taxes when all three taxes were considered, White Plainsians got socked with a 7.2% increase. See our story on this at http://www.whiteplainscnr.com/article7293.html
The truth is, when you take into account all three county taxes, the county property tax, the Mamaroneck Valley Sewer District charge, and the ever popular Refuse Disposal charge, in 2009, the White Plains homeowner tax bill was up 5.69% on the tax levy charge and a 7.18% on the Tax Levy.
In a bi-partisan vote of 16-1, the budget reduced spending by $28.5 million dollars (from 2010 budget), reduced the County workforce by 10%, restores critical services for most in need, provides transitional timetables as the County continues to recalibrate agencies and presents a more fiscally responsible alternative to the County Executive’s budget proposal.
Last month, Westchester County Executive Robert Astorino presented his first County budget, which included severe budget cuts to the social safety net and funding for vital services for Westchester’s working families at a time when Westchester needs to invest in the future and move forward. If the Legislature didn’t override the Astorino vetoes, it would have resulted in a tax increase — from the -2% that we previously approved that all the vetoes amounted to the difference of 2 tenths of one percent.
“Westchester County’s budget is balanced and on time, and it will lower the county tax levy. This budget right-sizes government, and not capsizes it,” Board Chairman Kenneth W. Jenkins (D-Yonkers) said. “This year, the County has to make exceedingly difficult decisions. We took this responsibility with the utmost seriousness and made an effort to ensure that every budget decision was thoughtful and deliberate. Despite these obstacles, the Democratic Majority has presented a budget that will preserve the most critical County services without raising taxes.”
Highlights of Legislature’s FY 2011 Adopted Budget
· Tax Reduction of 2% to the county tax levy vs. County Executive’s proposed -1%
· Total spending $1.79B = $28.5M from 2010 budget
· Reduces County workforce by 10% (funded through grants, additional revenue & corresponding deletions)
· Eliminates County Executive’s proposed one-shot to bond tax certioraris = cash vs. credit for operating costs (maintains fiscally responsible fund balance)
· Fairly restores balances and protects public safety, health and essential services
· Identified opportunities for shared services between Dept of Emergency Services & Dept of Public Safety; will continue stakeholder inclusion of merger discussion
· Provides six-months transitional funding for community mental health clinics, pending contracts that must be in place per Section 41.07 of the NYS Mental Hygiene Law
· Restores funding of community health centers & child care services
· Reinstates County’s contract of the Section 8 program