As of November 9, Shoreline voters are passing Proposition 1 with 62% of the vote.
Approval of Proposition 1 will help fund police and neighborhood services, including RADAR and crime prevention; preserve parks, trails, playgrounds, and playfields; and provide human services.
Proposition 1 restores the City’s 2016 maintenance and operations levy, which expires at the end of the year, by providing Council authorization to increase the City’s regular property tax levy rate up to $1.39 per $1,000 of assessed value, which remains under the $1.60 legal limit.
Passage of Proposition 1 addresses the structural imbalance for 2023-2028 by addressing the 1% limit on increasing property tax revenues. Property tax revenue is the City’s largest revenue source, but absent the levy lid lift, the 1% cap prevents it from keeping pace with inflation.
“Passage of Proposition 1 allows the City to maintain the level of services residents have come to expect,” Shoreline Mayor Keith Scully stated.
“It will also allow the City to create an even more robust system of support for individuals in our community who are experiencing a behavioral health crisis. The RADAR program has proven to be an effective public safety and behavioral health program that benefits the entire community.”
Passage of Proposition 1 addresses the structural imbalance for 2023-2028 by addressing the 1% limit on increasing property tax revenues. Property tax revenue is the City’s largest revenue source, but absent the levy lid lift, the 1% cap prevents it from keeping pace with inflation.
Passage of Proposition 1 allows the City to maintain current levels of police and community safety services, including neighborhood safety patrols; traffic enforcement in school zones and neighborhoods; and community crime prevention programs.
It will also enhance the RADAR Program by adding mental health professional teams to provide 24/7 response with police to community members in behavioral health crisis. It will also preserve safe, well-maintained, and accessible parks and trails; playgrounds and play equipment; playfields and restrooms; and preserve recreation programs for youth, adults, families, and seniors.
Proposition 1 will continue funding for community services for seniors, youth, and individuals and families in need, including homelessness response services.
The levy also sustains the City’s code enforcement and customer response programs.
The increase in the levy lid lift from the previous $1.13 to the new $1.39 per $1000 home valuation results in a 50% increase in tax assessment from the previous year
ReplyDeleteThat is because the property valuation increased dramatically this last year. Valuations also were quite large 3 of the previous 4 years. For the average homeowner, their taxes to the city would still have gone up 28% from 2022 even without the increase to $1.39. One would think that 28% increase would keep up with inflation & covers needed expenses!
I better not see a homeless person on the street and a cop every few blocks!
ReplyDeleteHad to vote no cause as a young home owner we cannot afford the increase. We already have some of the highest property taxes in the county, I couldn’t imagine voting to approve taking even more. Inflation is already bad, shame on the city for coercing more money from ppl who cannot afford it.
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