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Gwinnett millage rate public hearings announced

By Staff
Posted 5:16PM on Friday 27th June 2014 ( 9 years ago )
LAWRENCEVILLE - The Gwinnett County Board of Commissioners will hold three public hearings to receive comments on the proposed 2014 millage rates. Two hearings will be held on July 7 at 11 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. and the third will be on July 14 at 6:30 p.m. All three hearings will take place in the auditorium of the Gwinnett Justice and Administration Center, also known as GJAC, located at 75 Langley Drive in Lawrenceville.<br /> <br /> The millage rate adoption is scheduled to take place on July 15 at 2 p.m. Commissioners are considering adopting the same millage rate as last year, which will result in more property tax revenue than last year due to an increase in property values.<br /> <br /> The Gwinnett County Tax Assessor calculates the total value of all property in the county, called the tax digest, by conducting annual property updates of residential and commercial property and issuing assessment notices to the owners, in accordance with state law. Reassessments reflect changes in the real estate market, including traditional sales as well as foreclosures. After five years of decline in the overall tax digest, many properties in Gwinnett County have increased in value. Higher sales prices and a marked decrease in the number of foreclosures provide evidence of the overall improvement in the real estate market.<br /> <br /> When the total digest of taxable property is prepared, Georgia law requires taxing authorities to compute a rollback millage rate for maintenance and operations that will produce the same total revenue based on the current year's digest that last year's millage rate would have produced had no reassessments occurred. For 2014, the calculated rollback millage rate would be 6.90 mills. The proposed millage rate is the same as last year, or 7.40 mills, thereby requiring the Gwinnett County Board of Commissioners to announce a property tax increase, even though no increase in the tax rate is under consideration.<br /> <br /> Commissioners plan no change to the millage rates that were established in 2013 to support new service districts that fund specific government functions such as police, fire and emergency medical protection. If the county maintains the same millage rates, actual taxes levied on most properties should be approximately the same as the estimate of property taxes included on the assessment notices that were mailed in April. The proposed total millage rate for properties located in unincorporated Gwinnett County would remain the same at 13.75 mills.<br /> <br /> During the period of the digest decline, Gwinnett County balanced basic needs with the resulting revenue losses. In 2008, when the digest was at its highest point, the value of a mill was approximately $29.4 million. In 2013, that same mill was valued at $23.6 million, a reduction of 20 percent, because of the change in the value of the digest. The digest reduction added considerable pressure to the budgeting process to balance the demands of a growing population

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