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Franklin County officials warn of growing 9-1-1 funding shortfall, propose sales-tax option
Summary
County commissioners said the traditional landline fee that funds 9-1-1 has declined and may leave the county with a multimillion-dollar shortfall; they discussed putting a county sales-tax increase on the ballot to replace the lost revenue and spread costs among visitors and residents.
Franklin County commissioners told a town-hall-style public meeting that the county faces a growing funding shortfall for 9-1-1 emergency services and discussed a potential quarter‑percent local sales-tax to replace diminishing landline revenues. Commissioners said the county currently relies on a per‑landline fee that has sharply declined as residents move from landlines to cell phones, leaving the 9-1-1 budget at risk.
Why it matters: 9-1-1 funding supports dispatch centers (PSAPs), equipment, and staffing that handle emergency calls. Commissioners said the shortfall could be more than $2 million and that current landline receipts have dropped from the mid six‑hundreds of thousands to roughly $300,000–$400,000 in the most recent year, creating an urgent budget gap for emergency…
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