A councilmember introduced a resolution asking the City of Buffalo to study a property-tax circuit breaker to protect long-term, low-income homeowners from disproportionate tax increases after the council approved an 8% property-tax levy increase.
The proposer told the finance committee the circuit-breaker concept would cap property-tax liability relative to household income and apply on a sliding scale so lower-income households receive proportionally greater relief. The member gave an illustrative example: for a household with $30,000 in income and a tax bill of $2,400, a 5% income threshold would cover $1,500 and the household would be refunded or forgiven the remaining $900; the committee was not asked to adopt a specific mechanism and the member said the administration, the Department of Taxation and state representatives would need to be involved to design a workable program.
Why it matters: The sponsor said long-term, generational homeowners in historically divested neighborhoods face a risk of being taxed out of their homes and that a circuit breaker could mitigate that risk. The member estimated a possible fiscal exposure for the city of roughly $2 million to $4 million annually in refunded or rebated taxes, but said precise modeling is required.
The councilmember asked the committee to pursue a citywide solution—not limited to specific districts—and to consider practical issues such as whether relief would be implemented as a refund, rebate or another mechanism, and whether the city’s billing system could accommodate installment payment options.
The committee approved a motion related to the resolution and left further consideration in the finance committee for additional analysis and stakeholder engagement.