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Clayton County opts out of HB 581, moves to pursue narrower local homestead exemption; $15,000 proposal tabled
Summary
The Clayton County Board of Commissioners voted Feb. 20 to opt out of Georgia House Bill 581 and to ask the county's legislative delegation to pursue a narrower local act that would offer additional homestead exemptions to disabled veterans, certain surviving spouses, 100% disabled residents and homeowners 65 and older; a separate proposal to raise the county's general homestead exemption from $10,000 to $15,000 was introduced and tabled for further study.
The Clayton County Board of Commissioners voted Feb. 20 to opt out of Georgia House Bill 581 and approved a separate resolution asking the county's legislative delegation to pursue a local act that would create an adjusted base-year ad valorem homestead exemption limited to specified groups. Commissioners also introduced — then agreed to study and table — a proposal to raise the county's general homestead exemption from $10,000 to $15,000.
Why it matters: the decisions set two distinct paths. Opting out rejects the statewide HB 581 approach for Clayton County. The local-act route would ask the state legislature to let Clayton County place a narrower exemption on the November ballot; if voters approve, the exemptions would take effect Jan. 1, 2026, using 2025 as the base year. Separately, the $15,000 proposal would also need legislative approval and voter ratification and was sent to the board's March 4 meeting for further study.
The board first approved resolution 2025-36, authorizing Clayton County to opt out of HB 581. A commissioner moved and a second was given; the board approved the motion by voice vote. The meeting record does not show a roll-call tally; commissioners verbally indicated the ayes prevailed and the motion carried.
County attorney (Attorney Reed) explained the local-act option in detail when commissioners debated resolution 2025-37, which directs the chairwoman to present a local act to the county's legislative delegation. Attorney Reed said the county's proposal "tracks exactly the same language of May except that it applies to the — it gives an additional homestead instead of to everybody. It gives it to the categories…
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