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Moscow council adopts $139.6 million FY2026 budget, OKs tax levy and foregone recovery

5529332 · August 5, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

The Moscow City Council on Aug. 4 approved the city's fiscal year 2026 appropriation ordinance and related tax actions, adopting a $139,578,442 budget that includes compensation increases, continued investment in public safety and capital projects, and funding for an alternate water-supply study.

The Moscow City Council on Aug. 4 adopted the city's fiscal year 2026 appropriation ordinance, approving a $139,578,442 budget and authorizing the mayor to certify a total tax levy used for next year's property tax collections.

The vote followed a formal public hearing led by Bill Beltknap, who presented details of the proposed budget, and included staff responses to public questions. Council members then approved a foregone tax recovery resolution, suspended the rules to adopt the appropriation ordinance by summary, and authorized the mayor's signature on the L-2 property tax certification form.

Beltknap said the appropriation ordinance frames expected revenues and the city's spending priorities for the Oct. 2025'Sept. 2026 fiscal year. "The budget is a very important policy action by the council. It is our fiscal plan," he said during the hearing.

The budget package highlights and context

- Total appropriation: $139,578,442 (ordinance read and approved by title as "annual appropriation ordinance appropriating $139,578,442"). - Property tax certification (L-2): council authorized the mayor to sign a certification in the aggregate amount of $9,088,502. - General fund and priorities: the city plans to continue a multi-year emphasis on capital reinvestment and public safety; the police department represents the single largest general fund operating cost. Council and staff identified roughly $37 million in general-fund capital needs over the next 10 years, largely for roadways and public facilities. - Cost-of-living and compensation: the budget includes a 4% cost-of-living adjustment for employees and a 3% pay-for-performance pool; the city also continues a multi-year plan to increase dependent health coverage from 60% toward 80%. - Capital and projects: the budget funds nearly $3.4 million to complete the city shop project (new 16,000-square-foot addition plus renovation of the existing shop); just over $3 million is allocated to roadway improvements (including TAP grant projects on Mountain View North and South and a South Main pedestrian underpass); $335,000 is…

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