Marion County approves series of small transfers, grants and policy tweak to capitalization threshold
Loading...
Summary
Commissioners accepted the treasurer's report and approved multiple budget transfers and small appropriations, including $15,000 for courthouse security upgrades, a $52,580 FEMA-funded concrete slab repair, a $15,000 fire district grant, and a policy change raising the capital-asset reporting threshold to $8,000.
The Marion County commission on Monday accepted the treasurer's monthly report and approved a package of budget transfers and small appropriations covering building security, disaster repairs and a rural fire grant.
Treasurer reported mixed revenue results for December and the year-to-date: sales-tax receipts for the month rose 4.4%, the overall year-to-date sales-tax increase was about 3.5%, county general receipts were up roughly 9.5% and the road department showed an 11% increase. The treasurer also reported a final tornado-related payment to the disaster fund and noted the official jail bond payout date as March 1.
On ordinances, the commission: • Approved Ordinance 2026-2 to transfer $15,000 for county building security-system upgrades. The motion was moved and recorded on a roll call with multiple justices responding 'Yes.' • Approved appropriation of $52,580 in FEMA funds to pay for a new concrete slab on MCA Avenue related to a flood repair. • Approved a $15,000 rural community grant for the Oakland Promise Land Fire Protection District to procure a model rescue truck and equipment. • Voted to amend Ordinance 2023-74 by setting the minimum purchase amount that requires capital-asset reporting to $8,000, a change aimed at minimizing small-item capital reporting.
Clerk Moffett and county staff answered procedural and typographical questions about paperwork and confirmed one ordinance had its year corrected on the record.
The commission also approved a transfer related to election reimbursements and handled a number of routine procedural votes before moving on to facility-maintenance matters.

