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Legislature adopts Local Law A to implement new RPTL §421‑p tax exemption; vote unanimous

Tompkins County Legislature · March 1, 2026

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Summary

Tompkins County lawmakers adopted Local Law A of 2025, implementing the tax exemption allowed under the new Real Property Tax Law §421‑p. Supporters framed it as a housing‑infill incentive; the adoption followed a short public hearing with one speaker urging strong public‑benefit stipulations and clawbacks.

The Tompkins County Legislature unanimously adopted Local Law A of 2025 (Resolution N, Document ID 12903) on Jan. 21, implementing the tax exemption permitted under Real Property Tax Law §421‑p.

Public hearing and comment

Before adopting the law, the legislature held a public hearing focused on the proposed tax‑exemption local law. Amanda Kirch Gessner, a resident of Ulysses, told the legislature she had not seen the proposed legislation and cautioned that tax exemptions should include “very, very clear stipulations for what is public benefit” and robust clawback provisions if public benefits are not realized.

Legislator discussion and rationale

Legislators said the measure is intended to spur infill housing and the reuse of existing infrastructure. Legislator Mike Lane said the exemption helps support adding housing units and increasing available housing supply. Legislator Rich John said incentives are a reasonable tool to promote infill where roads and services already exist.

Vote and implementation

Resolution N moved and was seconded; the roll call vote was 11‑0. The law implements the county’s ability to grant the tax exemption created by state statute; details about implementing rules, eligibility criteria and any clawback mechanisms will be addressed in follow‑up administrative procedures and associated resolutions.

What to watch for

Advocates and at least one public commenter urged the legislature to adopt clear public‑benefit standards and clawback language to ensure exemptions yield measurable community benefit. The legislature noted the matter’s relationship to upcoming housing and development work in 2025 and directed staff to provide more details about administration and oversight.