Citizen Portal
Sign In

Lifetime Citizen Portal Access — AI Briefings, Alerts & Unlimited Follows

County departments brief Key Peninsula residents on services and local resources

Pierce County Council · April 2, 2026

Loading...

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

Auditor, assessor, human services, health, parks, libraries and school district officials gave five‑minute updates on services available to Key Peninsula residents, from tax-exemption updates and owner‑alert recording services to veterans assistance, park capital and library outreach.

Multiple Pierce County and partner agencies used the District 7 meeting to brief residents on services and local resources.

Assessor‑Treasurer Denise Marsala said county appraisers recently covered many parcels in District 7 and explained exemptions and appeals processes, including a July 1 appeals deadline and an upcoming 2027 state increase to the senior/disabled income limit that will expand eligibility for property tax exemptions.

Auditor Linda Farmer highlighted election staffing, passport services, and a new owner‑alert service to notify people when documents are recorded in their name. Director Gary Genna of Human Services described programs for aging and disability resources, behavioral health services supported by sales tax and opioid settlement funds, veterans assistance (~$20 million in benefits supported last year) and a local human services coordinator based in District 7.

Chantelle Harmon Reed of the Tacoma‑Pierce County Health Department focused on health disparities in the Key Peninsula, services for seniors and septic‑system assistance (inspection extensions and financial help). Pierce County Library Executive Director Gretchen Casarotti outlined a strategic planning process and local outreach efforts, while Peninsula School District chief of schools Michael Farmer reviewed levy-funded program expansions, kindergarten registration and upcoming youth mental‑health panels.

Presentations also included parks and library event plans and a request that residents sign up for county email lists and alert services for timely information.