Lifetime Citizen Portal Access — AI Briefings, Alerts & Unlimited Follows
Residents and business groups urge Montgomery County council to reject proposed property and income tax increases
Loading...
Summary
At public hearings, business groups and dozens of residents urged the County Council to oppose proposed FY27 increases to the property tax rate and county income tax, citing affordability, rapid budget growth, and alternatives such as a more progressive income tax. Officials scheduled committee work sessions to reconcile revenue and spending choices.
Council President Natalie Fanny Gonzales opened a public hearing on the proposed FY2027 real‑property tax rate and a separate hearing on a county income‑tax increase, giving registered speakers a timed opportunity to testify.
Business groups and residents urged the council to reject both proposed increases. Angela Franco, president and CEO of the Montgomery County Chamber, told the council the chamber opposes a $0.063 property‑tax increase and a county income‑tax increase from 3.2% to 3.3%. Franco said the county’s operating budget has grown sharply over the past decade and urged slower budget growth, staffing reductions where appropriate and disciplined budgeting instead of new taxes.
Multiple speakers from the business community and local homeowners made similar points. Jackie Bennett, representing the Greater Capital Area Association of Realtors, called the county’s fiscal gap a product of local government growth and said a property‑tax increase would saddle middle‑class families. Residents and small‑business owners described rising assessments, fixed incomes, and revenue losses; one longtime homeowner said his property tax bill rose 66.5% over seven years.
Other speakers urged alternatives. Paul Salatin and other commenters argued property tax is an opaque, regressive way to raise revenue and proposed shifting toward more progressive local income taxation when legally possible. Several speakers also noted limits imposed by state law and recommended the council prioritize protecting vulnerable seniors and renters.
The hearing record will inform a Government Operations and Fiscal Policy Committee work session scheduled for April 29, when the council will examine budget assumptions and reconciliation scenarios. County staff previously told the council that the executive’s CIP and operating assumptions have produced a large multi‑year gap, and members pressed for specific tradeoffs, PAYGO assumptions and debt‑service impacts.
No votes were taken at the hearing itself; councilmembers signaled they will consider the testimony as they revisit revenue proposals and the FY27 budget during upcoming committee work sessions.
