Citizen Portal
Sign In

Get AI Briefings, Transcripts & Alerts on Local & National Government Meetings — Forever.

Commissioners vote to ask state to repurpose quarter-cent sales tax to boost school funding

Gaston County Board of Commissioners · April 29, 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

The Gaston County Board of Commissioners voted April 28 to ask state lawmakers to allow the county to repurpose an available quarter-cent sales tax for supplemental school funding, a move commissioners estimated could raise roughly $9.5–$11 million and would require legislative authorization and a voter referendum if approved.

The Gaston County Board of Commissioners voted unanimously on April 28 to send a resolution to the county’s legislative delegation asking the General Assembly to authorize the repurposing of an available quarter-cent sales tax to provide supplemental funding for Gaston County Schools.

Commissioner Bob Hovis framed the proposal as a new revenue source distinct from property tax and said it "will net somewhere between 9.5 and $11,000,000" depending on economic conditions. He said the revenue could be used to close a $6.7 million gap in teacher supplements the board identified as necessary to reach peer-county averages.

Hovis told the board that repurposing existing sales-tax authority would require legislative action and then voter approval on the ballot; the board voted to add the resolution to the agenda and then to approve the request to the legislature. Chair Chad Brown called for an affirmation vote to place the item on the agenda and later recorded a unanimous vote on the motion to ask the General Assembly to modify the relevant statute.

County Manager Matt Roden and other commissioners discussed that sales-tax shares can shift based on municipal rates and that the county’s share of local sales tax revenue has declined in recent years. Commissioners asked staff to prepare materials and next steps — including the statutory deadline to act in time for a November referendum should legislative changes be authorized.

The resolution passed on April 28 is a request to the county’s legislative delegation; any reallocation would still require state statutory authorization and, per Hovis’s remarks, a voter referendum to take effect.