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Florida local leaders sound alarm about potential property tax cuts


Momentum for drastically reducing property taxes in Florida is seemingly unstoppable. So city, town, village and county officials have stepped up warnings about the jeopardy such cuts present to the local government services people rely on for their safety and quality of life.

Even if every last dollar of what critics deem wasteful or frivolous is squeezed out of local government budgets, they argue the savings would fall far short of the money needed to make up for the kind of cuts being contemplated in Tallahassee.

Programs and services that range from roads and sidewalks to parks and libraries would be cut, they say.

Even the most politically sacred priority, public safety — including spending on police, sheriff’s deputies, fire-rescue and 911 — would suffer, they say, dismissing assurances from advocates of slashing property taxes that those budgets would be protected.

The prospect of property tax cuts, and the effects, has been a central issue at recent gatherings of state legislators in South Florida and at the state Capitol in Tallahassee, and at meetings of the region’s city, town, village and county officials.

State legislators, including those sympathetic to local governments, were blunt in their assessments.

“You need to justify your existence,” said state Sen. Barbara Sharief, a Broward Democrat and former county commissioner, elected twice by her colleagues to serve terms as county mayor, and former Miramar city commissioner.

State Rep. Rep. Robin Bartleman, a Democratic former member of the Broward School Board and Weston City Commission, recently told local government officials: “You are going to be fighting for your lives.”

The push

Gov. Ron DeSantis put the idea at the top of the Florida agenda when he started talking early this year about eliminating property taxes.

DeSantis is seeking a dramatic dénouement before term limits end his time as governor after next year’s elections. A legacy including something as big as a radical reduction in property taxes could help DeSantis sell himself to primary voters if he makes another attempt to win the Republican presidential nomination.

Talk earlier in the year of eliminating property taxes had been scaled back in recent months. A range of proposals have been introduced in advance of the 2026 legislative session that would leave school taxes in place and eliminate, phase out or substantially reduce other governments’ property taxes on owner-occupied homes.

So many competing political interests are interacting on the issue that no one knows just what’s going to happen, when and how, and the financial implications for local governments and taxpayers.

Republicans who control the state House of Representatives have put forward seven proposed amendments to the state Constitution, some of which would dramatically reduce or eliminate property taxes for homeowners — and dramatically reduce revenue to local government.

Some would be far reaching and others would be targeted. And some are contradictory. One, for example, would eliminate all non-school taxes on owner-occupied residential property. Another would implement a phase out over 10 years. And another would eliminate non-school taxes for homeowners older than 65.



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