Page 29 - Bedford-FY22-23 Budget
P. 29

Truth in Taxation
            The ad valorem tax is a tax assessed on real property in order to provide a revenue stream for government operations.  The FY
            2022-2023 proposed budget was developed with a tax rate of $0.495726 per $100 assessed valuation, which is presented to the
            City Council for approval during the budget process.

            The tax rate is used to generate revenue to provide for operations.  The two main functions supported by the ad valorem tax are
            General Fund operations and Debt Service payments.  The tax rate has two different sub-rates.
                 The maintenance and operations, or M&O, rate is used by the General Fund to pay for General Fund expenses.
                 The interest and sinking, or I&S, rate is used by the Debt Service Fund to pay for the annual debt obligations for the City.

            To determine the tax rates for FY 2022-2023, the Tax Assessor for Tarrant County utilizes information from FY2021-2022 and from
            the estimated new property values developed during the current  scal year.

            The following are the rates established by the Tax Assessor:


             No New Revenue Tax Rate           $0.507583
             No New Revenue M&O Rate           $0. 356246
             Voter Approval M&O Tax Rate       $0.444603
             Debt Rate                         $0.128229

             Unadjusted Voter Approval Rate    $0.572832
             Sales Tax Adjustment Rate         $0.080764
             Voter Approval Rate, Adjusted for Sal es
                                               $0.492068
             Tax 
            Senate Bill 2, also known as the Texas Property Tax Reform and Transparency Act of 2019, was passed by the Texas Legislature in
            2019. At its most fundamental level, S.B. 2 reforms the system of property taxation in three primary ways: (1) lowering the tax
            rate  a  taxing  unit  can  adopt  without  voter  approval  and  requiring  a  mandatory  election  to  go  above  the  lowered  rate;  (2)
            making numerous changes to the procedure by which a city adopts a tax rate; and (3) making several changes to the property
            tax appraisal process (Texas Municipal League). The bill took effect 1 January 2020.

            Previously, any rate adopted that exceeded the 8 percent rollback rate triggered the ability of citizens to petition to hold an
            election to “roll back” the tax rate to the rollback rate. Generally speaking, S.B. 2 requires a city to hold an automatic election
            (i.e., the bill eliminates the petition requirement) on the November uniform election date if it adopts a rate exceeding the 3.5
            percent voter-approval rate. See TEX. TAX CODE § 26.07.



































                City of Bedford, TX | Adopted Budget FY 2023                                                Page 29
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