Orange County NC Website
2 <br />is intended to offer a preliminary outlook of budget drivers likely to influence the FY 2009- <br />10budget. <br />Highlights of the preliminary outlook include: <br />Projections for property taxes assume 3% natural growth in real property. <br />Orange County is nearing the completion of its property revaluation process. <br />Revaluation is a systematic, in-depth process of reappraising all the real property in <br />the county to the current market value and is necessary in order to maintain <br />equitable and uniform property values among property owners throughout the <br />county. North Carolina General Statutes require counties to revalue real property at <br />least every eight years. The Orange County Board of Commissioners has chosen <br />to authorize revaluations every four years. The next revaluation of real property will <br />become effective on January 1, 2009. A direct result of revaluation is that the <br />County's tax rate wilt be adjusted to be "revenue neutral". Revenue neutral is <br />defined as the rate estimated to produce revenue for the next fiscal year equal to <br />the revenue that would have been produced for the next fiscal year by the can-ent <br />tax rate if no reappraisal had occurred. Orange County's current tax rate is 99.8 <br />cents per $100 of valuation, and it is much too early in the budget planning process <br />to anticipate what the revenue neutral rate will be. <br />• Fiscal year 2009-10 sees the final year of the three-year phase in of Medicaid <br />Relief/Sales Tax Swap legislation approved by the General Assembly in August <br />2007. The financial impact on Orange County includes a reduction of about $4.9 <br />million in safes tax revenues with an offsetting expenditure reduction in Medicaid <br />expenditures. <br />• Over the last two-to-three years, the County has embarked on a number of major <br />capital construction projects and long-term leases including schools, parks, libraries <br />and other County and partner facilities. Given the County's limited pay-as-you-go <br />capital funding, it has been necessary to debt finance these projects. It wilt be <br />necessary, in the upcoming fiscal year, to begin repaying the borrowed monies as <br />well as begin funding day-to-day operating costs such as utilities and leases. The <br />projected increase in debt service and annual operating costs associated with new <br />facilities totals $5.25 million. <br />During fiscal year 2006-07, Commissioners approved an employee pay and <br />classification study. As the Board will hear later tonight, the consultant is nearing <br />the completion of the study. Last spring, the consultant indicated a good <br />benchmark for study implementation cost projections would be 10 percent of total <br />salaries. <br />The number of students attending school in the County's two school districts has <br />increased, on average, 385 students each year. The anticipated FY 2009-10 fiscal <br />impact of 385 students at the current per pupil allocation of $3,200 totals <br />$1,232,000. <br />It is too early to predict the tax rate impact of the preliminary budget drivers. However, it <br />is safe to say that the combination of anticipated revenue reductions and expenditure <br />increases will have an upward impact on the revenue neutral tax rate. <br />