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06-27-2022 City Council Minutes
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06-27-2022 City Council Minutes
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MINUTES OF THE <br /> ORONO CITY COUNCIL MEETING <br /> Monday,June 27,2022 <br /> 6:00 o'clock p.m. <br /> Mr.LaTondresse replied what Mayor Walsh is describing reflects the old mill-rate system which expired <br /> in 1988. He noted they do not set a tax rate but set a max levy which is in reference to the amount of <br /> money collected this year. If they set a 3.5%levy this year in the face of roughly an 18%increase in <br /> property values it will not translate to an 18%levy increase. He noted it does not go up dramatically or <br /> down dramatically which is why the State changed the system. <br /> Johnson asked how Mr. LaTondresse's district compared in property tax increase assessments versus the <br /> other districts. <br /> Mr. LaTondresse invited the City Council to participate in a meeting on Wednesday evening which will <br /> go over property value increases and the impact on individual property taxes.Broadly speaking in <br /> Hennepin County it has gone up 18%in value,Wright County was at 18%, Carver County at 20%, so in <br /> terms of assessed values Hennepin County is pretty comparable, noting Orono was about 24-25%. <br /> Johnson clarified his question he is curious about minimums and maximums within Hennepin County,for <br /> example downtown Minneapolis. <br /> Jim Atchison,County Assessor,stated all of the reports are based on City and suburban versus <br /> Minneapolis,so he does not have one that goes right to the districts, although he can get it for the City.In <br /> general starting in Minneapolis,the further West and North one goes the higher the increase and the <br /> higher the value of the residential property,the higher the increase. Western Hennepin had higher <br /> increases than the inner core of Minneapolis in single-family residentials.Bloomington increased more <br /> than Richfield.Edina increased more than East Bloomington,etcetera.Mr.Atchison said overall the City <br /> of Minneapolis had an increase of 6.9%with residential single-family up about 8.6%,apartments are up <br /> 7.3%, and commercial is up 4%. <br /> Johnson asked for the breakdown for Orono. <br /> Mr.Atchison shared for the City of Orono,single-family residential is up 21.9%,apartments are up <br /> 10.5%,commercial is up 13.7%,and a small sample of industrial is up 5.4%. Overall in the entire City the <br /> increase was 24.1%. <br /> Johnson noted Orono is seeing a 3X increase of values and asked if that translates to the amount of <br /> resources that come directly into their district or if they are disproportionately spread throughout <br /> Hennepin County?In other words,Orono is generating more money for more improvements through this <br /> tax increase,but does it stay here? <br /> Mr.LaTondresse replied property taxes account for about 1/3 of Hennepin County's budget overall and <br /> the primary function of Hennepin County is human services. Those services are not geography based but <br /> follow residents where they are eligible for those programs and benefits so that is where those dollars go. <br /> There are other areas that budget directly into place-based investments such as public works, libraries, <br /> roads and bridges,housing investments,and there is concerted effort to make sure there is an equitable <br /> distribution of those resources County-wide. In looking at it in aggregate,where there is a higher <br /> concentration of residents living in poverty,there is probably a higher percentage of those program <br /> dollars going in that direction. Other things funded through property tax dollars include Sheriff's budget, <br /> courts,County Attorney Office,and all of those services. <br /> Page 3 of 11 <br />
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