
[V]ermont Tax Commissioner Kaj Samsom is predicting that robust growth in the tax base should hold education property tax rates flat next year despite projected spending increases.
The forecast comes in a letter to the Legislature the commissioner is required by law to release by Dec. 1 predicting education tax rates. Samsom said in an interview that grand list growth from market appreciation and new construction, along with an anticipated surplus from this fiscal year, are the main reason tax rates are expected to hold steady.
โItโs overall positive news,โ Samsom said. โAnd what it shows is that in an environment of revenue growth, you can maintain reasonable spending growth without increasing the tax rates.โ
The tax commissioner in his letter assumes education spending will increase by 3.2 percent. He projects the average residential property tax rate will be $1.50 per $100 in value (the same as this year) and that the average non-homestead property tax rate will be $1.58 (also the same as this year.) About two-thirds of Vermonters actually pay income-based property taxes, and Samsomโs forecast pins the average education income tax rate at 2.45 percent (down slightly from this yearโs 2.49 percent.)
A steady tax rate does not mean tax bills themselves arenโt expected to rise. The average property tax bill is expected to go up by 1.52 percent, according to the commissionerโs forecast, because of increases in property value and rising incomes.
The numbers projected by the commissioner are subject to change. The education tax yield, a number used to calculate tax rates, isnโt finalized by the Legislature until the spring, after school districts have voted for their budgets on Town Meeting Day. But the projected yield included in the December letter is a critical number used by school boards as they begin crafting budgets for next year, and it sets the stage for the education spending debates lawmakers and Gov. Phil Scott are sure to have once the legislative session gets underway.
Samsomโs letter foreshadowed those debates, writing that if school boards hold spending increases to 1.7 percent โ last yearโs spending growth โ that $21 million could be freed up to actually lower tax rates and put money toward child care subsidies, a longstanding policy priority for the governor.
โSaid plainly, this year we have an opportunity to both lower the non-residential and average homestead rates and increase investment in our childrenโs early care and learning,โ Samsom wrote.
