The Buncombe County Board of Commissioners held a June 4 public hearing on their $337 million budget proposal, but they didn’t hear much from the public. Only a few residents stood up to the podium to make their views known during the short session.
The plan for the 2013-14 fiscal year, which begins July 1, calls for raising the property tax rate by roughly 15 percent to cover a drop in property values, increased funding requests and unfunded federal mandates. And at the hearing, Candler resident Jerry Rice, an outspoken regular meeting attendee, called that an “ungodly” amount.
“We’re going to feel the pain from this tax increase much worse than you might think,” he asserted.
However, the other attendees who weighed-in expressed no complaints about the proposed rate of 60.4 cents per $100 of property value (the current rate is 52.5 cents). Instead, speakers asked commissioners to fund a pair of projects they’re involved in.
Michelle Pace Wood, a former candidate for commissioner in District 3, said she was there to speak on behalf of a community group of more than 200 people called Equal Education for Enka. She asked the commissioners to consider financing a new intermediate school in the Enka district in coming years.
Meanwhile, Carl Silverstein, executive director of the Souther Highlands Conservancy, urged the commissioners to include $242,000 in the budget for easements to protect land from development.
In response, commissioners mostly remained silent. Commissioner Joe Belcher was the sole member of the board to share his thoughts on the budget. Praising the teamwork of staff and commissioners who helped draft the plan, he called the responsibility of covering millions in unfunded mandates “a heavy lift.”
“Am I happy with everything? No,” he added, maintaining that he and his colleagues will continue looking for ways for the county to cut costs after a final budget is approved June 24.
“We will continue working on saving money,” he said. “We’ll work on it everyday.”
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