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The Villages
Saturday, April 20, 2024

Marion County Commission adopts 2017-2018 budget  

The Marion County Board of County Commissioners on Thursday adopted the final budget for next fiscal year, which runs from Oct. 1, 2017 to Sept. 30, 2018. The total adopted budget is $640,336,480. This includes the countywide budget of $444,987,795 and the budgets of non-countywide entities ($195,348,685).
During its Sept. 21 final budget public hearing, the commission adopted the countywide millage rate of 4.02 mills. A millage rate of 4.02 equates to $4.02 for each $1,000 of taxable property value. The countywide millage rate funds:
1. The County General Fund, which includes the following:
•  Board of County Commissioners departments including Parks and Recreation, Public Library System, Fleet Management, Animal Services, Veterans Services, and others. Not included: Solid Waste, Building Safety, Utilities, Visitors and Convention Bureau, Airport and the Office of the County Engineer (transportation/roads).
•  Emergency medical transport provided by Marion County Fire Rescue.
•  Marion County Sheriff’s Office jail administration and emergency operations.
•  Constitutional Offices (Clerk of the Court and Comptroller, Supervisor of Elections, Property Appraiser, Tax Collector).
•  Courts and criminal justice (court administration technology, Guardian Ad Litem technology, public defender technology, and drug and teen courts).
•  Reserves for natural disasters and emergencies.
• Partner agencies (The Centers, Inc., Marion Senior Services/Transit, Heart of Florida Health Center, Early Learning Coalition, and others).
2. Fine and forfeiture (overseen by the Sheriff’s Office, with some portions overseen by the Clerk of the Court and State Attorney’s Office).
3. The Florida Department of Health in Marion County. The Department of Health is a state-county funding partnership; this portion of the millage rate represents the county’s funding.
4. Parks and Land Acquisition Debt Service Fund. This voter-approved debt All other non-countywide millage rates will also remain at their current levels, including the MSTU for Law Enforcement and the MSTU for Fire, Rescue and EMS. The MSTU for Law Enforcement was kept at a millage rate of 3.47. This MSTU is applied to properties in the unincorporated areas of the county that receive sheriff patrol services. The MSTU for Fire, Rescue and EMS remained at a millage rate of 0.77.
The special assessment rates for solid waste and stormwater also remained at the same levels.
The Board of County Commissioners voted to adjust the fire assessment rates during a Sept. 13, 2016 public hearing; the assessment for a residential dwelling is now $194.31.

Golf course deserves a failing grade

A Village of Hadley resident recently played an executive golf course that had earned a B- grade in a recent report grade. He says the golf course now deserves a failing grade.

It’s great that Villages-News.com features holes-in-one

A reader from Arkansas is envious that Villages-News.com publishes stories celebrating Villagers’ holes-in-one. He wishes he and his friends could get that kind of recognition where they live.

Roosevelt Executive Golf Course should be downgraded to F grade

A Village of Bradford resident, in a Letter to the Editor, contends the Roosevelt Executive Golf Course has a D grade, but should be an F.

The press is biased against Trump

In a Letter to the Editor, a Village of Osceola Hills makes the case that the press is biased against former President Trump.

Former Morse South Gate attendant offers a little perspective

A former Morse South Gate attendant, in a Letter to the Editor, offers a little perspective after another letter writer was critical of attendants working that gate.