Monmouth County open space question will be decided by voters

Date:

Share post:

Monmouth County residents who head to the polls on Nov. 7 will be asked by the county Board of Freeholders if they want to raise the open space tax rate that generates millions of dollars in revenue that public officials use to acquire and preserve open space properties.

Voters will decide whether the open space tax rate will be increased from 1.5 cents to 2.75 cents per $100 of equalized valuation.

- Advertisement -

Freeholder Director Lillian Burry has said “the current collection (tax revenue) is not meeting the county’s needs” in terms of land preservation. She said that “if we don’t save land now, it will be lost.”

In 2017, the open space tax is expected to produce $17.7 million in revenue. It is estimated that if the tax rate is raised to 2.75 cents, $33 million in revenue will be generated annually, according to Craig R. Marshall, the county’s chief financial officer and county treasurer.

The open space tax rate, when applied to the assessed value of an individual’s property, determines the amount a property owner pays into the county’s open space trust fund on an annual basis.

County officials use those funds to pursue a policy of preserving public open space, providing public recreation opportunities, conserving natural resources and protecting water quality, according to the freeholders.

On an assessment of $200,000, a property owner currently pays $30 per year into the county’s open space trust fund. With a tax rate of 2.75 cents, that would increase to $55 per year.

On an assessment of $400,000, a property owner currently pays $60 per year into the county’s open space trust fund. With a tax rate of 2.75 cents, that would increase to $110 per year.

On an assessment of $600,000, a property owner currently pays $90 per year into the county’s open space trust fund. With a tax rate of 2.75 cents, that would increase to $165 per year.

On an assessment of $800,000, a property owner currently pays $120 per year into the county’s open space trust fund. With a tax rate to 2.75 cents, that would increase to $220 per year.

Stay Connected

213FansLike
89FollowersFollow

Current Issue

Latest News

Related articles

Sponsored: Could You Be at Risk for Breast Cancer?

When actress Olivia Munn revealed in March that a breast cancer risk assessment started a path to her...

Hit the ‘trail’ and learn about New Jersey’s Black history

by Jay Watson, Co-Executive Director, New Jersey Conservation Foundation James Still always wanted to become a doctor, but as...

Common calendar, Packet papers, May 31

Burlington, Mercer, Middlesex, and Somerset counties New Jersey Blood Services (NJBS), a division of New York Blood Center, which...

Protesters disrupt Princeton University alumni festivities

Pro-Palestinian/anti-Israel protesters were true to the word that they would "see you at Reunions" when they briefly held...