STRAW: Delaware County Council Should Find Ways to Reduce Spending, Cut Tax Increase
The cost of living in Delaware County is out of control and one of the main contributors is local governments raising taxes, from school boards to Delaware County Council itself. Just this past Wednesday, Delaware County Council proposed a 23.8 percent property tax increase that would be used to pay for increased spending and grow the county’s financial deficit from $54 million to $76 million. Hundreds of residents attended the meeting, including myself, calling on the council not to raise taxes by such a high amount.
The county council says there hasn’t been a tax increase in 12 years, and they blame the previously all-Republican council’s not raising revenue for why there is a dramatic increase in taxes now. However, there is more to this story. The current Delaware County Council is spending far more than previous councils spent. The addition of a Health Department, the de-privatization of George H. Hill Correctional Facility, the purchasing of additional land, and increasing county staff salaries have all contributed to increased spending in the county.
The county’s taxes didn’t go up immediately when this increase in spending began, however. This is because the county council received $110,083,961 in ARPA (American Rescue Plan Act) funds in 2022 and has plugged the holes of its growing deficit with these funds to hold off tax increases, until last year when it raised taxes by 5 percent. They are proposing to use the dwindling ARPA funds in the 2025 budget to pay for the health department again this year and are using additional rainy-day funds to fill gaps in the overall budget. Also, when the council obtains grants to purchase or enact various items or programs, it is using one-time or limited funding sources that eventually run out. This means that without the ARPA or grant funding, this proposed tax increase could be even higher than 23.8 percent.
When addressing the county council in last Wednesday’s meeting, I gave the council plenty of examples of ways they could, in fact, cut some of their spending to encourage them to lower their tax increase. Some of these examples included ending “free yoga” (nothing is free to taxpayers), shrinking their electric vehicle fleet, not spending $4.1 million in outside legal fees, and putting off some of their capital project spending, which is $120,926,840, up from $74,852,754, an increase of 61.6 percent.
Also, the Delaware County Council has undertaken a plan to buy up land for open space use and increase the number of trails it has across the county. I am an advocate for open space and green space in our communities. However, the annexation of land has put an increased burden on taxpayers and the county’s budget. In the past few years, the county has used eminent domain or settled litigation to acquire land in Media Borough for Glen Providence Park, in Marple Township for ‘Delco Woods,’ and more. This has amounted to millions more in taxpayer dollars being spent and requiring more for taxpayers to have to pay in the long run for the projects the council wants to do with these properties.
Whether you are a renter, business owner, or homeowner in Delaware County, we all should be concerned with the increased spending in Delaware County. Regardless of the justification, the council is irresponsibly creating a deeper deficit and has run out of options other than massive tax hikes to maintain their spending increases. This upcoming Wednesday, Dec. 11, the county council will convene to vote on this proposed budget.
Instead, Delaware County Council needs to make cuts in its budget to reduce the blow of this tax increase and prevent further increases in the future for struggling county residents.