The St. Paul City Council on Wednesday unanimously approved an $805 million 2023 budget that includes a nearly 15% increase in property tax collections, drawing frustration from homeowners who said the higher bill will squeeze already-tight budgets.
About half of the 14.65% levy increase will be offset by a decrease in residents' street maintenance bills, after a May court ruling said routine services must be funded by taxes instead of fees.
The rest of the property tax hike will cover inflation and added operating costs, city officials said. The levy — which will total $201 million in 2023 — is the amount the city collects in property taxes, not the amount that individual owners pay.
"I know we all have struggled with the levy increase. We know people really are struggling now," Council Member Chris Tolbert said Wednesday. "It's almost a Catch-22. … The increased property bills are hard on people. But at the same time, when things get tough, people rely on city services more."
The council approved a property tax levy $1.1 million lower than what Mayor Melvin Carter proposed in August, mainly by adjusting projected sales tax revenue, which came in higher than expected for 2022. The council also made a few cuts to city department budgets, including a $350,000 reduction from what Carter proposed for the Office of Neighborhood Safety, which recently received $4 million in federal American Rescue Plan dollars to distribute for violence prevention work.
But with inflation already affecting day-to-day costs from gas to groceries, dozens of residents who attended Tuesday's truth-in-taxation hearing urged elected officials to make even more cuts.
"I live on a fixed income," said Brian Bergson, a former state legislator who lives in the Merriam Park neighborhood. "My family budget, because of these increases, is going to be in a deficit."
The owner of a $266,300 median-value home with a 40-foot lot would see their city property tax bill grow by $262 next year, according to preliminary data from the Ramsey County Assessor's Office, while their assessment bill for street work would shrink by $103. That homeowner will end up paying $2,268 for all St. Paul taxes and fees, not including additional taxes owed to the county, school district and regional rail authority.