INSIDE INFORMATION
2 0 2 2 L O C A L V O T E R G U I D E
PROPERTY TAX PROPOSITIONS
COMPILED BY MATT STEPHENS
Texas voters will decide local elections in numerous communities across the state May 7, but they will also vote on two propositions that will have implications on property taxes statewide. Community Impact Newspaper spoke with Joshua Blank, research director of the Texas Politics Project for The University of Texas; Dale Craymer, president of the Texas
Taxpayers and Research Association; and Dick Lavine, senior scal analyst for Every Texan, to break down the two propositions before voters head to the polls. Blank said both constitutional amendments received bipartisan support from legislators in 2021, and he believes they are likely to pass to provide homeowners property tax relief, but they would place more of the
public education funding burden on the state. “Ultimately what you’re doing is you are shifting the burden from … the homeowner automatically handing over some of our property tax into the public education system and switching that to rely on the Legislature to continue to fund public education at equal or higher levels than they have in the past,” he said.
P R O P O S I T I O N 1
P R O P O S I T I O N 2
WHY VOTE YES ?
Therewas no opposition to either of the proposals at the Legislature. So I think they’re fairly noncontroversial, and homeowners who vote for themwill receive property tax relief. It may not be substantial enough relief to cut anyone’s tax bill, but I think it’s certainly going to take a big chunk out of a potential increase. DALE CRAYMER, PRESIDENT, TEXAS TAXPAYERS AND RESEARCH ASSOCIATION
S EN AT E J O I N T R E S O LU T I O N 2 Second special session of 87th Texas Legislature
S EN AT E J O I N T R E S O LU T I O N 2 Third special session of 87th Texas Legislature
House vote:
Senate vote:
Sent to secretary of state’s oce Aug. 30
House vote:
Senate vote:
Sent to secretary of state’s oce Oct. 19
1160 290
1470 310
B A L L O T T E X T
B A L L O T T E X T
“The constitutional amendment authorizing the Legislature to provide for the reduction of the amount of a limitation on the total amount of ad valorem taxes that may be imposed for general elementary and secondary public school purposes on the residence homestead of a person who is elderly or disabled to reect any statutory reduction from the preceding tax year in the maximum compressed rate of the maintenance and operations taxes imposed for those purposes on the homestead.”
“The constitutional amendment increasing the amount of the residence homestead exemption from ad valorem taxation for public school purposes from $25,000 to $40,000.”
W H A T D O E S I T M E A N ?
Blank said homeowners in Texas are already oered a $25,000 homestead exemption on property taxes from public school districts— meaning the rst $25,000 of a home’s appraised property value does not count against a homeowner’s annual property taxes. If approved, that exemption for homeowners would be raised to $40,000.
WHY VOTE NO ?
We are reducing our income from the property tax, which is relatively
W H A T D O E S I T M E A N ?
less regressive thanmost of the other sources of state general revenue. So it is a small shift, but a shift in the wrong direction. ... What we really need to do is work on something to get those appraisalsmore correct. DICK LAVINE, SENIOR FISCAL ANALYST, EVERY TEXAN
Although property taxes are frozen for the disabled and those over the age of 65, this would allow the Legislature to provide additional property tax relief from school districts for even those elderly and disabled homeowners with frozen taxes, Blank and Craymer said.
$600M Estimated annual cost to the state
Estimated cost to the state through 2026
Annual savings for the average homeowner
$744M
$167
SOURCES: TEXAS LEGISLATURE ONLINE, TEXAS SECRETARY OF STATE’S OFFICE WEBSITE, JOSHUA BLANK, DALE CRAYMER, DICK LAVINECOMMUNITY IMPACT NEWSPAPER
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