Phoenix approved a $2.1 billion city budget on Tuesday despite public requests for expanded emergency housing aid; residents had urged a doubling of a $3.15 million crisis relief allocation. On May 19, Wayne County Manager Chip Crumpler presented a roughly $291.2 million FY2026-27 budget recommendation without a tax increase, and earlier this month Pittsfield outlined a $232.8 million proposal. This week Wilmington moved closer to approving a more than $350 million spending plan that would raise the property tax rate by 5.75 cents to 34 cents per $100 and increase starting police salaries from $52,000 to $62,000. Officials across jurisdictions cited rising health insurance, retirement and debt costs; councils scheduled continued deliberations and accepted public comment on funding levels and eligibility.
Prepared by Lauren Mitchell and reviewed by editorial team.
Your city's budget affects your daily life. It determines funding for services like emergency housing and police salaries. It also impacts your taxes. Stay informed about your local budget proposals. Attend public hearings or submit comments if you can.
City budgets are tight. Rising costs for health insurance and retirements are big factors. Some cities are raising taxes, others are not. Officials are working to balance needs and resources. Keep an eye on your city's final budget decisions. Worth forwarding if you know someone concerned about local services or taxes.
Municipal departments and funded services — including police, fire departments, schools and city operations — will receive increased appropriations and targeted raises, preserving staffing and capital needs in the short term.
Low-income residents and renters seeking emergency housing assistance suffered from limited growth in crisis relief funds and eligibility restrictions tied to citizenship status, prompting disappointment and public comment.
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Cities Propose Budgets Amid Public Concern Over Services
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