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Dover Budget Balances With Tax Hikes

Dover Budget Balances With Tax Hikes

Published 3 days, 11 hours ago
Description

Dover’s city council just approved a $62 million budget for FY27, balancing a multi-million dollar deficit without touching reserves — but at a cost: higher property taxes, electric rates, and sewer charges for residents. A controversial $4/month public safety fee for households was dropped, while businesses now pay $10–$40 monthly for emergency services. Water and trash rates stay flat, but a million dollars is being moved from sanitation to the general fund. Some council members opposed the plan, warning it’ll hit low-income residents hardest, especially those choosing between medicine and utilities — and arguing police training funds should go toward more patrols. Supporters countered that they trimmed property tax hikes nearly in half and eliminated the fee, calling these moves essential to avoid future crises. The budget also slashes capital projects, freezes nine vacant positions, and limits out-of-state travel to essential training — plus, $11 million is being shifted from electric revenue to the general fund, up from $10 million last year.

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