DuBois City Not to Raise Taxes in 2024

The municipal building of the City of DuBois, Pennsylvania. Min Xian / Spotlight PA

2024 Budget

The City of Dubois will not be raising taxes in 2024 if the presented budget and tax plan reach final passage unchanged.   Tuesday night was the first reading of the two city ordinances that cover both the tax rate and budget.  Before it becomes official there remains two more steps:

The tax rate will remain at 23.5 mills with the millage rate set to $2 per $100 of assessed property value.            

The total millage is broken up into two groups:

This tax rate will bring in $1.137 million of the expected $9.238 million revenue in 2024.

The full budget is available on the City of DuBois’ website.  Here is a direct link to the full current budget: https://duboispa.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Proposed-2024-Budget.pdf.  If the budget is updated it should be posted on the City’s Finance Department page: https://duboispa.gov/city-departments/finance/.

The General Fund is expected to total $9,238,311.  Expenditures from the General Fund are projected to be $8,341,277 with the expenditures from the Genderal Fund Capital Budget coming to $897,034.  Combined revenue and expenditures are projected to break even for $0 net money for the City.

Source Amount
Administrative Fees $      2,305,091
Trash Collection $      1,682,640
Local Enabling Taxes $      1,342,878
Real Estate Taxes $      1,137,000
Grant Income $         673,300
Misc Receipts $         395,919
State Revenue Entitlements $         359,240
Local Government/Contracted Services $         240,000
General Government $         233,819
Recreation $         198,125
Recreation & Culture Tax $         195,000
Licenses & Permits $         190,000
Public Safety $         133,300
Parking Facilities $           52,500
Fines & Forfeits $           40,000
Payments in Lieu of Taxes $           37,000
Interest $           12,000
Rents & Royalties $             8,000
Assessment Collections $             2,500
Residence Taxes $                   –  
Total General Government
General Government/Administrative $         703,950 
Engineering $         165,006 
Tax Collection $         160,744 
Legal $           81,809 
Personnel $             3,500 
  Total $      1,115,009
Public Safety
Police Department $      2,275,712 
Pension $         909,525 
Fire Department $         268,380 
Code Enforcement $         176,696 
Emergency Management $             3,620 
Planning and Zoning $             1,000 
  Total $      3,634,933
Public Works
Refuse & Recycling $      1,368,000 
Highway, Road, and Streets $         856,591 
Community Development $           92,000 
Street Lighting $           83,000 
Traffic and Street Signs $           25,000 
Parking $             5,500 
  Total $      2,430,091
Assorted Others
Pool Administration, Maintenance, and Parks $         588,821 
Insurances $         331,073 
Debt Service $         150,348 
Public Library $           88,000 
Misc Expenditures $             3,000 
  Total $      1,161,242
 Grand Total $      8,341,275
General Fund Capital Budget
Brady & Park Traffic Light $         588,000 
ADA Playgrond Equipment $         172,930 
Police Vehicle $           63,000 
Long Ave & 4th Street Bridge Engineering $           50,000 
Replacement Mowers $             9,000 
Flood Control Mowers $             9,000 
Computer Storage and Back Up $             2,644 
Network Upgrades $             2,460 
  Total $         897,034

Property Registration – Council Bill No. 1975

            The City Council of DuBois made their first attempt at a rental property registration ordinance since 2016.  The nearly decade long effort to get something like this passed in DuBois has three goals:

The core issue over the years for the City of Dubois, and other regional governments, is nobody knows who owns what building.  There are people and organizations listed as the owner of the property, but there’s a reoccurring trend of nobody being able to find a way to contact these owners to resolve issues before they escalate.  Most of the ordinance is about resolving this.

Requirements in the ordinance:

“You don’t know who lives in my house.  Why should you know who lives in my rental houses?” said Councilmember Pat Reasinger.

Reasinger questioned both the documenting of who lives in every rental within the City of DuBois and inspecting every building.  With 2,500 rental properties within the City, according to Reasinger, he estimated it would be a full time job to do the inspections even if only 500 happened a year.

Code Enforcement Officer Zac Lawhead agreed.  If the ordinance passed it would potentially need new hires and overtime for himself.  Lawhead asked that, if passed, the renewal fees be high enough to cover these increased costs.

“I am sure it is going to be at least a three year rotation if one person is doing it,” said Lawhead.

The documenting of who lives in each rental unit has usually been justified on the grounds of helping the DuBois Volunteer Fire Department over the years.  Reasinger questioned how effective it would actually be in practice.

“If the fire department sees six people they don’t stop looking.  They keep looking,” said Reasinger.

He added other scenarios where the reported tenant counts would be off.  Maybe the renters areout somewhere when the fire happens?  What if a whole group of people are visiting and are sleeping in the basement when the fire breaks out?

DuBois Police Chief Blaine Clark said that the rentor registration would be useful for the police department on two grounds.  Knowing how many people are in an apartment would help with planning if the police ever needed to go into said apartment.  Knowing the names and home of every renter within the City could help DuBois Police find wanted individuals by visiting the apartments of known acquaintances of the wanted individual.

The council passed the first reading 4-1 with Reasinger being the sole vote against.

There will be a public hearing scheduled before the second reading.

City Mayor Ed Walsh’s Final Meeting           

Walsh announced at the end of the meeting that this was his final meeting.  He will be unable to attend either of the two December meetings.  As of January 1, Councilmember Pat Reasinger will be the new City Mayor of DuBois.  Walsh had been a member of the City government for twelve years as Mayor and Councilmember.           

Walsh admitted the last eight months had been rough, but through it all the Council had held itself with dignity.  He was proud to have served with them and wished them luck going forward. 

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