The assessed
value of all property located within the City of Dunwoody is $1.92
billion. That means, the borrowing limit
for Dunwoody is $192 million. Dunwoody
has annual revenue of about $25 million and an Asset Value reported in the 2012
CAFR of $90.3 million. A more
responsible State Law would limit city borrowing to 100% of City Assets.
What hubris
allows the State Legislature to presume that our private property can be viewed
as collateral for goofy City Councils being bribed by the federal government to
spend and borrow all they can.
The Handbook
for Georgia Mayors and Councilmembers; Part 5 Financing & Revenues for
Municipal Indebtedness states:
Debt Limitations
Generally, the Georgia Constitution
limits indebtedness to 10 percent of the assessed value of all taxable property
located within a municipality.
This provision also states that no new
debt may be incurred without the assent of a majority of the qualified voters
voting on the question of whether the city should incur the debt.
Exceptions to the 10 percent
limitation and the required election include:
• funds granted by and loans obtained
from the federal government or any agency pursuant to conditions imposed by
federal law,
• funds borrowed from any person,
corporation, association, or the state to pay in whole or in part the cost of
property valuation and equalization programs for ad valorem tax purposes;
• temporary loans; and
• funds to pay for damages caused by
the city's breach of a contract.
Counties and school districts have
their own 10 percent limitation. A city may enter into a contract with an
authority and levy taxes to meet its contractual obligations to the public
authority as long as the contract between the city and the public authority is
authorized by the intergovernmental contacts clause of the state constitution.
Contracts that are authorized by the
intergovernmental contracts clause and require a municipality to pay an amount
sufficient to pay the debt services on an authority's debt do not create new
municipal debt.
Source: Handbook for Georgia Mayors and Councilmembers.pdf
Norb Leahy,
Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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