Town manager proposes budget 2 cents above revenue neutral

Budget discussions include spending on Northcross Drive extension, a key north-south connector
April 5. By Dave Yochum. While general fund expenditures would arguably fall—due to one-time ARPA funds that were placed into reserve accounts during FY23—chances of a revenue-neutral town budget in FY24 may be in doubt.
In fact, Town Manager Andrew Grant is recommending a budget that would be 2 cents above revenue neutral, or 18.3 cents per $100 of assessed valuation.
Revenue neutral, which builds in a revenue increase equal to the average of the last 4 years in Cornelius, would be 16.3 cents per $100.
Budget process
The FY24 budget is a work in progress, with hours of discussion ahead, negotiations around needs vs. desires and a real desire to keep a lid on property taxes. How much of an increase, based on spending in administration, parks, public works, roads and safety is what lies ahead during the next roughly 11 weeks. The new budget must be in place when the 2024 Fiscal Year begins July 1.
All this is taking place in the midst of an economy in flux.

Dave Gilroy
Grant could not be reached for comment, but veteran budget monitor and Commissioner Dave Gilroy said the town manager’s proposed budget would represent a 12.3 percent tax increase in local property taxes. “It would be the first time in Cornelius history for two consecutive tax increases, after 5 percent last year,” Gilroy said.
In concert with the county-wide revaluation, some increases will be higher, some lower.
A tax rate of 16.1 cents per $100 of valuation would be revenue neutral. The county has already said they cannot adopt a revenue neutral budget.
The proposed budget calls for total spending around $31 million. The $33 million in the current fiscal year includes roughly $4 million in reserve fund allocations for Smithville revitalization and other projects—money held in reserve to be spent over many years in the future.
“That’s not money that was spent last year, just accounted for in one bucket instead of another. It never left our bank account. So, it’s silly to say the town is going to spend less next year—$31 million vs $33 million. What matters is recurring personnel and operations which is always comparable from one year to the next,” Gilroy said.
Personnel costs
Personnel expenditures are on the rise, partly because of inflation and the need for more staff in a growing town, as well as the effort to get salaries here closer to market rates.
But Gilroy said the rate of local government spending is growing “super fast.”
“This year, our town manager is recommending a 16.5 percent increase in personnel expenditures. He proposes paying for this with a 12.3 percent tax increase. This follows a 5 percent tax increase last year and the highest tax increase since the 13 percent tax increase in 2020,” Gilroy said.
During the discussions Commissioner Denis Bilodeau said an increase of 2 cents above revenue neutral was too much. In fact, he advocated for revenue neutral—with the help of reserve funds.

Denis Bilodeau
“Manager Grant ‘s proposal addresses the quality of life issues most important to our citizens. I believe we can afford this plan without a tax increase and remain revenue neutral in this reval year,” Bilodeau said.
Must taxes go up?
The Town of Cornelius must publish a revenue neutral rate prior to setting the tax rate by June 30. It’s possible for your local tax bill to go down, if the rate falls enough to compensate for the higher increase in value. Of course, the opposite is true.
The overall property tax rate is driven by Mecklenburg County taxes, so property owners anxious to see what their tax bill will be next year will have to wait. All the fiscal back and forth among the town commissioners only impacts only part of the rate.
Sources in Mecklenburg County say the county’s new tax rate is expected to be higher than revenue neutral. It appears to be a toss-up in Cornelius with sentiments on both sides of the equation on the Town Board.
No Comments
Leave A Comment Cancel reply
Our Partners









While businesses all over the nation are cutting spending ASAP to whether what they see are declining revenues Cornelius is planning to spend OVER revenue projections.
That is a JOKE. How about spend LESS than revenue projections. Time for the adults to take over.
I find that it is amazing that in this year of runaway inflation these two commissioners think that costs going up don’t need to be addressed. Stop the nonsense and vote 2 pennies. You have a Town Manager who knows what we need and spends frugally. Market pay to keep talent cannot be ignored.
As a retired citizen, I hate the thought of paying more taxes. But, you “don’t get something for nothing.” The needs are real in a fast growing town!
I remember when we could not retain Police, Fire, and high performing Town staff because the Town was less attentive on salary surveys. I choose not to return to that perilous situation. To date, the Manager’s budget decisions have stood the test of time.
The greed in this town is getting to be beyond bizarre. Citizens are facing higher prices on everything, including taxes. To do this now is a total slap in the face. You increased your salaries, more commercial property is being built (more tax revenue) and now you want to increase tax? DISGUSTING
The town budget is very lean and efficient. Everyone agrees that costs are rising and because our population growth has been negligible, the tax base is static, meaning greater costs are spread over the same number of people. The real issue is timing. Based on inflationary pressures and economic uncertainty, a tax increase right now might not be prudent. As expectations of town services increase and if the tax base remains flat, revenues will need to keep pace.
“our population growth has been negligible” because the Town commissioners and the developers have conspired to use every available parcel of land without any concern for infrastructure improvements.
Well said! I think most Cornelius residents would totally agree with you.
All this spending and still no left turn lane/light on Westmoreland for eastbound traffic heading north on Statesville.
I’m betting none of the town leaders get to regularly sit in the back-up that stretches past Alexander Chase!
The same story EVERY year, everything around us goes up but property taxes in Cornelius. The only issue is to do this the level of service and quality of life goes down, down, down. Staff leave, police leave, we park on dirt to visit our parks. One of the wealthiest zip codes in NC and we have a Town run like we broke. 2 cents per 100 on a 500,000 home is $8.33 cents a month. $16.66 on a million dollar home. You can’t get a good glass of wine for that. Property Values increased by 20% each of the last 2 years. Tax payers home value net worth increased on average 100,000. Do you think that can pay an extra $100 a year to increase the quality of life here? Don’t worry if things get tough here in Cornelius we can always shop at our largest retailer the Goodwill and get the no name ketchup at Aldi’s. STOP the nonsense! Raise the tax 5 cents $20 a month and upgrade the Parks, Roads and Town. Lets Make Cornelius one of the most Beautiful Towns in the State.
I am with Jacob Palillo on this. Hardly anything has changed since I ran for mayor in 2007 because of how stingy the commissioners have been. Well last year was good but now Gilroy is back in office to kill anything new or good or needed.
Jake Palillo is a wealthy developer constantly pitching and shilling for new sprawl style projects in the open land in Huntersville/Cornelius. Let Jake … finance the tax burden.
His preferred method of sprawl development and the related traffic it brings from other communities is one of the primary reasons for the traffic issues in Cornelius. These Developers are the ones making millions on the new projects. Assess the cost where the burden comes from. Require the developers to pay for the true cost of their infrastructure for their projects. Don’t raise taxes on your existing residential base, assess development fees on the projects that are constantly seeking to take advantage of the base and aging infrastructure that is here.
Very well stated. I agree 100%, and the unfettered development done by developers like Jake Palillo and Tim Perry without supporting infrastructure has done nothing but decrease quality of life, and who cares about going to parks when you can’t get there. These developers are so out of touch.