Attempting to understand proposition 2 1/2.
The following is from a guide about prop 2 1/2 published by Department of Revenue, division of local services of MA.
What is a Levy?
The property tax levy is the revenue a community can raise through real and personal property taxes. We will refer
to the property tax levy simply as the levy. In Massachusetts, municipal revenues to support local spending for
schools, public safety and other public services are raised through the property tax levy, state aid, local receipts
and other sources. The property tax levy is the largest source of revenue for most cities and towns.
What is a Levy Ceiling? What is a Levy Limit?
Proposition 21
⁄2 places constraints on the amount of the levy raised by a city or town and on how much the levy can
be increased from year to year.
A levy limit is a restriction on the amount of property taxes a community can levy. Proposition 21
⁄2 established two
types of levy limits:
First, a community cannot levy more than 2.5 percent of the total full and fair cash value of all taxable real and personal
property in the community. In this primer we will refer to the full and fair cash value limit as the levy ceiling.
Second, a community’s levy is also constrained in that it can only increase by a certain amount from year to year.
We will refer to the maximum amount a community can levy in a given year as the levy limit. The levy limit will
always be below, or at most, equal to the levy ceiling. The levy limit may not exceed the levy ceiling.
Proposition 21
⁄2 does provide communities with some flexibility. It is possible for a community to levy above its levy
limit or its levy ceiling on a temporary basis, as well as to increase its levy limit on a permanent basis. These options
are discussed in more detail in other sections of this primer. The concepts of levy ceiling and levy limit are illustrated
in Figure 1.
How is a Levy Ceiling Calculated?
The levy ceiling is determined by calculating 2.5 percent of the total full and fair cash value of taxable real and personal
property in the community:
Full and Fair Cash Value x 2.5% = LEVY CEILING
Full and Fair Cash Value = $100,000,000
$100,000,000 x 2.5% = $2,500,000
I believe it is important when anyone puts out any graphs, charts or figures projecting taxes and tax rates that all understand or at least try to so we all then realize how it actually works or at least how it has worked out in many cities and towns, most importantly, in our own Town.
Jeff Bennett
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