Two public hearings were previously advertised and have already taken place. A third public hearing will be held Monday, August 1 at 6:30 p.m. in the auditorium of the Gwinnett Justice and Administration Center located at 75 Langley Drive in Lawrenceville.
When the total digest of taxable property is prepared, Georgia law requires a rollback millage rate must be computed that will produce the same total revenue on the current year’s digest that last year’s millage rate would have produced had no reassessments occurred.
For 2022, Gwinnett County’s rollback millage rate is calculated at 6.088 mills. The 2022 millage rate that the Board of Commissioners is considering is 6.95, or 0.862 mills above the rollback millage rate. Therefore, state law requires commissioners to announce a property tax increase. Required notices for the millage rate adoption will be published in the Gwinnett Daily Post, the county’s legal organ, Sunday, July 24.
The Board of Commissioners adopted the 2022 budget assuming the current millage rate, not the calculated rollback rate. The revenue raised from 2022 property taxes will fund County services and needs that are approved by the board.
“We put a lot of thought, time and diligence into this proposal,” said Gwinnett County Chairwoman Nicole Hendrickson. “The tax revenue generated will allow us to deliver the Gwinnett Standard of services while helping us maintain our roads, transit systems, senior services, libraries and other quality of life programs.”
Commissioners will also consider millage rates for the police, fire and emergency services, development and code enforcement, recreation and economic development funds.
The millage rates will be adopted during the Board of Commissioners regularly scheduled meeting on Tuesday, August 2 at 2 p.m.