Politics & Government

Haddonfield Commissioners Approve Budget

The $15.23 million budget will boost property taxes.

The Haddonfield Board of Commissioners on Tuesday approved a $15.23 million budget that will increase the local tax rate by 7.47 percent.

The budget will boost the average amount paid for local services by taxpayers to $2,304 yearly. That's a $134 hike for the owner of a home assessed at $491,359, the borough average.

The tax hike is largely fueled by a nearly $500,000 increase in the reserve for uncollected taxes. The reserve is a state requirement. The budget will still keep Haddonfield under a state-mandated, 2-percent cap on increases to the amount raised by taxes, or the tax levy. The projected levy will be $10,576,000, up from $9,992,651.

Find out what's happening in Haddonfield-Haddon Townshipwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Commissioners are also approved the 2012 budget for the Partnership for Haddonfield, the borough's business improvement district.

The PfH budget was reduced from $355,046 to $300,000 this year. The surplus, the amount carried over from year to year, dropped to $18,000 this year, down from $67,346 last year.

Find out what's happening in Haddonfield-Haddon Townshipwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Jeff Kasko, a commissioner and a PfH board member, said the surplus has been shrinking for several years because expenses continue to rise while the BID tax has not been increased. The two-tier tax rate is paid by local commercial-property owners.

The PfH budget comes from a $250,000 annual tax levy on businesses, $32,000 in revenue from the annual summer crafts fair and surplus funds.

Please see the attached PDF for the full agenda from Tuesday's meeting.


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here