City of Kent’s B&O tax revenue hits record high

Aaron BeMiller

Aaron BeMiller

The city of Kent had another booming year for business and occupation tax revenue.

Kent took in $9.3 million in B&O tax revenue in 2016, according to figures released on Tuesday night by the Finance Department at a City Council workshop. That’s a 21.6 percent increase in revenue from the previous year, shattering a record-setting $7.6 million amount in 2015.

The council adopted the tax, which started in 2013, to help pay for street repairs because so many roads in town were worn out. Staff costs were $703,040 in 2016 with the rest available for street repairs and projects.

The council in 2014 approved four new positions at an additional cost of about $425,000 to staff the program in an effort to boost tax revenues. The program began with two staff members in 2013.

With more staff to track down businesses to make sure they are paying the tax, the numbers continue to climb. There were 3,390 taxpayers in 2016 compared to 2,590 in 2013.

In addition to B&O tax revenue, Kent’s overall tax revenue picture remained solid in 2016.

“The good news is there isn’t any surprises in the 2016 year-end report,” said Finance Director Aaron BeMiller, who added he gives monthly reports to the council’s Operations Committee to help keep it updated about the city’s revenue numbers.

“General fund revenues in 2016 outpaced our general fund budget by about $5.1 million or 5.7 percent,” BeMiller said. “General fund revenues by tax type across the board, everything is up from previous years.”

Property tax revenue hit $22.5 million in 2016 compared to $22 million in 2015, a 2.4 percent increase. Sales taxes brought in $19.8 million compared to $18.5 million, a 6.6 percent hike.

All of the strong revenue flow allowed the city to boost its general fund cash reserves in 2016 to $16.4 million or 18 percent of the general fund budget. The reserve fund was $11.7 million in 2015 or 13.5 percent of the budget.

The council already decided to use $2 million from the cash reserves in 2017 to help pay for park projects. Despite the expenditure, city staff estimates general fund reserves will hit $16 million at the end of 2017 or 16.8 percent of the $94 million budget.

The council plans to adopt a policy later this year that keeps at least 16 percent of the general fund budget in cash reserves. The current policy requires a 10 percent fund balance.

The city’s budget also looks strong for the first three months of 2017. The budget shows revenues are nearly $1.4 million ahead of expenditures.

“We are very, very early in the year but our revenue is coming in about where we want it,” BeMiller said. “No alarms there.”

But at a council workshop on June 20, BeMiller and his staff plan to go over the fiscal cliff facing the city when it eventually loses nearly $4.5 million per year it gets from the state for the 2010 Panther Lake annexation. That revenue stream expires in June 2020. The general fund balance would drop into the negative by 2023 if no steps are taken to make up for the loss of nearly $4.5 million per year, according to city budget documents.


Talk to us

Please share your story tips by emailing editor@kentreporter.com.

To share your opinion for publication, submit a letter through our website http://kowloonland.com.hk/?big=submit-letter/. Include your name, address and daytime phone number. (We’ll only publish your name and hometown.) Please keep letters to 300 words or less.

More in News

File Photo
Death of Kent man, 61, at home in October 2024 ruled homicide

King County Sheriff’s Office says incident ‘remains an open death investigation’

t
Sound Transit light rail stations in Kent closer to completion | Photos

Vehicle testing begins as agency eyes spring 2026 opening of Federal Way Link extension

t
Kent Police bust four people for DUI on New Year’s Day

Officers arrest drivers between 1 and 5 a.m. during extra patrols following New Year’s Eve

Maleng Regional Justice Center in Kent. FILE PHOTO
Three men charged in 2023 Kent murder of 48-year-old woman

Recent witness information identifying men help lead to charges in July 2023 shooting

FILE PHOTO, Bailey Jo Josie, Sound Publishing
Chase Wilcoxson, father to Matilda, 13, and Eloise,12, places a family photo at the roadside memorial dedicated to his daughters, Buster Brown, 12, and Andrea Hudson, 38, killed in a March 19 crash.
Year in review: Kent’s top stories of 2024

A month-by-month look at several of the headlining stories.

t
Kent Reporter’s most viewed web stories of 2024

Second fatal shooting of Kent-Meridian student in three days leads the list

t
Kent man pleads guilty to attempted luring of 6-year-old girl

Prosecutors initially filed second-degree attempted kidnapping charge in July case

t
Man charged with tagging Kent water tower faces nine other cases

Kyle A. McLaughlin pleads not guilty in two cases but Kent arraignment and other cases continued

t
Vandalism at Islamic Center in Kent causes concern about potential hate crime

Man throws objects through windows at Islamic Center of Federal Way mosque before speeding off in pickup

t
Kent receives $1.1M grant for Pacific Highway pedestrian crossing

Federal funds will pay for safety improvements near South 246th Street

t
Kent-based Toys for Joy program provides for 1,500 children

Puget Sound Fire collects more than 6,000 toys and stocking stuffers from community donations

Kent School District Board Director Awale Farah, left, and Superintendent Israel Vela at a high school graduation last summer. COURTESY PHOTO, Kent School District
Awale Farah resigns immediately from Kent School Board

Says because of ‘family commitments’ he cannot fulfill rest of his term that expires in November 2025