Politics & Government

City OKs Higher Tax Exemption

Mayor Matt Santini called the Freeport tax reduction one of the "most important" in Cartersville's economic development plan.

last night moved on a longtime that hits the school system where it hurts, in the pocket book.

Councilmen approved an increase in Freeport tax exemptions that positively affect the bottom lines of local manufacturers and other businesses that hold large inventories, reports. The vote followed ' resolution in support, in its March meeting.

The measure means reduced property taxes for local manufacturers and other businesses holding inventories of goods that were produced in Georgia. As an incentive to new and expanding industry, Cartersville has exempted from taxation 20 percent of those goods since 2004.

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

Beginning Jan. 1, the tax break will cover 40 percent of the raw materials, partially finished and finished goods.

"This is one of the single most important things we can do in our economic development strategy to bring quality jobs to this community. I am really happy that we are taking this step and I am even more happy that the school board is taking this step with us," Mayor Matt Santini said, according to the newspaper.

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

Bartow County’s but was down almost 2 percentage points from a year earlier.

Santini has said creating jobs is the biggest challenge for the city, which is looking to continue increasing its Freeport exemption by 20 percent a year until it reaches 100 percent.

Bartow County exempts from property taxes 80 percent of qualified inventories.

While the amount of property tax revenue the school system will lose is unclear, it's .


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