Coral Springs Votes to Oppose HJR 213 Property Tax Cap, Warning of Service Cuts

by | Feb 28, 2026 · 9:05 am | Politics & Government, Coral Springs | 0 comments

Coral Springs Votes to Oppose HJR 213 Property Tax Cap, Warning of Service Cuts

Let's Be Friends

Support Boca Post by following us on Facebook, X (formerly Twitter), Instagram, and Nextdoor for trusted local news, events, weather updates, and important community information delivered as it happens.

CORAL SPRINGS, FL (Boca Post) (Copyright © 2026) — Coral Springs commissioners have formally moved to oppose a proposed state constitutional amendment that would tighten limits on how much property assessments can rise, a change city leaders say could restrict local budget flexibility and pressure core city services.

The Coral Springs City Commission approved Resolution 2026-007 opposing House Joint Resolution 213 during a recent public meeting. The resolution takes aim at a measure filed in the 2026 Florida Legislative Session that would curb non-school property assessment increases and further restrict what local governments can do under home rule authority.

Under the proposal, non-school homestead property assessment increases would be limited to once every three years, with a cap of 3% or the inflation rate, whichever is lower. Non-homestead property assessment increases would also be limited to once every three years, capped at 15%.

The Coral Springs resolution also flags additional limits described in the joint resolution, including language that would prohibit increases in non-school assessments if the just value has decreased over the prior three years.

Commissioners framed their opposition around a basic concern: local governments rely heavily on property tax revenue to operate, and limiting assessment growth without replacing the lost revenue shifts the burden onto city budgets. Coral Springs’ resolution states the city currently receives 48.23% of its revenue from property taxation, and it warns that municipal services across Florida could face cuts if property tax growth is constrained without an alternative funding source.

The resolution points directly to public safety spending and the way municipal budgets are built. It states that Coral Springs’ General Fund public safety expenses equal 101.41% of the revenue generated from property taxation, comparing $93,680,944 in expenses to $92,375,673 in ad valorem revenue. In plain terms, the document argues property taxes already function as a backbone for essential services like police and fire, and that reducing growth in that revenue stream would be difficult to absorb.

Coral Springs’ resolution estimates the cumulative impact of the proposed ballot measure would amount to roughly $8.15 million in property tax revenue losses over the first three-year period, based on an assumption of 4% annual growth in total taxable assessed value. The document says the joint resolution does not provide alternative municipal revenue sources to offset potential losses.

Another point of contention is a restriction described in the resolution that would prevent local governments from reducing first responder funding below amounts budgeted in either local fiscal year 2025–2026 or 2026–2027, whichever is greater. Coral Springs officials argue that requirement could lock in police and fire spending while forcing reductions elsewhere, limiting local flexibility even further.

City leaders warned that if local governments cannot adjust public safety budgets to meet revenue realities, the cuts would land on other operations that residents still rely on day to day. Coral Springs specifically raised the possibility of impacts to parks and recreation, public works and infrastructure maintenance, road resurfacing, stormwater management, environmental services, code compliance, and community programming. The resolution also describes the risk of delaying or eliminating capital improvement projects and long-term infrastructure investments, including maintenance that keeps critical systems operating within useful life.

The commission’s resolution goes beyond Coral Springs alone, describing broader statewide effects if local governments lose capacity to collect property tax revenue at current levels. The document warns of service cuts, staffing reductions, and financial stress that could be severe for some municipalities.

The resolution also lays out what happens next procedurally. If the Florida Legislature passes the joint resolution, it would move to voters as a ballot measure for approval. Coral Springs directed its city clerk to transmit the resolution to the Florida Legislature, the Broward League of Cities, Gov. Ron DeSantis, the media, and other interested parties.

The measure adopted by Coral Springs was approved unanimously, according to the resolution record. The city said it will continue monitoring state legislation and advocate for policies it believes protect essential services, preserve home rule authority, and support resident safety and wellbeing.

Stay informed with Boca Raton News covering neighborhoods, local government, public safety, and the stories driving conversation across the area.

Get Your Business In Front of Boca Raton

When major stories break in Boca Raton, thousands of readers turn to Boca Post.

Businesses, professionals, and organizations can work with Boca Post through sponsored announcements, expert commentary, press releases, and local advertising that appears directly alongside trusted local reporting.

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

More News

Two Major Ballot Questions Face Boca Raton Voters In March 10 Municipal Election

Two Major Ballot Questions Face Boca Raton Voters In March 10 Municipal Election

Boca Raton voters will decide two major ballot questions in the March 10 municipal election involving a new police headquarters and the proposed Downtown Campus redevelopment plan.

Coral Springs Earns Dual National Gfoa Awards For Budget And Financial Reporting

Coral Springs Earns Dual National GFOA Awards for Budget and Financial Reporting

Coral Springs received two national Government Finance Officers Association awards recognizing its annual financial report and budget document for clarity, transparency, and strong reporting standards.

Vote-By-Mail Request Deadline Is 5 P.m. Today For March 10 Boca Raton Election

Vote-By-Mail Request Deadline Is 5 P.M. Today for March 10 Boca Raton Election

Boca Raton voters who want a vote-by-mail ballot for the March 10 municipal election must get their request in by 5 p.m. today, according to the Palm Beach County Supervisor of Elections.

Boca Raton Delays Downtown Campus Zoning Vote Until After March Referendum

Boca Raton Delays Downtown Campus Zoning Vote Until After March Referendum

Boca Raton City Council has pushed four ordinances tied to the Downtown Campus regulatory framework to March 24, after initially discussing a delay until after the March 10 referendum election.

Cra Approves Major Redesign Of Royal Palm Place Hotel Parking Plan In Downtown Boca Raton

CRA Approves Major Redesign of Royal Palm Place Hotel Parking Plan in Downtown Boca Raton

Boca Raton’s Community Redevelopment Agency approved an amended development order for the Royal Palm Place Hotel site, cutting rooms, removing below-grade parking, and replacing a small public parking plaza with a new multi-story parking structure and other site changes.