Tarrant County commissioners are set to vote on a lower tax rate and smaller budget next month, with almost 70 county positions eliminated and changes in the way the county offers funding for people in need.
Commissioners are in charge of the county budget and property tax rate, and they heard proposals for both at a hearing Thursday morning. The county has focused on property tax relief in the past few budget cycles and have continued in this one.
The property tax rate
The county is suggesting a property tax rate of 18.62 cents per $100 valuation. That means the tax bill for the average home in Tarrant County 鈥 with a taxable value of about $277,000 鈥 is expected to be about $516 a year.
Last year, it was a few dollars higher, at about $519, according to county data.

This is Republican Commissioner Matt Krause鈥檚 first budget cycle with the county, though he went through the process several times as a state legislator. He congratulated county staff for their work on the tax rate and the budget.
鈥淪ometimes I think when the numbers are smaller, it鈥檚 actually harder to do,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 think y鈥檃ll have done a yeoman鈥檚 effort to take care of the county鈥檚 needs.鈥
County property taxes make up a small chunk of a homeowner鈥檚 bill. Most property taxes
Tarrant County has focused on relief to homeowners with property tax cuts and increased homestead exemptions, which are a tax break people can get on their primary residences.
The budget
Commissioners also heard the proposed budget for next fiscal year, which includes county departments like the sheriff鈥檚 office, the DA鈥檚 office, public health and the courts.
The fiscal year 2026 budget would total about $825 million 鈥 $21.5 million less than the previous budget, according to county budget documents.
The proposed budget eliminates 67 county positions, including 24 jobs in the county鈥檚 rental and utility assistance department, which commissioners have already voted to shut down due to criticisms the department was inefficient.
Not all of the 67 positions are currently filled, though budget chief Helen Giese didn鈥檛 know the exact number of people who would lose their jobs when asked Thursday. People who could get laid off may be able to find other jobs within the county, she said.
The proposed budget earmarks $2.3 million for local nonprofits to do the same work as the rental assistance office, Giese said. Critics of the department shutdown have said there isn鈥檛 enough time to find a nonprofit to take over the work 鈥 if there even is a local nonprofit capable of taking it on.
In another change, some outside public assistance organizations that have received steady funding from the county each year will have to reapply to get funding again, Giese said.
Instead of a donation each year, organizations will have to submit for reimbursements and explain what they鈥檙e using county money for, Giese said.
鈥淚 think it's much more transparent in how we're giving money out and how it's being utilized," she said.
The organizations that have received yearly funding in the past include Youth Recovery Campus and Downtown Fort Worth Inc., according to budget documents.
The proposed budget would also put a staffing cap on each commissioner鈥檚 office, meaning some commissioners would have to eliminate positions.
鈥淚鈥檓 not one to mince words, and this whole thing feels like a backroom deal, cooked up without all of us at the table,鈥 Simmons said.
Commissioner Manny Ramirez said the plan has been discussed before and wasn鈥檛 鈥渉atched and schemed.鈥 Commissioners鈥 offices should be standardized, he said.
鈥淲e all represent roughly the same exact amount of citizens,鈥 Ramirez said.
Simmons accused her colleagues of targeting her politically. County Judge Tim O鈥橦are 鈥 who frequently clashes with Simmons during meetings 鈥 said her precinct was gaining more than a dozen jobs, because the recently redrawn county commissioners map gave her Precinct 2 more roads to maintain.
鈥淚s that political too?鈥 O鈥橦are said.
Road maintenance workers are different from her office staff, who she needs to communicate with constituents and put on events like town halls, Simmons said.
The budget and tax rate aren鈥檛 final yet. Commissioners are scheduled to vote on both on September 16.
Some residents who came to Thursday鈥檚 hearing criticized the county for giving them little time to review budget documents and comment on them. The budget will be on every commissioners court agenda between now and the budget鈥檚 approval date, Giese said.
Editor鈥檚 note: This story was updated to reflect Tarrant County鈥檚 proposed property tax rate.
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