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CT Towns Race to Approve Budgets Amid Tax Crunch

National Desk
May 1, 2026
Connecticut municipalities kick off their budget cycles early in the year, with chief executives like mayors, first selectmen or town managers proposing plans for operations and school superintendents outlining education needs. These proposals go to boards of selectmen, finance boards or councils for review, culminating in final adoption by councils, representative town meetings or voter referendums in April or May. In Tolland, for instance, this structured process ensures community input before fiscal years begin July 1.[1][5] Property taxes dominate funding, covering over 70% of local budgets by taxing properties at 70% of market value via mill rates—one mill equals $1 per $1,000 assessed. A $400,000 home in a 30-mill town owes $12,000 annually, though motor vehicle rates cap at 32.46 mills. State grants fill most gaps, with 70% of $3 billion-plus in aid targeting schools, plus funds for roads and capital projects—disproportionately aiding poorer areas.[1] Fiscal pressures mount as inflation-adjusted state aid to towns has dropped nearly $370 million, or 10%, since 2016, despite swelling state coffers. School systems devour the largest share, fueling mill rate hikes in places like Bridgeport and Stamford. The Connecticut Conference of Municipalities warns this two-source reliance—taxes and state aid—breeds tension, pushing leaders to balance services without state oversight of local spending.[1][6]

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