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Common Cents
is a one-cent sales tax that funds many capital improvement
projects for Sarasota County, the School District and the
municipalities of Sarasota, Venice, North Port and Longboat Key.
The penny
provides money for quality-of-life projects without relying on
higher property taxes that make Sarasota County a better place
to live, work and visit.
The penny spreads the cost
of capital projects such as libraries, roads, parks and fire
stations among all those who use them, including seasonal
residents and tourists which would otherwise be paid for by
property owners alone.
Sarasota County voters approved the 15-year
renewal of the 1 percent sales tax on Nov. 6, 2007.
The renewal is expected to raise about $1.4
billion over the next 15 years through 2024. The school board
will receive 25 percent of the revenue, with the remainder
allocated based on population in Sarasota County, Venice,
Sarasota, North Port and Longboat Key.
The penny
was first approved by voters in 1989. A penny
extension (Phase II) was approved by voters beginning 1999.
Sarasota County commissioners agreed to
dedicate 50 percent of the county’s revenues from the penny tax
extension for transportation projects.
Past Penny projects have
included: road improvement projects, street tree landscaping,
the new North Port Police station, North Port High School, pothole
patching projects, new fire stations, bike trails, waterway
improvements, the Venice pier parking lot improvements and many
other community improvement projects.
The educational material on this site is provided by
Sarasota County Government. Sarasota County's use of the
phrase "Common Cents" has no affiliation with any
political action group.
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