VCSD tax rates set

Enterprise file photo — Michael Koff

Students from Clayton A. Bouton graduated in June. This month, the Voorheesville School Board finalized tax rates for district residents. 

NEW SCOTLAND — Payers of Voorheesville school and library taxes will save a few dollars on next year’s bill after the school board recently finalized tax rates for 2023-24.

The board approved the rates at a special Aug. 18 meeting. 

Next year, according to the district, New Scotland, Guilderland, and Berne residents of the Voorheesville Central School District will pay a “true rate” of $15.37 per $1,000, which is down 6.2 percent from the this year, and is ascertained by multiplying a property’s assessed value per $1,000 by its municipality’s equalization rate.

Meanwhile, the true tax rate paid by residents to the Voorheesville Public Library will be about 95 cents per $1,000, which is down 4.4 percent from this year. 

Residents of New Scotland, which has an equalization rate of 74 percent, are due to pay school and library taxes of about $20.77 and $1.29 of assessed value per $1,000, respectively. New Scotland’s school and library assessed tax rates are set to increase by 2.64 and 4.64 percent, respectively.

Guilderland residents, whose equalization rate is 85%, are set to pay school taxes of $18.08 per $1,000 of assessed value and library taxes of $1.12 per $1,000, which are up 0.39 and 2.35 percent, respectively.

Berne has an equalization rate of 43 percent, and its handful of Voorheesville School District residents are due to pay $35.75 per $1,000 of assessed value in school taxes, up about 9 percent, and $2.21 per $1,000 in library taxes, an increase of 11.16 percent

More New Scotland News

  • The decision to hold off on construction, at least according to Kevin O’Connor, Albany County’s economic development chief, was in response to the Trump administration’s levying of heavy tariffs on goods manufactured outside the United States.

  • With 587 ballots cast, 415 Voorheesville School District voters were in favor of the now-approved spending plan for next year while 172 residents were against it. 

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