Newberry fire assessment fee spikes 50%

Newberry City Hall building
Suzette Cook

Newberry’s fire assessment will increase from $200 to $300 in the 2025-26 fiscal year for the rate’s first increase in three years.  

After much deliberation on how to proceed with the rate, the Newberry City Commission approved the 50% increase, 4-1, during a regular meeting on Monday, with Commissioner Monty Farnsworth in dissent.

With a packed city hall, Commissioner Rick Coleman suggested tabling the fire assessment in order to hold another workshop where citizens could speak more on the item. But the commission decided to move forward with a vote in the interest of needing to finalize the city’s budget by Oct. 1. 

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Although the fire assessment is still below the $419 maximum rate adopted by the commission and balances the Newberry Fire Department’s (NFD) $2.6 million spot in the city’s budget, City Manager Jordan Marlowe said it doesn’t account for growth in the future. 

“We are not getting ready for tomorrow, we’re just taking care of today,” he said. “Tomorrow is coming, and we will have to deal with it.”  

Marlowe said the $300 rate reflected three years of data from a recent fire assessment study. He said last year’s rate was based only on one year of data, skewed by one business that spiked the numbers. 

The new study revealed that Newberry has more commercial businesses in town needing fire services and, even though the rate is still a substantial increase, Marlowe said the numbers show the natural growth of the city. 

“The three-year study has brought significant increases down to still significant increases,” he said. “But instead of nine times more the cost, now we’re looking at something that’s three times the cost.” 

Staff shared that in 2020, Newberry’s fire assessment was $175. The rate increased over the next few years to $190 and $195 before holding steady at $200 for the past three.  

At one point, previous City Commissions had been advised to plan on $25 increases each year, but failed to incorporate them. Some citizens called on the commission to do so again, moving forward. 

“What frustrates me the most isn’t the size of this jump, but this could’ve been avoided,” said former Newberry Commissioner Jason McGehee. “The rate hasn’t moved, and now we have to make significant jumps.” 

According to a staff presentation, 54% of Newberry’s fire budget is funded by property taxes, 36% by the fire assessment fee, and 10% from the fire services agreement with Alachua County. 

The agreement states that for every call the NFD answers in unincorporated Alachua County, the county pays $865 per call.  

Commissioner Mark Clark asked how much it would cost to turn NFD over to the county. 

Staff said rates would be higher on the county’s sliding scale for fire assessments, with a residential house in Newberry costing $200,000, paying around $270, the average Newberry resident around $357 and a high value home at $400,000 costing around $450. 

Newberry’s neighboring city of High Springs will determine next week whether it will keep its fire department or depend on Alachua County Fire Rescue services after the county proposed a $188,000 cut in aid to the city.  

The cut is based on a few months of data from the new Fire Station 21 in Alachua, which is providing more coverage to that area of the county instead of depending on the High Springs Fire Department.  

Marlowe said even though there aren’t any plans right now to build fire stations closer to Newberry that could cut its funding, like in High Springs, the conversation to do so could happen at any time. 

Editor’s note: It is actually a 50% rate increase and not 33%, as previously stated.

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A.Battel

Where is DeSantis’ DOGE gestapo when you need them.

James

Just going to keep getting much more expensive to live in and own a home in Newberry; probably more so than anywhere else in North Central Florida. Newberry is easily taken over by uncontrolled development which is just getting started. Newberry never really recognized its past and just now starting to try and hold on to its old landmarks, the old Icehouse is the only example I can note here. The old Hotel and Bank are being allowed to deteriorate. The Hotel doesn’t even have plywood covering the broken and missing glass back upper windows to keep rainwater out of the building and the front entrance door to the upper level doesn’t have a threshold and therefore has almost a four inch gap at bottom of door that allows rodent entry point and that has been the case for years. How is that even allowed for a restaurant? Really.

Last edited 1 month ago by James
James

Commissioner Monty Farnsworth is a true Newberry area Native that honestly cares for the Town and especially its poorer residents.

Last edited 1 month ago by James
i am 138

Man, I thought the republicans were all about lower taxes… What happened Timmy? You realized that nice things cost money?

Just wait till next year that Newberry has to come up with more cash to fund that school that they stole from the county. Hold on to your wallets Newberry!

Freedom

Calling a legal vote of the families of the school to have more parent directed control of their school “stealing” a school from the county is sort of exactly why it’s important to take greater control of your child’s education. What a deranged statement. No doubt coming from another genius at ACSD

i am 138

It was a legal vote, but they needed 50% +1 and when you didn’t reach that number, the rules miraculously changed. Maybe because you had a state rep in your pocket…. (not to mention the child predator that spearheaded the whole thing)

I find it funny that the party of “pull yourself up by the bootstraps” is stealing a public school. Maybe you guys should have “pulled yourselves up by the bootstraps” and built your own charter school. Then the parents of Newberry kids would truly have a choice.

Freedom

It’s just incredibly creepy that you think kids and schools belong to anyone other than parents at those schools. Most people have caught on to what that really means. Really dark stuff.

teddy

Just for the record – the headline touting a 33% increase is wrong if the assessment is going up from $200 to $300 as reported in the article. That’s actually a 50% increase!

C.J. Gish

Thank you for catching this. It has been updated.