Close Menu
  • Home
  • Subscribe
  • Current Edition
  • Store Locations
  • Photo Albums
  • Rate Card
  • Classifieds
  • Submit News
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Sunday, February 1
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube TikTok
Login
The Village Reporter
  • Home
  • Subscribe
  • Current Edition
  • Store Locations
  • Photo Albums
  • Rate Card
  • Classifieds
  • Submit News
The Village Reporter
Home»News»Representatives Jim Hoops & David Thomas Introduce 20 Mill Floor Inflation Cap Legislation
News

Representatives Jim Hoops & David Thomas Introduce 20 Mill Floor Inflation Cap Legislation

By Newspaper StaffMarch 22, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Email Copy Link

(PRESS RELEASE / THE VILLAGE REPORTER)
TAX LEGISLATION … State Representatives Jim Hoops (R-Napoleon) and David Thomas (R-Jefferson) introduce property tax reform legislation.


COLUMBUS – State Representatives Jim Hoops (R-Napoleon) and David Thomas (R-Jefferson) recently introduced a bill they believe will be one of the strongest pieces of property tax reform legislation this General Assembly.

The pair of lawmakers are both former County Auditors and used their backgrounds to craft legislation will provide long-term relief to homeowners.


Their 20 Mill Floor Inflation Cap bill will limit the revenue school districts can receive from the 20 Mill Floor to inflation, which will lower the spike of unvoted property tax increases.

“Since the pandemic, the perfect storm has arisen,” said Hoops. “Due to lack of housing and the increasing costs of building homes, anyone who bought or sold a home found the sale price increased dramatically.

Hoops went on to add, “In the past, the 920, which was put in place back in the 70s to combat inflation, usually took care of the issue when values were too excessive.”

“However, because of the 20 mill floor rule that was put in place for the schools in the 80s, values have finally caught up with us and as such has made the 920 factor obsolete for those tax payers that live in school districts who now sit at the 20 mill.”


Every school district in Ohio is guaranteed to receive 20 Mills or 2% of their district’s property value in tax rate. Roughly 400 of Ohio’s school districts have an effective tax rate that is below their guaranteed 20 Mill tax rate.

20 Mills are still applied to the district’s value and as value grows, the taxpayer’s burden grows with value causing spikes of unvoted property taxes.

“I’m a firm believer that if you want more than inflation in tax revenue, the voters should approve that and this bill greatly helps lower the spike in taxes with property value increases,” said Thomas.

The legislators have been working since November on this measure. Stakeholders from the school community, county auditors, the Department of Taxation, the Department of Education and Workforce, and House leadership have held conversations on the most impactful way to craft the reform in a way that will meet legal muster and provide long-term relief for property owners.


The 20 Mill Floor is largely seen as a main culprit for the spikes in unvoted property taxes across Ohio over the past several years as values have increased and more schools are below the guaranteed tax rate.

“This proposal is like a base layer, something that must be done as a core aspect to property tax reform with other ideas added on top to give additional relief,” said Thomas.

The sponsors are hopeful for fast action in the House of Representatives to avoid more schools moving below the floor, causing large windfalls of tax dollars next year. Property tax reform bills are continuing to be introduced weekly in this General Assembly as the issue remains top of mind for many lawmakers.

The legislation awaits a bill number and House committee assignment.


 

Previous ArticleBlack Swamp Arts Council Hosts Annual High School Invitational Art Show
Next Article WILLIAMS COUNTY FAIR BOARD: Preparations Continue For 2025 Williams County Fair
Newspaper Staff
  • Facebook

Related Posts

Black Swamp Arts Center Now Offering Winter Classes

January 31, 2026 News

Archbold Rotarians Support New Student Food Initiative

January 31, 2026 News

SWANTON VILLAGE COUNCIL: Council Divided As Swanton Updates Meeting Rules & Procedures

January 31, 2026 News

MONTPELIER BOARD OF EDUCATION: Board Appoints Michael Worksetter To Fill Vacancy

January 30, 2026 News

Comments are closed.

Account
  • Login
Sponsored By
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Home
  • Subscribe
  • Current Edition
  • Store Locations
  • Photo Albums
  • Rate Card
  • Classifieds
  • Submit News
© 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Sign In or Register

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below.

Lost password?