Paradise Town Council adopts FY 2026-27 budget, certifies current tax rate
Paradise Town Council approved FY 2026-27 budget, OK’d FY 2025-26 amendments, and certified the current property-tax rate after a June 17 public hearing.
At its June 17, 2026 budget public hearing and Town Council meeting, Paradise Town Council approved amendments to the fiscal year 2025-2026 budget, adopted the fiscal year 2026-2027 budget, and voted to certify the Town’s current property tax rate.
The three actions are laid out in advance in Utah’s Public Notice entries for the hearing and agenda. The Council’s official June 17, 2026 minutes also record the motions, including the budget votes and the tax-rate certification vote.
What the June 17 hearing notice said the Council would do
In the notice for the public hearing, Paradise’s Town Council set the meeting for June 17, 2026 and described the purpose as:
- Amending the budget for fiscal year 2025-2026
- Adopting the budget for fiscal year 2026-2027
- Certifying the current tax rate
The notice was posted on June 4, 2026.
Agenda items: budget adoption and tax-rate certification
The June 17 council agenda mirrors those required budget steps and lists the specific actions the Council planned to take at the meeting, including:
- Adopt FY 26/27 Budget
- Adopt FY 25/26 Budget Amendments
- Certify Tax Rate
What the minutes confirm was actually voted on
In the official minutes from the June 17 meeting, Council records motions and outcomes for the three core finance actions:
- Adopt FY 2026/2027 Budget: the minutes state a motion to approve the FY 2026/2027 budget was made, seconded, and approved.
- Adopt FY 2025/2026 Budget Amendments: the minutes state a motion to approve the FY 2025/2026 budget amendments was made, seconded, and approved.
- Certify Tax Rate: the minutes state the Council voted to certify the current tax rate (with the motion made, seconded, and approved).
Why “certifying the current tax rate” matters
The certification vote is a key step in the Town’s local property-tax process. However, it’s not the same thing as your personal tax bill amount. Your final property-tax numbers can still depend on the property’s assessed value and how taxes are calculated for your specific parcel.
What to watch next: When the Town’s certified-rate information is reflected in your next property-tax paperwork, compare the certified-rate details shown on your notices to understand how the Town Council’s certified step applies to your situation.
Where to verify the exact documents
For residents who want to double-check the formal record, the relevant documents are posted through Utah’s Public Notice system (including a minutes PDF attachment posted on July 1, 2026):
- The June 17, 2026 budget hearing notice
- The June 17, 2026 council agenda
- The June 17, 2026 Council minutes PDF
Keeping those entries handy can also make it easier to follow any future budget amendments, because the official minutes and posted agendas show what the Council did—and when.
Sources
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