Wednesday, May 1, 2024 May 1, 2024
81° F Dallas, TX
Advertisement
Civics

Klyde Warren Park Wants Its Neighbors to Help Pay For Its Maintenance, Via a Public Improvement District. What the Heck Is a Public Improvement District?

|
Image
All that grass doesn't maintain itself. Photo: Bradford Pearson
All that grass doesn’t maintain itself. Photo: Bradford Pearson

As Wilonsky broke yesterday afternoon, the folks at Klyde Warren Park would like its neighbors to start pitching in with the costs of maintaining the park. Their plan is to create a public improvement district, which would assess a small tax on property owners in the district to help with, well, improvements. Wilonsky mentioned the 10 other PIDs in the city briefly in his piece, but let’s open it up a bit, and see where the Klyde Warren Park PID would fall:

Deep Ellum (founded in 1999), assesses a 12-cent/$100 of appraised value tax

Downtown (founded in 1992) assesses a 11.9-cent/$100 of appraised value tax

Knox Street (founded in 2010) assesses a 15-cent/$100 of appraised value tax

Lake Highlands (founded in 2008) assesses a 13-cent/$100 of appraised value tax

Oak Lawn-Hi Line (founded in 2009) assesses a 15-cent/$100 of appraised value tax

Prestonwood (founded in 1997) assesses a 9-cent/$100 of appraised value tax

SouthSide (founded in 2005) assesses a 15-cent/$100 of appraised value tax

Tourism (founded in 2012, no documents available yet)

Uptown (founded in 1993) assesses a 4.5-cent/$100 of appraised value tax

Vickery Meadow (founded in 1993) assesses a 10-cent/$100 of appraised value tax for premium areas, 5-cent/$100 of appraised value tax for standard areas

These were the proposed values for 2012, as found on the city’s PID website. The proposed Klyde Warren Park PID would begin at a rate of 2.5 cents/$100, but could raise up to 15 cents, the maximum value allowed. PIDs are approved in seven-year clips, but are often renewed. Each PID is created at the request of area property owners, and Klyde Warren Park PID supporters will need to garner the support of 60 percent of property value — not 60 percent of the property owners — to take the plan to the city.

Maybe this is what the city needs to get Zac’s double-park idea off the ground. Fingers crossed.

Related Articles

Mark Metlon attorney
Government & Law

The Lawyer Who Landlords Don’t Want to See in Court

Attorney Mark Melton started helping people on Facebook during the pandemic. Before he knew it, he’d assembled the country’s only group of lawyers focused full time on stopping illegal evictions—and saving taxpayers millions.
Image
Home & Garden

Kitchen Confidential—The Return of the Scullery

The scullery is seeing a resurgence, allowing hosts and home chefs to put their best foot forward­—and keep messes behind closed doors.
Advertisement