Reserves and reserve funds are used to ensure a municipality’s long-term financial sustainability, reducing the need for long-term borrowing or imposing sudden tax increases.
The purpose of the Tax Stabilization Reserve Fund is:
To stabilize tax rates by funding in-year shortfalls and one-time/unanticipated expenditures including but not limited to legislated and discretionary plans/studies, legal costs, and insurance claims/premium increases.
Reserve & Reserve Fund Policy
Tax Rate Stabilization Reserve Funds are to be used to reduce the sudden impact to tax or utility rates from unexpected costs in budgets, or unexpected costs arising mid-year. The purpose of the funds set aside by Council is to reduce the sudden impact to tax or utility rates from unexpected costs in budgets, or unexpected costs arising mid-year.
Belleville By-Law Number 99-84 – Reserve Fund for Local Service Realignment Stabilization, was first established on June 14, 1999.
Reserve Fund has been used to fund various initiatives
In Belleville’s Tax Rate Stabilization Reserve Fund has been drawn down in recent years, from a balance of:
- $10.826M in 2021
- $9.427M in 2022
- $6.519M down to $2.25 million in 2023.
It has been used for:
- 2023
- $140K to the Welcoming Streets Program
- $650K to reduce property tax increase (news)
- $350K to fund increase in QuinteWaste Solutions budget
- 2024
- $1M to the new YMCA
- $1.821M to The Bridge
Timeline
2023 – Automated Speed Enforcement surplus destination
Council approved that any net surplus (net deficit) from the Automated Speed Enforcement Program be transferred to (from) the Tax Rate Stabilization Reserve Fund:
[ASE] will be cost neutral and net surplus (net deficit) from the Automated Speed Enforcement Program be transferred to (from) the Tax Rate Stabilization Reserve Fund to be used for traffic safety related projects/initiatives and community road safety projects.GMTOS-2023-29
March 2024 – Reserve & Reserve Fund Report and Policy created
In 2024, the Reserve & Reserve Fund Policy and report found the Tax Rate Stabilization Reserve Fund and other reserves to be considerably underfunded:
- Tax Rate Stabilization Reserve Fund by $6.4M
- Asset Management Reserve Fund by $38.2M
- Sanitary Sewer Reserve Fund by $24.7M
March 2024 – Surplus & Deficit Management Report and Policy created
In 2024, Belleville approved a Surplus & Deficit Management Policy to govern the management and administration of surpluses and deficits at the City, to ensure:
- The treatment of Surpluses and Deficits are in accordance with the Municipal Act, 2001 (the Act).
- A priority application framework is established and consistently applied for the allocation of Surpluses and Deficits.
- That the intended uses and targets established in the Reserve & Reserve Fund Policy are continually considered when making decisions at the City.
- Financial sustainability is maintained while still providing for stabilized taxes and user fees to ratepayers.
It sets a consistent priority application framework, intended to replenish key reserve funds, including but not limited to the City’s Tax Rate Stabilization, Asset Management, and various user-funded reserve funds.
The Treasurer or designate is authorized to distribute the tax-funded operating surplus in the preceding year as follows:
- 50% to the Tax Rate Stabilization Reserve Fund
- 50% to the Asset Management Reserve Fund
February 27, 2024 – Large commercial property owners filing for property tax relief through the Assessment Review Board
The municipal law as it relates to property taxation continues to be subject to challenge.
In reaction to the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, some large commercial property owners, ineligible for government relief programs, filed claims for Section 357 tax relief due to the emergent issues created by the pandemic.
While these claims were denied by the Assessment Review Board (ARB), the ruling has been challenged in court. Municipalities across Ontario and the ARB are awaiting decision. The remaining assessment at risk in Belleville is approximately $793M.

As a rough estimate, using the Commercial tax rates for the years in question, an appeal decision rendering an average 25% reduction in the remaining assessment at risk would produce a liability for the City of approximately $6.15M.
As tax appeals commonly take several years to be resolved, the eventual expenditures resulting from current outstanding claims would be determined over years to come. It should be noted that this calculation does not include any potential assessment appeal in 2024 for these properties.
Since 2017, the City has paid out approximately $12.3M in tax adjustments from Assessment Review Board and Request for Reconsideration Appeals, Post Roll Amendments, Amended Notice Adjustments, and Classification changes:




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