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Sheriff Simmons Discusses Impact of Tax Cuts on ECSO

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Local Government / Public Safety

Sheriff Simmons: Property Tax Plan Could Force Cuts in Deputies, Not Time to Panic—Yet

Escambia County Sheriff Chip Simmons is watching Gov. DeSantis’s homestead exemption proposal closely, but says the sheriff’s office has runway before it faces a budget crunch.


Gov. Ron DeSantis has sent the Florida Legislature his proposal to  expand the homestead exemption, which would slash property tax revenues for counties and municipalities statewide. For Escambia County Sheriff Chip Simmons, the stakes are clear: 92% of his office’s budget is personnel, leaving almost no cushion if revenues fall.


The Core Concern: A Flat Budget Means Fewer Deputies

Simmons didn’t mince words about the structural problem. Even without a direct cut, holding his budget flat while costs rise amounts to a reduction in force. The Florida Retirement System (FRS) rate increase alone would consume millions with no corresponding revenue growth—a scenario that plays out quietly but hits hard in an agency where nearly every dollar pays a salary or benefit.

“FRS rates look like they’re going up two million dollars just for the sheriff’s office next year. So a flat line budget for us means reductions—reductions in manpower.”

 


What the Sheriffs Association Is Saying

The Florida Sheriffs Association has not taken an official position for or against the governor’s plan. Simmons described the group’s posture as watchful: monitoring the legislation and holding conversations with House and Senate members, but not yet committing to a stance.

The reason, he said, is that everyone agrees something needs to happen on property taxes—the disagreement is over which approach works without gutting public safety budgets.


The Three-Year Budget Agreement Provides Some Cover

Escambia County and the sheriff’s office negotiated a three-year funding agreement that has been widely credited with stabilizing the relationship between the commission and Simmons’s office. That agreement offers a degree of protection in the near term, according to the sheriff.

Simmons said the earliest the constitutional amendment could appear on the ballot is around 2028—and it would still need 60 percent voter approval to pass. The sheriff’s office is already into year one of the three-year agreement and has submitted its ask for year two.

Key timeline: Even under the most aggressive scenario, a constitutional amendment expanding the homestead exemption could not take effect before approximately 2028. The Escambia County Sheriff’s Office’s three-year funding agreement provides budget stability through the near term—though the third year could overlap with implementation.

Open Questions: Sales Tax, State Trust Fund

Simmons acknowledged there are potential remedies being discussed at the state level—including a state trust fund that could backstop local governments losing property tax revenue—but said he hasn’t studied those proposals in depth because the details haven’t been settled yet.

He took a measured tone on the uncertainty: “This has been going on for what, a year or so? And had we started to panic and have a lot of drama a year ago, it’s completely different than what we see right now. So we would have wasted a lot of time.”

“There’s some time for grown-ups to kind of take a look at this thing and then let the chips fall where they may.”


Bottom Line

Simmons said he’s not a “sky is falling” kind of sheriff—but he’s keeping an anxious eye on the Capitol as the House and Senate work through competing versions of what property tax relief will actually look like.


Dig Deeper

At its Committee of the Whole in early April, the Board of County Commissioners (BCC) discussed all the constitutional officers having to bear some burden of  any tax cuts.

Commissioner Mike Kohler went on record that any draconian cuts wouldn’t be limited to the BCC’s own operations. Constitutional officers—Sheriff, Clerk, Tax Collector, Property Appraiser—would need to share the pain.

Commissioner Steven Barry offered a more measured view. “I don’t think we’re going to get a plan back from the property appraiser of how to deal with anything right now, just because the legislation would be specifically targeting them as much as anything.”

Barry also noted the county has a multi-year funding agreement with Sheriff Chip Simmons, but said extraordinary circumstances would require an extraordinary conversation.

 

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