A letter signed by 98 Minnesota mayors was sent to Gov. Tim Walz, state senators and representatives on Monday, saying fiscal management at the state is hurting their cities.
The letter comes a week before local governments must set their final property tax levies on Dec. 29.
Tax levies look to be increasing across the board. Preliminary reports from the state Department of Revenue show 2026 levies for cities totaling roughly $4.02 billion compared with a final levy of $3.7 billion in 2025 — an 8.7% increase.
“There is a growing disconnect between state-level fiscal decisions and the strain they place on the cities we lead,” the letter reads. “When the state expands programs or shifts responsibilities without stable funding, it is our residents — families, seniors, businesses, and workers — who ultimately bear the cost.”
Counties have also expressed concern about needing to raise property taxes in response to Medicaid eligibility restrictions included in the Trump administration’s “One Big Beautiful Bill.”
The majority of the signatures represent greater Minnesota, including East Grand Forks Mayor Mark Olstad, Pequot Lakes Mayor Tyler Gardner, Worthington Mayor Rick von Holdt, Perham Mayor Timothy J. Meehl and Wadena Mayor George M. Deiss. It also includes a few Twin Cities suburbs — Wayzata, Coon Rapids and Deephaven.
The letter ended by urging the Legislature to “course-correct and to remember that every dollar you manage belongs not to the Capitol, but to the people of Minnesota.”
The state already passed a roughly $67 billion two-year budget in the 2025 session, with $5 billion in cuts from the last state budget. The 2026 session is not a budget-crafting session, but lawmakers could pass a supplemental budget and have other financial decisions, like how much to allocate for a bonding bill, ahead of them.
A state budget forecast in December showed the state’s previously expected 2028 $6 billion deficit decreasing to about $3 billion. In the near term, projections show the state working with a $2.57 billion surplus for 2026-27.
Related Articles
Q&A with outgoing St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter
Gov. Tim Walz, DHS say they don’t have evidence to suggest fraud could reach $9 billion
MyPillow founder and Trump supporter Mike Lindell says he’s running for Minnesota governor
Affordable Care Act enrollment is slightly ahead of last year so far, despite expiring subsidies
Medical leave applications opening for Minnesotans who welcomed a child in 2025
Leave a Reply