No Tax Increase Again: Adams Township Unveils 2026 Preliminary Budget

Adams Township Chairman Russell Ford discusses key elements of the 2026 preliminary budget during Monday night’s workshop meeting.

Adams Township supervisors held a special budget workshop Monday night, where officials unveiled the proposed 2026 township budget and confirmed that residents will not see a tax increase for the 32nd consecutive year. According to Chairman Russell Ford, Adams Township has not raised taxes since 1994—an accomplishment he attributes to careful spending, long-term planning, and strong local revenues.

Supervisors unanimously approved the preliminary budget and voted to advertise the document for public inspection, with a special meeting scheduled for 8 a.m. on Monday December 22 to officially adopt the final version.

Key Highlights From the 2026 Budget Workshop

Adams Township supervisors meet Monday night to review the 2026 preliminary budget. From left: Chairman Russell Ford, Ronald Shemla, David Goodworth and Ronald Nacey.

No Tax Increase Once Again

The township continues its long-standing record of maintaining stable real estate taxes.
Real estate tax revenue represents about 10% of all annual income, with the remainder driven by earned income tax, interest earnings, service charges, and intergovernmental funds.

Emergency Services Now 39% of All Spending

Chairman Russell Ford emphasized rising public safety costs as the township’s largest expense driver.

“About 39% of our overall expense budget consists of police, fire, and EMS,” Ford said. “That has risen from 31% to 39% over the last seven years. With insurance, wages, and operating costs increasing, we need to maximize the revenue that’s already coming in.”

Public Safety: Two New Police Cars in 2026

The 2026 General Fund—totaling $9.96 million in revenue against $9.95 million in expenses—includes funding for two new police vehicles next year.

Investing in Public Works: $5 Million Set Aside

The township now has more than $5 million reserved to construct a new public works garage, a long-term infrastructure need supervisors have discussed over the past several years.

In addition to the building fund, the 2026 budget also supports:

Supervisors also briefly reviewed the township’s Capital Reserve Fund, which maintains more than $21 million for long-term projects, but no major changes were discussed Monday.

Technology Savings: Servers Moving to the Cloud

In a cost-saving measure, the township plans to migrate its servers to cloud-based systems, which is expected to reduce long-term IT maintenance and infrastructure costs.

Employee Benefits: New Cost-Sharing Requirement

Starting in 2026, employees will pay 10% of their health insurance premium, while the township will continue to cover dental and vision at 100%.

Lightning Strike Costs Township $52,000

Township officials reported an unusual expense in 2025:
Two traffic signals were destroyed by lightning on the same night, resulting in $52,000 in replacement costs.

Fund-by-Fund Breakdown (From Budget Documents)

General Fund (2026)

Recreation Fee Fund

Capital Reserve Fund

Park Fund

Liquid Fuels Fund

Next Steps

Residents will have the opportunity to review the full budget once advertised. The supervisors will reconvene on Monday, December 22 at 8 a.m. for final approval.

The 228 Times will continue to follow the budget process and provide updates as they become available.

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