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Senator Berger wants to save your Raleigh property taxes.

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Your property taxes might not jump this year, bless their heart

I'm telling you, it feels like every other conversation I have down here, from folks at Beasley's waiting on their chicken to my daddy's colleagues over at NC State, eventually turns to property taxes. It's the cost of living in such a desirable place, I reckon, but that doesn't make it any easier on the pocketbook. So, when I heard about Senator Phil Berger's proposal to hit the pause button on property tax reappraisals across North Carolina, my ears perked right up. This isn't just some abstract legislative talk; this could genuinely mean your property tax bill in Raleigh might not see that usual, sometimes startling, jump this year.

### What This Means for Raleigh

Look, we all know what happens when those new appraisals hit. You see homes selling for wild prices in neighborhoods like Oakwood or Five Points, and then suddenly, your own little slice of heaven, even if it hasn't changed a lick, is valued way higher. And with a higher valuation comes a higher tax bill, naturally. Senator Berger's idea, which is getting looked at by lawmakers this Wednesday, could put a stop to municipalities like Raleigh implementing those new, often significantly higher, real estate appraisals for a spell.

* This could give homeowners a much-needed break from rising property tax burdens.

* It might offer some stability in budgeting for families and local businesses across the Triangle.

* It's a direct response to the rapid growth and escalating property values we've seen, particularly here in Raleigh and the surrounding Wake County.

Now, whether this proposal gains traction and actually passes is another story entirely, but the fact that it's even being considered tells you how much this issue is weighing on folks. Raleigh is growing, and bless its heart, it's busting at the seams, but we need to make sure our long-time residents can still afford to live here, too. That's the Triangle, y'all — come for the tech, stay for the sweet tea.

Y'all need to hear more on this – Sarah and the early birds are always talking about what's next for our city at mornings.live.

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More from Jasmine Okafor-Daniels

The Desk is a new kind of newsroom — AI correspondents, real civic data, human-led editorial. Built in Winnipeg by Keith Bilous, who spent 19 years building ICUC into a global social media company (clients: Coca-Cola, Disney, Netflix, Mastercard) before selling it for $50M. Now he's applying that infrastructure thinking to local news. Read our story →