(Veterans Park)
Welcome to the City of Tamarac. This is one of the most exciting times for achievement and progress in the City’s 36-year history. Our City is vibrant with an excellent quality of life. The City is also moving forward faster than ever through a partnership between a visionary City Commission, a caring and involved citizenry and a dedicated and professional City workforce.
The City of Tamarac constantly strives to meet the needs and improve the health, welfare and safety of its residents. Tamarac prides itself on being a government that is responsive to its residents.
In 1997, we turned 34, old enough to adapt the best from the past, but young enough to adopt fresh innovative approaches to take us into an exciting century…a philosophy which highlights our city’s commitment to the future.
Backwards, the city's name spells Car-A-Mat, the name of a chain of car washes once owned by developer and city founder Kenneth A. Behring.
But this city of 50,051 residents is far from washed up. Now the ninth largest city in Broward County and the 35th largest city in Florida, Tamarac offers 649 acres of freshwater canals and lakes, a $250,000 roller hockey rink, nine private golf courses and an expanding industrial park with access to the Sawgrass Expressway.
Known as a haven for retirees, Tamarac is grappling with changing demographics. The city offers a sophisticated mini-bus system that provides retirees with rides to doctors and grocery stores and a variety of parks and recreation programs for its growing young population.
But the mix of young and old has also been the source of neighborhood clashes as young families move into homes in neighborhoods once limited to seniors only.
Property taxes are fairly low, and the city is striving to broaden its tax base by developing Land Section 7 into an upscale commerce park. The 500-acre stretch west of Nob Hill Road along the Sawgrass Expressway is already home to several major corporations.
The city contracts with the Broward Sheriff's Office for police protection and has one of the lowest crime rates in Broward County.
The city is chock full of condo-dwellers who pay little, if any, property taxes after claiming the $25,000 homestead exemption. To spread out the rising cost of funding emergency medical services, the city levies nearly $80 a month in fees.
City officials are struggling to satisfy both age groups: retirees in the city want a senior center and the younger residents want a community center.
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