LaSalle residents will have to dig a little deeper.
On Tuesday, council voted in favour of an average tax increase of 3.8% for residential property owners.
Council also approved a zero percent increase on the municipal tax rate.
Mayor Ken Antaya says the town continues to head in the right direction.
"I think we have a lot of, I hate to put it this way but all of our ducks in a row that appears to set the course for the municipality over the next few years," says Antaya.
Meanwhile, councillor Terry Burns voted against the increase.
He feels it will be difficult for the average homeowner to absorb the increase.
"I mean in my simple case, the increase is going to be $155 that's a lot to absorb and I have an average house assessed at $247,000 so if your house is assessed more than that this is going to be huge to them," says Burns.
The town hopes when the education and county levies are factored in the increase drops to 2.7 percent.
During budget deliberations, the town stated residential tax payers will see an increase in the overall tax bill due to the recent MPAC re-assessment.
A splash pad/accessible playground and a second fire station in old LaSalle near Front Road are also included in the budget.