Montgomery County Emergency Service District No. 10​

Magnolia Fire Department

Election Day Voting Locator

MC ESD No. 10 β€” Proposition A

Special Election Β· May 2, 2026 Β· What It Is & What It Funds

πŸš’ What Proposition A Is About
MC ESD No. 10 Β· Proposition A Β· Special Election Β· May 2, 2026
Investing in Magnolia's Emergency Services
Proposition A asks voters to authorize an additional 1% local sales tax in eligible areas of the district β€” bringing those areas to the Texas state maximum of 8.25%. The revenue would go directly toward staffing, new fire stations, infrastructure upgrades, and equipment replacement to keep pace with one of the fastest-growing communities in Texas.
Official ballot language: "The adoption of an increased local sales and use tax in Montgomery County Emergency Services District No. 10 (also known as the Magnolia Fire Department) at a rate not to exceed two percent (2%) in any location in the district."  Β·  Texas law requires the "This Is a Tax Increase" disclosure on any ballot measure that could raise a tax rate.
πŸ’° Where the Revenue Goes β€” In Detail
πŸ‘·
Staffing
As Magnolia grows, so does call volume β€” up approximately 14% per year. Increasing daily staffing minimums means more firefighters on shift, faster assembly of an Effective Response Force, and the ability to meet NFPA 1710 deployment standards. More personnel on duty means a faster, more capable response for every resident.
πŸ—οΈ
New Fire Stations
New stations are needed to close coverage gaps created by rapid residential and commercial development across the district. New stations mean shorter response times in areas currently underserved, and help the department meet the ISO requirement of a station within 5 road miles of every property β€” directly impacting community fire protection ratings and homeowner insurance costs.
🏚️
Bringing Stations Up to Standard
Several existing stations were built as volunteer facilities and were never designed for full-time professional crews living 24/7 on shift. NFPA 1500 requires safe living conditions β€” individual bunks, proper restrooms, and wellness facilities. This funding addresses those critical needs.
πŸš’
Apparatus & Equipment Replacement
Fire engines have increased in cost by 53% since 2020, and aerial apparatus by 82%. Delivery timelines have stretched to 24–36+ months. NFPA 1850 requires regular inspection, cleaning, and replacement of protective gear that has a limited service life. Planned, responsible replacement keeps firefighters safe and equipment ready when it counts.
πŸ” Understanding the Ballot Language
πŸ“
"This Is a Tax Increase"
This is required disclosure language under Texas law β€” it appears on every ballot measure that raises any tax. It does not describe the size or impact of the change, only that a rate would increase.
πŸ’²
"Not to Exceed 2%"
The practical change is 1 additional percent per dollar in eligible areas β€” bringing them from 7.25% to 8.25%. The "2%" is the legal maximum ceiling, not the increase amount.
πŸ“
"In Any Location in the District"
Not everyone is affected equally. Areas already at the 8.25% state maximum will see absolutely no change. Only the green areas on the map β€” currently at 7.25% β€” would see the 1% increase.
πŸ—ΊοΈ Where the 1% Applies
πŸ—ΊοΈ Interactive Map  |  Sales tax district coverage β€” Proposition A affected areas
Green β€” Would Change
Currently at 7.25%. If Proposition A passes, rate increases by 1% to 8.25% β€” the Texas state maximum.
Black β€” No Change
Already at the 8.25% maximum. Proposition A has no effect on these areas regardless of the vote outcome.
7.25% Current Rate
(green areas)
β†’
8.25% Proposed Rate
(Texas max)
This page is provided for educational and informational purposes only. Montgomery County Emergency Service District No. 10 and the Magnolia Fire Department are committed to providing factual, balanced information about Proposition A. The department's role is to inform β€” not to advocate. This is a community decision. For official questions, contact MCESD No. 10 through official channels.

Who We Are

A Legacy of Service

From a donated engine funded by turkey dinners to a professional department of 168 β€” Magnolia Fire has grown alongside this community every step of the way.

168 Employees
9 Stations Staffed 24/7
164 Square Miles
70+ Years Serving Magnolia
1952
Magnolia VFD Founded
The Magnolia Volunteer Fire Department begins with a single donated engine, funding operations through turkey dinners β€” neighbors protecting neighbors from day one.
1995
ESD No. 10 Formed
Emergency Service District No. 10 is officially established as a political subdivision of the State of Texas, covering 164 square miles of Montgomery County.
2017
Professional Shift β€” First Full-Time Employee Hired
A defining milestone β€” the department transitions to professional shift coverage and hires its first full-time employee, marking the shift from volunteer to career fire service.
2022–Today
Direct Service Provider
Now a fully professional direct service provider with 168 employees serving one of Texas's fastest-growing communities.
πŸš’
Reliable Response
πŸ›‘οΈ
Community Safety
πŸ“‹
Responsible Planning
🀝
Public Stewardship

National Fire Protection Standards

The benchmarks that define professional fire service

NFPA 1500 πŸ§‘β€πŸš’
Firefighter Safety & Health
πŸ›οΈ Individual bunks per firefighter
🚿 Separate restroom facilities
πŸ’ͺ Health & wellness programs
NFPA 1850 🦺
Protective Equipment
⏳ Gear has a limited service life
🧼 Regular cleaning & inspection
πŸ”„ Backup gear required
NFPA 1710 πŸš’
Fire & EMS Deployment
πŸ‘₯ 4-person minimum crew per engine
⏱️ First engine on scene in 6 min
πŸ“ Full ERF on scene in 8–10 min
πŸ”₯ Effective Response Force Required
🏠
15
Firefighters for a house fire
🏒
28+
Firefighters for an apartment fire
NFPA 1710 Response Time Map
πŸ” Click to enlarge  |  ⏱️ NFPA 1710 β€” 6-Minute Response Time Coverage
⏱️
NFPA 1710 Requires
The first engine must arrive on scene within 6 minutes of dispatch. This map shows current response time coverage from our stations β€” highlighting areas that may be underserved as Magnolia grows.
⭐
Stars on the Map Each star marks land currently owned by the district β€” potential sites for future fire stations to close coverage gaps as Magnolia continues to grow.
πŸ… ISO Fire Protection Rating β€” How We're Scored
πŸš’ 50%
Fire Department Capability
πŸ’§ 40%
Water Supply & Hydrants
πŸ“‘ 10%
911 Communications
πŸ† Class 1 = Best  |  Class 10 = Minimal β€” A stronger, better-funded department means a better ISO rating, which insurance companies use to set your property insurance costs.
🏠 What ISO Class Means for MCESD No. 10 Residents
ISO Class 2 Badge
ISO Class 2 β€” Within 5 Miles
MCESD No. 10 citizens who live within 5 road miles of a fire station are currently rated ISO Class 2 β€” one of the highest fire protection ratings in the country. This means better-protected homes and potentially lower homeowner insurance premiums.
10
ISO Class 10 β€” Beyond 5 Miles
Residents who live more than 5 road miles from a fire station fall into ISO Class 10 β€” the lowest rating, indicating minimal fire protection. This can result in significantly higher insurance costs and longer response times in an emergency.
ISO 5-Mile Station Coverage Map
πŸ” Click to enlarge  |  πŸ“ ISO Class 2 β€” 5-Mile Station Coverage

Frequently Asked Questions

Clear answers about the sales tax vote and what it means for emergency services in Magnolia.

The Funding Problem

This election addresses the gap between Magnolia's rapid growth and the funding structure that was originally designed for a much smaller, slower-growing community.

The Magnolia Fire Department has experienced significant increases in call volume, service demand, and infrastructure needs as residential, commercial, and multi-family development has expanded. At the same time, the cost of fire apparatus, equipment, staffing, and station construction has increased substantially nationwide.

Population Growth Chart
Population growth spiked around 2022 with ~10% annual growth since then.
Call Volume Chart
Call volume has slightly outpaced growth at 14% annually since 2022.

Currently, the department relies primarily on property taxes for funding. The proposed sales tax would allow the funding model to better reflect how the community is growing by broadening the revenue base to include commercial activity and visitors β€” not just property owners.

This election is about maintaining reliable emergency response, addressing aging infrastructure, and planning responsibly so the department can continue to meet community expectations as Magnolia continues to grow.

The Money
An independent financial analysis estimates the additional one-cent sales tax could generate approximately $6 million per year, depending on economic activity.

As with any sales tax, the actual amount would vary based on retail activity and growth. Any revenue collected would be incorporated into the district's annual budgeting process and subject to normal financial oversight including Board Approval in an Open Meeting.

Currently, about 57% of funding comes from property taxes and about 43% from sales taxes. If voters approve the measure, the balance would shift to roughly 57% sales tax and 43% property tax, spreading the responsibility more broadly.

Based on current estimates, the additional one-cent sales tax could make up about 20–25% of the district's annual budget. The goal is to create a more balanced funding model rather than relying mostly on property taxes.

In other districts, as commercial growth increases, sales tax has become a larger part of funding β€” in some cases allowing those districts to rely less on property tax over time.

If approved, the total sales tax rate in affected areas would be 8.25% β€” the maximum allowed under Texas law.

Areas of the district already at the 8.25% maximum would not see any change. The additional one-cent tax would only apply where local capacity is still available.

Who Is Affected

The green area on the map represents our 165 sq. miles of ESD coverage. The black areas within our service area are already at the 8.25% max and would not see any change.

It is important to note that while some areas are at the max, there are areas where we do not see any sales tax revenue β€” including the City of Magnolia and some areas along 1488/2978.

District Tax Map
🟩 Green = areas where 1% sales tax is available (currently at 7.25%)  |  ⬛ Black = already at 8.25% max

Bordering areas to the north, east, and south of our district are already at the 8.25% max β€” and in those areas, the full 2% is allocated to fire protection (The Woodlands, Tomball, MCESD 2 and MCESD 3).

Services & Impact

If approved, funding would help the department keep up with the demands of a growing community, including:

🏚️ New & improved stations β€” building new stations and replacing those that no longer meet operational or safety needs

πŸš’ Apparatus & equipment β€” replacing aging fire trucks and equipment to meet national safety standards

πŸ‘· Staffing β€” ensuring we have the personnel needed to continue providing dependable emergency response

The focus is on maintaining reliable service, taking care of what we already have, and planning responsibly for Magnolia's future.

This funding is intended to help the department maintain reliable service as Magnolia continues to grow. As development expands across the district, additional infrastructure is needed over time β€” including fire stations, apparatus, and staffing to maintain coverage.

Having the right number of stations and personnel helps maintain dependable response times and ensures we can continue responding effectively as call volume increases. This funding would allow us to plan for those long-term needs and keep pace with Magnolia's growth.

Yes. Since becoming Fire Chief a little over a year ago, one of our top priorities has been moving from a reactive posture to a more proactive approach β€” especially when it comes to long-term planning. The district already maintains long-term planning for staffing, apparatus replacement, and infrastructure needs based on growth, call trends, and facility conditions.

If the measure does not pass: The department will continue operating under the current funding structure, but some capital projects and infrastructure needs will likely need to be phased over a longer period of time as funding allows.

Additional funding would allow the department to address these needs sooner, move projects forward on a reasonable timeline, and help keep pace with the growth we're seeing across Magnolia.