Carrollton, Texas: City Government Structure and Services

Carrollton is a mid-sized Texas city straddling Dallas, Denton, and Collin counties, with a population exceeding 140,000 residents according to U.S. Census Bureau estimates. The city operates under a council-manager form of government, a structural model distinct from the strong-mayor systems used in larger Texas municipalities. This page covers Carrollton's municipal governance framework, the distribution of city services across departments, and the regulatory and jurisdictional boundaries that define what the city government controls.

Definition and Scope

Carrollton is incorporated as a home-rule city under Texas law, a classification that applies to municipalities with populations above 5,000 that have adopted a home-rule charter (Texas Local Government Code, Title 2, §9.001). Home-rule status grants Carrollton broad authority to pass ordinances, set tax rates within state caps, and structure its own government — powers not available to general-law cities.

The city's territorial jurisdiction spans approximately 36.9 square miles. Because Carrollton lies within three counties simultaneously, some administrative functions — particularly property tax assessment and elections administration — are handled at the county level by Dallas County, Denton County, or Collin County depending on the parcel's location. The Texas property tax system assigns appraisal responsibility to county appraisal districts, not to municipal governments, which creates a split administrative structure for Carrollton property owners.

Scope and Coverage Limitations: This page covers the structure and services of the City of Carrollton's municipal government only. State agency functions operating within Carrollton's boundaries — including those of the Texas Department of Transportation, Texas Department of Public Safety, and the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality — fall outside this scope. County-level services provided by Dallas, Denton, and Collin counties are similarly not covered here.

How It Works

Carrollton operates under a council-manager structure, which separates political authority from administrative management. The structure functions as follows:

  1. City Council — A seven-member body, including the mayor, elected at-large on staggered three-year terms. The council sets policy, adopts the annual budget, and approves ordinances.
  2. Mayor — A ceremonial and presiding role with voting rights on the council; the mayor does not hold executive administrative authority.
  3. City Manager — An appointed professional administrator who manages city departments, implements council policy, and supervises municipal employees. This position functions as the chief executive in operational terms.
  4. City Secretary — An appointed officer responsible for official records, election coordination at the municipal level, and compliance with the Texas Open Records Act and Texas Open Meetings Act.
  5. Municipal Court — Handles Class C misdemeanor offenses and city ordinance violations; judges are appointed by the council.

This model contrasts with the strong-mayor form used in cities such as Houston and San Antonio, where the elected mayor directly controls administrative departments without a professionally appointed city manager intermediary.

City finances are governed by a fiscal year running October 1 through September 30. The city levies a property tax rate set annually by the council, subject to rollback rate limitations established under the Texas Property Tax Code. The Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts oversees state sales tax remittances that flow back to municipalities based on point-of-sale collections within city limits.

Common Scenarios

Residents, businesses, and professionals interact with Carrollton's city government across a defined set of service categories:

For context on how Carrollton's neighbor jurisdictions structure comparable services, Plano, Garland, Irving, and Lewisville operate under similar council-manager frameworks within the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex.

Decision Boundaries

Determining which level of government handles a specific function in Carrollton requires applying a jurisdictional hierarchy:

Carrollton's extraterritorial jurisdiction (ETJ) extends up to 2 miles beyond city limits under Texas Local Government Code §42.021, giving the city limited platting and subdivision authority in unincorporated areas without full municipal service obligations.

The Dallas-Fort Worth metro government page addresses regional coordination bodies, including the North Central Texas Council of Governments (NCTCOG), which performs transportation planning and regional coordination functions that cross Carrollton's city boundaries.

A broader framework for understanding where municipal authority sits within the Texas governmental hierarchy is available at the Texas government authority index.

References