Posted on 12/12/2017 4:55:44 PM PST by 11th_VA
Projected revenue decline attributed to wealthy individuals paying significantly less in income taxes; future job cuts not ruled out
Montgomery County is revising its six-year revenue forecasts down by more than $400 million as income tax revenue lags behind previous projections.
The lower long-term forecast comes after County Executive Ike Leggett called for 2 percent cuts at county departments to address a projected $120 million shortfall in the $5.4 billion fiscal 2018 operating budget.
Leggett said he doesnt believe county employees should worry about their job security immediately, however he did say potential job cuts may need to be considered in a year or two.
In addition to cuts in this years budget, the countys chief administrative officer, Tim Firestine, is asking most departments to identify 3 percent cuts for the upcoming fiscal 2019 budget. Leggett is beginning to formulate the 2019 budget before sending it to the County Council to review in the spring.
Fiscal 2019 covers July 1, 2018 to June 30, 2019.
Firestine has asked public safety agencies, such as the police and fire department, to trim their budgets next year by 1.5 percent instead of 3 percent.
Further reductions might be needed as well, according to Jennifer Hughes, the countys budget director. She said that about $208 million less will be available for county departments in the countys fiscal 2019 budget, compared to the current fiscal 2018 budgeta 4.8 percent reduction.
The revised budget numbers and requested cuts were detailed in a council staff memo in advance of the councils Tuesday meeting.
County leaders have said the projected shortfall was unexpected given a surging national economy in which unemployment in the county is down to 3.1 percent.
At the meeting Tuesday, finance and budget officials attributed the decline in revenue primarily to wealthy individuals who make more than $500,000 per year reporting significantly less in capital gains. They suggested that the wealthy taxpayers might be withholding capital gains, such as by not selling stock, in anticipation of the Republican federal tax-cut bill passing, which could lower their overall tax payments.
Jacob Sesker, a legislative analyst for the council, said Tuesday that the countys top 50 taxpayers reported 50 percent less in capital gains in 2016 than in 2015$1.2 billion in 2015 compared to $600 million in 2016. That drop contributed to $21 million less in county income tax revenue.
That decline reflects the fiscal situation, Sesker told the council.
Leggett is expected to transfer a savings plan to the council in the next week or so to address the shortfall in this years operating budget. The council plans to review it when they return from their winter recess in mid-January.
Leggett said in an interview Tuesday that the county might be feeling initial effects of the proposed tax-cut package Republicans are pushing through Congress.
What people fail to realize is that people decided not to obtain capital gainsselling their business or selling their stockbecause theyre taking a look at this and saying, I want to do so when the time is much more favorable to me, Leggett said.
Hughes wrote in a memo to the council that the state comptrollers office has determined that other jurisdictions in the state are seeing similar declines in income-tax revenue and the state office is concerned that the proposed changes in the federal tax code could exacerbate the revenue decline.
The Department of Finance has been actively engaged with the State Comptrollers Office to better understand the reason for this unexpected decline, Hughes wrote. However, all discussions with state revenue officials to date suggest that the estimates are accurate, and that the current income tax forecasts for [fiscal years 2019 to 2024] may be further affected by federal tax code changes and general economic conditions.
Hughes said Tuesday that due to the large number of unknowns in the tax-cut package, county officials have to assume that the financial forecasts they are seeing now is what were going to be dealing with.
The state is scheduled to release its December financial forecasts Wednesday. Council members said those projections could provide more insight into whats happening statewide with income tax revenues. The state disburses income tax revenue to counties.
In total, county finance officials are projecting about $212 million less over the next six years in income tax revenue.
Alex Espinosa, the countys finance director, described the income tax revenue as highly volatile. He said the countys revenues forecasts likely will remain uncertain for at least next the year and a half as it waits to see what version of the tax bill is approved and how it affects tax revenue in the county.
The county is also forecasting $100 million less in energy tax revenue during the next six yearspossibly due to warmer weather and buildings being improved to be more energy efficient. The property tax revenue forecast was reduced by $35 million over the next six years, due to stagnant inflation, which has kept property values flat, according to county officials.
I’m confused. The county has a county income tax? Isn’t that unusual around the country, for an income tax at not the state but the local level?
Or do Montgomery residents pay a state income tax and a local income tax as well?
Heard an idiot councilman on radio cite climate change as part of their budget shortfall....
In Maryland, part of the state income tax is credited to the county of residence.
We pay up to three taxes (not counting property) - State, county, and if you live in incorporated city, you pay that tax too. It’s all computed on the State form.
County income tax piggybacks on MD State Income Tax.
Counties in the state of maryland have their own income tax. I don’t know what other states do that. Next-door virginia does not, but has higher property tax than maryland.
And all of those are on top of the federal income tax we all pay.
There should be some cap on taxes paid. This is not the time or place for discussion of marginal tax rates , but, I suspect many in Montgomery pay over 50% of their income in taxes.
Ive been saying for a year or so that one measure of a successful Trump Presidency will be if suburban DC residential property values flatten, or even decline. Reduced income tax revenue is also a good sign.
“the countys top 50 taxpayers reported 50 percent less in capital gains in 2016 than in 2015”
When gov soaks the rich, the gov gets soaked when the rich do something different.
Just imagine what would happen if those folks took an extra week off.
Hey! My house in the DC area is valued at over 1 million, and going up each year. I see no indication that’s going to change.
One county with a $5.4 billion budget?! There are more than a few states with a smaller annual budget than that!
It’s a piggy back tax. The amount is calculated as a percentage of your federal. So if you pay less federal then you pay less local county taxes.
Ping!
The County Executive is a brother voted in by the overwhelming majority of highly overpaid moonbat libs. Brothers typically excel in sports played with balls, dancing, and singing. When it comes to fiscal matters, many of them and their fellow sisters fall flat on their faces when the Big Uncle is not forthcoming with the bailout gibs. A big plus for them is the Sanctuary County mentality,
Oh yeah, Ill be quite surprised and impressed if it happens.
Die commie scum...or s sumthin....
There’s always the Progressive fallback...raise taxes some more (note most Progressives do not have a basic understanding of the “Law of Unintended Consequences” or the definition of insanity (doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results).
This will be even more fun if state and local taxes are no longer deductable on the federal form. This will really burn all of us in the DC metro, but especially those holier-than-thou folks in Monkey County. Fewer libs than they believe will be willing to pay their high taxes for questionable programs.
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