Posted on 04/04/2005 5:01:15 AM PDT by Born Conservative
Area school board presidents say push from governor could help.
HARRISBURG The lure of up to $1 billion in property-tax relief from gambling revenue has not been enough to convince most of the states 501 school boards to participate in the controversial Homeowner Tax Relief program.
As of mid-March, only four school districts, none of them local, had officially agreed opt in to the program, also known as Act 72.
Now, Gov. Ed Rendell plans to use the direct approach. Some might even call it the hard sell.
Rendell will reach out to the hundreds of elected school board directors across the state tomorrow by holding a live videoconference to answer questions and concerns raised about Act 72. The plan is to use Rendells personal touch to persuade school directors, many of whom have been hesitant about the law, to opt in.
But will Rendells powerful persona be enough to sway local school directors who have serious concerns about the financial implications of the tax-relief program?
Some local school board presidents said it might be just the nudge they need.
Weve had looming concerns over this and scratched our heads for many, many months now, and we havent really gotten any answers, said Dallas School Board President Russell Bigus. For the governor to come out and personally support it, that could put me over the edge.
Act 72 requires all school districts to opt in by May 30 or forever be locked out of the tax relief program.
In districts that opt in, homeowners are projected to see annual property tax cuts of $109 to $359. To opt in, districts must raise their earned income tax by 0.1 percent or hold a referendum asking voters if they want to further reduce property taxes by shifting to a local income tax. Even if voters reject the referendum, the district must then raise the earned income tax by 0.1 percent, and it is automatically locked into Act 72.
The state will then funnel gambling revenue to participating districts to make up for lost property-tax revenues.
The most troublesome provision for school boards is the back-end referendum, which would require districts to get voter approval any time officials want to raise taxes above the general rate of inflation.
Part of that kind of scares me, Bigus said. Just do the math. You have X amount of teachers at a high salary ... and now youve got health care costs that are skyrocketing. ... Its a huge concern.
Wyoming Valley West School Board President Raymond Lowery Jr. called the law a mixed bag that is too complex for school boards to tackle by May 30. He said he has urged local lawmakers and state officials to push back the deadline to Dec. 31.
He noted that the state likely will not begin to yield significant revenues from the planned slot machine parlors around the state until 2007 a year later than had been originally projected.
Why hold a gun to the school districts head?
Pittston Area School Board President William Balchune said he suspects his board will vote to opt in to Act 72, if for no other reason than the fact that it would help the districts significant senior citizen population. In addition, he said, his districts expenses are expected to stabilize within the coming year, making the back-end referendum a non-issue there.
Still, Balchune said he knows many other districts are not as fortunate as Pittston Area, and he understands their reluctancein opting in to Act 72. He said that is why Rendell needs to make his pitch today.
I think a personal touch may help some of the districts that may be close to the edge on this, he said. If it werent for the elderly population in my district, I know I wouldnt vote for it.
this crooked administration he leads has no known low they will go to, the recent re-assesment of property values says it all... I live in York County, and I see what he is doing
There are no "property tax cuts" - it is just shifting the taxes around so that the corrupt teacher's union can keep the money gravy train (without accountability) going...
Another lib-dem scam from a scum like Rendell, taking money out of one pocket and putting it into another pocket of the same taxpayer. He fiscally destroyed Philadelphia and won't be satisfied until all of Penna is trashed. The GOPers in Harrisburg aren't much better.
cost at station for inspection, on what didn't need inspection, (NEW vehicles with less than 5K miles exempt) still has to have sticker..charge (where we took it) $17.50, also required another small stick on top of that one just to say it was exempt, charge, $12.50, then the station got another good chunk to put stickers on...BTW, they keep coming up with this shiite and we are running out of view through the windshields
Gee, so generous a savings in property taxes ! I'm so excited ! My $ 7000 a year property tax bill will go down to about $ 6800. Wow, that'll really help pay the bills...
/sarcasm
Fast Eddie's gambling with the kids education huh?
Is everyone here aware of the Commonwealth Caucus plan? The basic of it is to replace property taxes with a sales tax.
'Commonwealth Caucus' has solution to state's property tax woes
by Lowman S. Henry, CEO, Lincoln Institute of Public Opinion Research
Property tax reform is the Holy Grail of efforts to restructure Pennsylvanias antiquated and unfair system of securing revenue for school districts, counties, and municipalities. Despite the burden the current system places on a wide segment of our population everyone from young families to senior citizens suffer no meaningful reform has been forthcoming from Harrisburg.
Supporters of Governor Ed Rendells ill-conceived slots law will argue that property tax relief is in the works. They still believe tax revenue from expanded gambling will provide property owners with a meaningful drop in property taxes. But, the evidence is mounting that taxpayers will see little, if any relief from gambling tax revenues.
The states new gaming panel is already hard at work awarding itself high salaries and perks such as free cars. The Pennsylvania School Boards Association, a group you might think would be on the side of taxpayers, is headed to court in an effort to gut provisions of the new law, officially known as Act 72, that would limit tax increases and require major tax hikes be submitted to voter approval via referendum.
Add to that the fact school districts are free to raise taxes to whatever level they deem necessary between now and the time Act 72 limitations takes effect, and, well the whole exercise pretty much leaves taxpayers again holding the bag. Even Rendell is saying it will be 2007 at the earliest before any gambling tax revenue will flow to school districts. By then most districts will have raised taxes more than the cuts to be funded by gambling proceeds. And none of this addresses tax reform for counties and municipalities.
But all is not lost. An intrepid group of legislators known collectively as the Commonwealth Caucus have been working for several years on an innovative plan that would totally eliminate all property taxes. Lead by State Representative Sam Rohrer (R-Berks), these legislators have been fine-tuning their plan by reaching out to a wide array of stakeholder groups and employing the numbers crunchers needed to make sure the plan will work.
Recently reintroduced as the Plan for Pennsylvanias Future, the Commonwealth Caucus tax reform measure truly unshackles taxpayers from the current system with real and meaningful change. Simply put, school property taxes are eliminated. Further, the states 6% sales tax is reduced to 5%. The revenue lost by these cuts would be made up by expanding the sales tax to cover goods and services not currently taxed. Food, clothing, and professional services such as legal and architectural fees that are now exempt would fall into the latter category. This would generate an additional $16-$17 billion each year.
The result would be a simplified system that would be more fair and equitable. Sales taxes are largely imposed on discretionary spending, whereas property taxes are levied against our homes not only at the time of purchase, but for as long as we own them.
While any tax reform proposal is ultimately a tax shifting proposal, through sheer persistence and the willingness to put aside the typical legislative proclivity to act incrementally rather than in bold strokes, Representative Rohrer and the Commonwealth Caucus have hit upon a workable, politically viable solution to the states property tax dilemma. The question now is whether legislative leaders and the governor are ready to give the Holy Grail a chance.
Good post. The state rep who put this together, is from my county, Berks. We're hearing a lot about it, but I don't think anyone else is. Spread the word brother, (or sister) spread the word.
Excellent point!
I didn't know any of the teachers unions have any accountability. Amen.
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