GoLocalProv surveys
municipalities on property tax hikes
By Will Collette
Tax rates for the past 10 years from Charlestown Tax Assessor Ken Swain's web page. The CCA Party has controlled the Town Council since 2008 |
Each year, town leaders – and since 2008, we’re talking
about CCA Party leadership – pat themselves on the back for not raising
property taxes as much as they could. State law caps annual rate increases at
4%. They tell us we should say “thank you” that they don’t raise taxes up to
that limit every year.
However, that’s a bogus argument aimed at keeping voters from noticing
that for the past six years, the CCA Party-controlled Town Council has raised
property taxes each and every year even though, each and every year, the Town
has run a substantial surplus. Instead of (a) refunding excess amounts
collected to taxpayers, (b) reducing tax rates or at least not raising them or
(c) instituting a homestead tax credit, our CCA controlled Town Council has
raised taxes.
GoLocalProv just did a survey of all 39 Rhode Island cities and towns, ranking each town based on how much their taxes collected increased or decreased in the current year’s budgets. Charlestown ranked dead center at #20, meaning that 19 municipalities imposed higher increases while 19 imposed lower ones.
Screen shot from the GoLocalProv survey article. |
Despite Charlestown’s big FY2014 surplus, the town raised our property
tax rate by 1.95%. We will see a change in our tax rate for the next fiscal
year depending on the outcome of the revaluations that are due to be released
soon.
Two Rhode Island municipalities reduced the amount of taxes they plan to
collect es this year – Pawtucket and Hopkinton, two places that couldn’t be
more different. Pawtucket cut its taxes by 0.68% and Hopkinton cut its taxes by
0.4%.
Westerly, South Kingstown and North Kingstown all came in with tax
increases lower than Charlestown’s. Among all South County towns, Block Island,
Richmond and Narragansett increased their taxes by higher percentages than
Charlestown.
Don’t get me wrong – I am not objecting to paying taxes. As Supreme Court
Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes said, “taxes are what we pay for a civil society.” So, no Tea Party
tri-corner hat for me.
But taxes should be fair and they should be driven by necessity. That’s
where I take issue with the six years of CCA tax hikes.
In 2011, we had a major revaluation, the first after the terrible real
estate crash that triggered the Great Recession. The total value of
Charlestown’s taxable real estate fell as a result, but the effects were not
shared equally. Properties worth one million dollars or more ended up getting a
property tax bonus of about 7% less after the assessors decided to mark down
the home values of those properties more than they did the more moderately
priced homes.
The practical effect was that owners of big ticket homes – the great
majority of whom are non-residents – saw their net taxes drop while owners of
homes in the $200,000 to $500,000 range got whacked with a big tax increase.
During the past six years, Charlestown used its large surpluses to pay
cash for capital improvement projects rather than finance them through
low-interest bonds. We also paid off some loans for capital projects before
they were due. Each time, we were told that by reducing debt, we were “saving
money for the taxpayers.”
Except each year, we raised taxes. So where were the savings? Who were the taxpayers that got them?
Many fiscal conservatives think debt is inherently evil. They say we
should never spend more money than we have. They say that government needs to
be run like a household.
However, households borrow money all the time often for good and worthy reasons.
Like buying a house. Or financing a college education. Or buying a car. Or
paying medical bills. Or major home repairs like a new furnace, roof or septic system. Or dealing with any of a number of family emergencies.
During the past six years, Charlestown has lived through the same “family
emergency” as the rest of the country, suffering high unemployment and the
evaporation of family assets when home values crashed.
In 2009, the first full year of the Recession, Charlestown averaged 10.8%
unemployment. We raised property taxes by 3.9%, just 0.1% under the legal limit.
In 2010, our unemployment rate rose to an average of 12.3%. We raised property
taxes by 0.5%.
Unemployment averaged 12.2% in 2011. This was the revaluation year where
net taxes went up sharply for the middle class but either dropped or stayed
close to the same for owners of millionaire properties.
Unemployment eased a little in 2012, dropping to 11.4%. We raised
property taxes again, this time by 2.7%.
Our current unemployment rate is 8.7%, which is better than 11.4% but
still awful. And, as noted above, we once against raised property taxes by
1.9%.
OK, now that
your eyes have glazed over, here’s the punch line – not one of those tax
increases were, on their face, necessary. Each year when we carried what the
Budget Commission called an
"excess surplus” (i.e. more than the amount of surplus recommended by our outside auditors), we missed an opportunity to provide hard-pressed Charlestown families with tax relief.
"excess surplus” (i.e. more than the amount of surplus recommended by our outside auditors), we missed an opportunity to provide hard-pressed Charlestown families with tax relief.
We could have decided that there was more than enough
of a cushion in at least one or two of those years to give taxpayers that
relief without necessarily requiring an increase in later years to make up for
it. But we didn't.
Instead, town
leaders, especially Councilor Dan Slattery, told us the lie that there was
nothing Charlestown could do to soften the effects of the national economic
slump when in fact he, as Council liaison to the Budget Commission, could have
fought for the use of our surplus for tax relief, instead of advocating for
higher property taxes, as he did.
And he
compounded the lie by claiming that Charlestown residents should be grateful
that their property taxes didn’t go up by the maximum of 4% even though there
was no economic imperative to raise taxes at all.
This is an
election year. I have already predicted that this year, the CCA incumbents will
not want to raise taxes and face angry voters. Chances are pretty good that the
new property revaluations will show an increase in property values and that
will naturally lead to a decrease in the tax rate.
Remember, there
are two numbers that determine what you pay in property taxes: your assessed property VALUE
multiplied by the town’s tax rate.
Watch to see if the CCA leaders running for
re-election attempt to pass off the tax rate drop as if it was a tax cut, when
there’s a pretty good chance that the CCA majority will continue its six year
pattern of increasing the amount of taxes they collect. Except this time,
instead of raising the tax rate, they’ll let the reassessment increases do the
dirty work for them.
You can count on
Progressive Charlestown to be watching this closely.