Panel proposes slashing city’s property taxes

A steep cut in Baltimore City’s property tax rate and an array of new sources of revenue are part of a sweeping plan to be issued today by a blue ribbon tax commission.

Impaneled by Mayor Sheila Dixon last April to explore ways to cut the city’s prohibitively high property tax rate — the highest in the region — the report provides a comprehensive, long-term plan for cutting property taxes up to 30 percent by increasing taxes and fees.

“What this plan does is address the issue of how to grow the base, which is how we believe we can raise revenues in the long run, by increasing the number of residents,” said the panel’s chairman, former city Councilman Jody Landers.

“The high tax rate keeps an artificial lid on the city’s growth, and we need to change that,” Landers said.
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Among proposed sources of new revenue are a regional sales tax, a commuter tax, increasing the city’s local share of state income taxes to the maximum rate, and doubling the current 4 percent cap on property tax increases when property values rise.

“The plan is comprehensive with the long-term of goal of making the city’s property tax rate no more than 50 percent higher than surrounding jurisdictions,” Landers said. “That’s what we need to do to grow.”

Currently, Baltimore’s property tax rate is $2.288 per $100 of assessed value — 108 percent more than Baltimore County’s rate and significantly higher than all other local jurisdictions. The city has cut the property tax rate by 2 cents for the past four years, with another decrease of 2 cents planned for 2008.

The report, though, departs from the incremental approach, recommending a vast array of new revenue sources that if implemented could allow the city to slash the property tax rate by nearly 65 cents per $100 of assessed value.

The cuts could save the owner of a $100,000 home $260 to $700 annually.

Dixon spokesman Sterling Clifford said the mayor was withholding judgment of the specific proposals until the plan had been reviewed by residents.

“This will affect every single person in the city. The mayor is committed to making owning property in Baltimore more affordable, but there is no magic bullet; there are trade-offs no matter what strategy we choose.”

http://www.examiner.com/a-1135402~Panel_proposes_slashing_city_s_property_taxes.html

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2008 GST Reduction Was Not Universally Praised

“I came to this very store and promised Canadians that a new Conservative government would cut the GST from seven to six to five per cent and at midnight tonight we will deliver on that promise, three years ahead of schedule,” he said at a photo opportunity in a Mississauga store Monday.

Harper said this latest cut will result in an additional $6 billion in tax relief for Canadian consumers in 2008.

But NDP Leader Jack Layton said the GST announcement and other Conservative tax cuts will do little to increase wealth in Canada. In an end-of-year interview, Layton noted that the tax cuts could widen the gap between rich and poor, while the average family could see higher property taxes, post-secondary education fees and other bills.

“Those with the highest salaries – the millionaires, the big banks, the (profitable) corporations… The ones that don’t need the help – are going to get the most help; the oil and gas companies in the tar sands, continuing to get subsidies as well as a big boost from the corporate tax cuts,” Layton said.

Patti Croft, chief economist with the investment firm Phillips, Hager and North, said anyone making big-ticket purchases will benefit from the consumption tax reduction. But, she said: “In general most economists would prefer a cut in income taxes. It’s a more efficient way to reduce the tax burden. By cutting the GST, hopefully it causes Canadians to spend more.”

Ottawa realtor Duane Leon, however, predicted that even though the cut could shave thousands of dollars off the price of a newly built home, there would be little impact on the real estate market. Many builders have already announced that price increases in the thousands of dollars for new construction that will take effect early in the new year, he said, adding this will offset any benefits to buyers from the GST reduction.

The only buyers who will see an actual one per cent price drop in the purchase price of a newly built home are those who bought in 2007 and take possession in 2008, said Leon, an agent with RE/MAX Metro-City Realty. GST is not charged on resales of existing properties.

The director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation, however, defended this second trim in the GST, saying it will save the average household between $150 and $200 annually.

“While some have criticized cutting the GST, it is a broad-based tax cut that puts $5 billion back in the pockets of over-taxed Canadians,” John Williamson said in a statement. Noting that this is the second GST cut that the Tories have made since July 1, 2006, he added: “This is good news particularly since $10 billion in the pockets of Canadian consumers is preferable to Ottawa hoarding the cash.”

The president of the Canadian Federation of Independent Business agreed.

“The one percentage point cut puts over $5 billion dollars back into the national economy, at a time when sales are traditionally sluggish in many sectors,” said Catherine Swift.

“Our members’ No. 1 priority is tax reduction of all kinds,” she said. “They want to see more money left in Canadians’ pockets.”

The Goods and Services Tax was introduced by the Conservatives in 1992. All 10 premiers opposed the tax, lobby groups railed against it and one poll showed 80 per cent of Canadians objected

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