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Tax Talk
From: Susan Kniep, President

From:  Susan Kniep,  President
The Federation of Connecticut Taxpayer Organizations, Inc.
Website:  http://ctact.org/
email:  fctopresident@ctact.org

860-524-6501

February 18, 2005

 

 

 

ALERT

 

 

LEGISLATIVE HEARING TODAY ON ACT

 

CONCERNING PROPERTY TAX REFORM

 

1:00 PM, Legislative Office Building, Room 2B

Proposed Bill No. 5417 AN ACT CONCERNING PROPERTY TAX REFORM. 

Introduced by Representatives Urban (43rd  Dist) and Winkler (41st Dist)  Be it enacted by

the Senate and House of Representatives in General Assembly convened: That the general statutes be amended to (1) adjust all property assessments to the valuation level in calendar year 2000, (2) freeze valuations at the calendar year 2000 level, eliminating the need for future appraisals, appeals and litigation, and (3) provide that property valuations remain frozen until change of ownership, and valuations at change of ownership increase only by the actual cost of any improvements. Statement of Purpose:  To reform the property tax system.

 

WELCOME TO THE 44th EDITION OF 

 

 

 

TAX TALK

 

 

Review Previous Tax Talk Issues on our Website at  http://ctact.org/

 

 

Mike Guarco, BudgetGuru06035

Chairman, Board of Finance, Granby

Subject:  ADVANCES in Organizing Municipal Boards of Finance; 

Earlier today, a meeting of the legislative committee of SE COG held in Norwich endorsed the consortium effort.Mike Zelasky and Mike OConnor...the Finance Chairs of Lisbon and Bozrah respectively ... are to be thanked for laying the groundwork for this accomplishment. The further recommendation  at our request, was that,within each town,we secure multiple board support via endorsement.The group seemed quite willing to press the agenda..both publicly in their towns...and with legislators at home and at the Capitol.The report card idea was favoered as a good way of tracking...and publishing...where each legislator stands on critical issues.Press was there as well..Thx again to SECOG  and the leaders in the E CT Regional Finance Group.     Mike Guarco     Granby BOF

 

************

 

Jim Louziotis, ledgehill@netzero.net.

Lower our Taxes, New London

Subject:  Early  Graduation Plan

Sue: Printed out the Yankee Institute Early Graduation Reward Plan which I thought was very good. I am giving a copy to to Charles Frink, the 30 year educator I had on our show to get his ideas.  Jim

************


Robert Green green_robert@hotmail.com

Chairman, Salem RTC
Member, Salem Board of Education
Subject:  Yankee Institute's response to Governor Rell's proposed budget. 

Susan:  I thought Yankee’s response fit nicely with your last edition of
Tax Talk.   See below…

Yankee Institute for
Public Policy
Philip Gressel Center
for Tax and Budget Policy
For Immediate Release Dated
February 9, 2005



Yankee Institute Reacts to Governor Rell's 'Tax and Spend' Budget

HARTFORD -- In response to Governor Rell's proposed budget for the 2006 and 2007 fiscal years, D. Dowd Muska, the Yankee Institute's Philip Gressel  Fellow for Tax and Budget Policy, offered the following statement:

Unfortunately, the governor's budget perpetuates Connecticut's decades-long policy of both higher spending and higher taxes. This trend has devastated the state's economy, driven businesses away and cut the take-home pay of
Connecticut residents who have not yet fled to lower-tax jurisdictions. While the governor's resistance to calls for a higher income tax is admirable, her willingness to embrace other "revenue enhancements" is disturbing. The combined local, state, and federal tax burden for the citizens of Connecticut is already the highest in the nation. In the last three years alone, the state has raised taxes by $900 million. When will the
tax hikes end? Instead of tweaking the corporation-tax surcharge, as her plan proposes, the  governor should move to eliminate the corporation tax altogether. It generates very little revenue, but imposes compliance and avoidance costs. The proposed elimination of the research and development tax credit is sound, and other unfair credits and exemptions in the tax code should also be removed. Connecticut's gasoline tax is already rather high, and raising it will not address the fundamental problem the state's drivers face. A disproportionate share of the Connecticut Department of Transportation's budget is devoted to "mass transit," an option chosen by only 4 percent of the state's commuters.
Connecticut does not need more revenue for transportation spending -- it needs to spend the revenue it already receives in better ways. In addition to her sound desire to improve the capacity of the state's highways, the
governor should embrace congestion pricing and other fee-based measures to fix
Connecticut's traffic woes. (One welcome feature of the governor's transportation agenda is that the proposed New Haven-Springfield commuter-rail line is not funded.)  The proposed tax hike on cigarettes is unsound -- and unfair. Since smokers  typically have lower household incomes than non-smokers, the tax increase is  regressive. Most ominously, it raises the specter of escalating violence  (and law-enforcement costs) due to the smuggling that inevitably results  from cigarette-tax hikes. Raising Connecticut's already heavy taxes on alcohol is regressive as well, and will encourage residents to look for cheaper liquor in other states.  Nevada, North Dakota, Texas, Virginia, and Wyoming all have substantially  lower tax burdens than Connecticut, yet are currently enjoying budget  surpluses. Clearly, high taxes are not the means to ensure a reliable  revenue stream. On the spending side, the budget's increases of 3.9 percent for each year of  the biennium are unwise and  unwarranted. In inflation-adjusted, per capita  terms, spending in Connecticut has ballooned by a factor of four in the last  three decades. More spending isn't the answer -- it's time to look at substantial cuts in expenditures.  Many state agencies and programs belong on the chopping block. Corporate  welfare should be the first to go. The governor's intention to "invest" an  additional $20 million in the risky biotech industry, which has seen the  loss of $60 billion in private investment worldwide since 1990, is
indefensible. The
Connecticut Development Authority and the Department of Community and Economic Development should be completely defunded. Many state assets, including quasi-public agencies, should be sold and the proceeds used to offset deficits, replenish the "Rainy Day Fund," and lighten Connecticut's tax load.   Failed and planned future "redevelopment" projects, political pork, and  subsidies to the arts should also be eliminated. The governor's education initiatives are disappointing. More computers,
preschool programs, and attempts to fix "racial isolation" are trendy goals that will be welcomed by the government-school establishment. But these measures are not likely to improve achievement. Proven, market-oriented reforms of the way the state and municipalities educate children would save taxpayer dollars and benefit students as well. But neither opportunity scholarships nor tuition tax credits are part of the governor's education plan. The governor's bonding proposals are excessive. Adding more than $2 billion
to the state's bonded indebtedness at a time when
Connecticut already suffers from the highest per capita debt in the nation is not fiscally sound. The governor should declare a moratorium on all state bonding projects not directly needed for public health and safety.  Connecticut has gone down the path of fiscal recklessness for decades.  Sadly, Governor Rell's budget is one more step in the wrong direction. D. Dowd Muska can be reached at (860) 729-1262 or dowdmuska@cox.net. www.yankeeinstitute.org