Wednesday, April 04, 2007

Another sham tax reform

The fact that there is an income based component to this so-called rebate is a tacit admission that the Property Tax is inherently unfair. Low income property taxpayers subsidize wealthier ones to the tune of 3 times the rate. Until N.J. eliminates the property tax for all government services (county, municipal and schools) and rolls it into an income tax, there will never be spending reform. Income taxes will never be allowed to go up on an annual basis. The Legislature's hands will be tied. Today's Press editorial mentions the Legislature's "low regard for the intelligence and attention span of the voter" and how they are "counting on the gullibility of the electorate" when it comes to this Falls elections. I do not think the Press was saying our legislators are right, but the sad truth is they are. NJ voters repeated re-elect these same crooks time and again. I doubt they will be mistaken this year. Besides, voting out one party will not do anything. The wholesale change due to Florio's tax hikes did not generate any improvements when the Republicans ran the show. Whitman just began the trend of putting the state into hock. When the Dems took over, they followed her lead by doubling up this plunge to total fiscal chaos. Only a third party sweeping to power can afford any hope of real change. Nevertheless, if there is to be any hope of correcting the property tax it will only come through consolidating taxes into one tax to fund government services. That will make it crystal clear how much is being spend. It will eliminate the shell game of forcing a little county tax increase here, a little municipal tax increase there, a lot of education tax increase, with each entity pointing to Trenton as the cause but not really doing anything politically to change it. Until people get the idea of eliminating the property tax into their head, we are going to have a continuation of what is and has been: seniors driven into poverty and/or out of the state; lower income people unable to afforrd a home, and continued runaway spending by all levels of government.

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