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- Guest Opinion: PCC's soft-peddling of tax levy
misleads voters
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By Michael
Hunter
Tucson Citizen
Oct. 22, 2002
A
notable property tax increase proposal will be going to
Pima County voters in November. In Proposition 400, Pima Community
College asks voters to approve a seven-year property tax levy limit
override, the first community college to do so since voters approved
the constitutional limits in 1980.
So far, the publicity
surrounding this increase has a familiar ring, demonstrating once
again the power local government has to "manage the
message."
PCC's sales pitch is
that the secondary tax rate, to fund both the override and the
continued debt service on general obligation (G.O.) bonds approved in 1995, will not
exceed 42 cents per $100.
PCC came to the 42-cent
figure for this election because 42 cents was presented as the
"not to exceed" rate from the 1995 bond question. The rate
for debt service, which has jumped around considerably since 1995, is currently
set at 38 cents. Thus PCC's claim so far has been that the difference
between this year's rate and 42 cents is not a tax increase.
PCC's plan is that as
property values increase and the debt service rate decreases, the
difference between the debt rate and 42 cents will automatically
become the rate used to fund the override. PCC publicity and recent
news coverage refers to this 4-cent difference and an average levy of
about $8 million. Not mentioned is PCC's analysis projecting the rate
to climb during the seven years to 20 cents, yielding $12.5 million in
property taxes.
A pamphlet produced by
PCC for public consumption describes the net effect of the override as
"$4.40 per year" for a home with a market value of $110,000.
That figure only takes into account the 4 cents. However, another
analysis presented to the PCC Governing Board looked at just the
planned override and pegged the first year impact at over three times
that amount ($18.66). The rate for the override is projected to grow
each year until, by the seventh year, (assuming, as PCC did, 4 percent
growth in valuations) the taxes for the override are 47 percent higher
than during the first year. Over the life of the override this
hypothetical homeowner would pay a total of $156 in additional taxes.
A business with a million-dollar full cash value would pay $3,545.96
over the seven-year period.
It is enough that PCC
is soft peddling the tax increase, but it has also issued statements
suggesting there is no tax increase at all. A press release from PCC
states that it will ask voters "to approve the continuation of a
secondary tax." The district's Bulletin provides this statement
from Chancellor Bob Jensen: "We're not asking the community to
increase their commitment, just to maintain their current
contribution."
The Arizona Tax
Research Association has raised its concerns directly to PCC officials
regarding the way the district has positioned this proposed tax
increase to voters. However, we believe it is also important that
voters be offered a more complete understanding of the implications of
a YES vote.
First, PCC cannot
guarantee that the secondary rate "will not exceed 42
cents." The debt service payments on the G.O. bonds are backed by
property taxes irrespective of changes in value. If values drop, as
they did in the early 1990s, it is possible that the secondary rate
could exceed 42 cents.
Second, voters approved
the 1995 G.O. bonds for specific capital projects with finite debt
service schedules. The debt service obligations associated with those
bonds usually decline over time. As new construction is added to the
tax rolls, the property tax burden is shared by more and more
taxpayers, resulting in lower rates for each individual property
owner. Such decreases in the debt service rate should not
automatically be viewed as an opportunity to shift taxes to the
operating budget. PCC recently refinanced their bonds, taking
advantage of lower interest rates.
Officials would like
voters to recognize their "good stewardship" by putting the
difference "back in." We applaud the district for exercising
their fiduciary responsibility, but frankly, the refinancing of debt is nothing more than what taxpayers should expect.
Third, unlike most
states, where all property is taxed at the same rate, Arizona taxes
business property at 2.5 times the rate of homeowners. Each year when
tax rates are set to fund government budgets, the tax burden is
shifted from homeowner to business property through differential
assessments.
Economic development
has long been a goal in Pima County. But such efforts keep running
into the same wall: extraordinarily high local government tax rates.
This fact has caused local government officials to resort to offering
tax breaks to large employers to entice them into the area, a practice
that is patently unfair to the county's existing taxpayers.
PCC should clearly
communicate the merits of its requests for additional spending, not
soft-peddle the tax impact. As for voters, their consideration of
Prop. 400 should take into account what the new taxes will fund and
vote on the merits of those requests, not on some fantasy that it is
free.
Michael Hunter is
vice president of the Arizona Tax Research Association, a taxpayer
watchdog organization established in 1940.
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