California News

Multimedia News

Ironman World Championships
8 photos
Chrissie Wellington, of Great Britain, winner...
Women getting it done
20 photos
Anti-government protesters occupying the grou...
Female sluggers on the court and stump
20 photos
Russia's Vera Dushevina returns a shot to Ser...
LA and Philly battle for the pennant
20 photos
Justin Maiuro of Mantua, NJ, shows off his Ph...
PETA gets naked and bloody again
16 photos
Partially clothed protesters seen with taped ...

Most council members favor cut to property tax

May 13, 2008 12:00 AM (152 days ago) by Kathleen Miller, The Examiner
This story ranks Not ranked
Related Topics: WASHINGTON

WASHINGTON (Map, News) - A growing number of Montgomery Council members favor reducing the property tax rate, a move that would completely reverse the central component of County Executive Ike Leggett’s budget plan, Council President Mike Knapp said Monday

In March, Leggett recommended an 8.3 percent increase in the property tax rate, the largest raise in 20 years, saying a $297 million budget deficit required the increase to maintain services. At the same time, Leggett proposed a $1,014 tax credit for homeowners, which he said would make the tax increase less onerous on lower income residents.

The three members of the council’s Management and Fiscal Policy Committee on Friday unanimously approved decreasing the property tax rate by 2.2 percent from the current year and cutting the homeowner credit from this year’s $613 to $361. Council member Duchy Trachtenberg, who chairs the committee, and council member Valerie Ervin, who sits on it, both told The Examiner their votes reflected a concern for renters.

“We’re clearly in the beginning of a recession and people are hurting so it is legitimate and reasonable to reduce the tax burden on our residents,” Trachtenberg said. She added the average apartment building owner would see tax increases of 20.7 percent under Leggett’s plan and she believes those costs would have been passed on to renters.

This story continues below
Advertisement

“Those renting have to be part of our considerations,” Trachtenberg said. “They are the ones that typically can’t afford to buy and maintain property.”

Patrick Lacefield, spokesman for County Executive Ike Leggett, slammed the committee’s idea.

“The [committee’s] plan makes the tax increase much more regressive,” Lacefield said in an e-mail, “[It] hammers lower and middle income homeowners even more at a time when foreclosures are going up. …”

Trachtenberg and Knapp countered that the committee’s plan is reasonable when tax rates are compared with 2005 rates, before the use of homeowner credits.

The full council will vote on the property tax rate Wednesday. Only five members need to agree on the property tax rate, but seven need to approve the budget as a whole.

Council member George Leventhal said he won’t support the committee’s plan and may instead push to reduce cost of living adjustments for employees making more than $102,000 a year.

kmiller@dcexaminer.com

Add a Comment


Name: (required)
Comments:
characters left
Comments are regulated by the Terms of Use.

Comments from Examiner Readers

10:17 AM MST on Wed., May. 14, 2008 re: "Leggett says property tax cuts only help businesses, wealthy"

Robin Ficker, Broker Robin Realty said:
Don't use the words, "property tax cut," in Montgomery County. Leggett has proposed the largest property tax increase in 20 years. Sticking to the charter limit will allow a 3.6% increase in property tax revenues. That should be enough. We shall see if Council members Tratchenberg and Andrews were serious when they spoke of sticking to the charter property tax limit. If they vote to exceed the limit, it will make passage of our November ballot question making it more difficult to exceed the charter property tax limit more likely.

3 agree | 2 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree

5:28 AM MST on Tue., May. 13, 2008 re: "Most council members favor cut to property tax"

Gazette Reader (and Examiner, too) said:
The council committee tax plan will result in a MUCH larger tax increase for the average homeowner (where their home is worth under about $500,000) then the Leggett plan. Older people and those who live in smaller condos and townhomes will bear the greater brunt of the increase than the people who live in million dollar homes. That fact that is exposed by this article, and their is no hiding from it.

2 agree | 3 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
12:18 PM MST on Tue., Apr. 15, 2008 re: "Council may kill Montgomery property tax hike"

Robin Ficker, Broker Robin Realty said:
The council is waiting for the results of the special election in District 4 to see what to do. Mark Fennel is running for County Council and Property Tax Relief. He opposes Leggett's biggest proposed property tax increase in 20 years, has pledged to vote against exceeding the charter property tax limit and supports our November ballot question which makes it more difficult to exceed the charter property tax limit. C

3 agree | 2 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
10:23 AM MST on Tue., Apr. 1, 2008 re: "Anti-tax signs disappear before increase proposed"

Examiner Reader said:
Last summer, Help Save Maryland filed a Freedom of Information” request with Montgomery County Executive Ike Leggett and County Council President Mike Knapp. Our request covered 5 years worth of official documents concerning Montgomery County and all taxpayer funding for the illegal alien support group CASA of Maryland – Day Laborer Centers, Training, Education, Outreach, Health Care, Legal Services and more, all County funded activities advertised on CASA’s web site. Leggett responded and supplied Help Save Maryland with THREE pieces of paper; Knapp had ZERO. Judicial Watch, a conservative, non-partisan educational foundation, which promotes transparency, accountability and integrity in government, politics and law, came to the rescue. Judicial Watch re-filed the request and guess what, they received boxes of documents from multiple parts of the Montgomery County Government regarding CASA of Maryland.

3 agree | 3 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
1:02 AM MST on Tue., Apr. 1, 2008 re: "Montgomery balks at tax increase for millionaires"

Robin Ficker Broker Robin Realty said:
Knapp and Leggett are trying to push through the biggest property tax increase in 20 years. When the state budget "deficit" in a budget that was 8.5% larger than last year was proposed, Leggett proposed raising taxes. He got what he wanted. Then he said he got too much of what he wanted. Now he is trying to raise the gas tax while gasoline is headed to $4 a gallon. Is he nuts?

2 agree | 2 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
6:30 PM MST on Sat., Mar. 22, 2008 re: "Anti-tax signs disappear before increase proposed"

Mark D. Fennel, County Council Candidate said:
For goodness sakes, three of the signs taken on seperate occasions, by the Montgomery County Government, was displayed in the yard of Tommy Le, who lives along that stretch. He's a candidate for Montgomery County Board of Education, fine man, and political ally.

2 agree | 3 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
5:50 PM MST on Sat., Mar. 22, 2008 re: "Anti-tax signs disappear before increase proposed"

Mark D. Fennel, County Council Candidate said:
When I caught the county employee, he said each house needed a permit to have a sign. He also said, the signs were to big for permits, and that he could fine me $500 per house for all 26 houses,($1,300). NONE OF THIS WAS TRUE. He asked to see my identification. I asked for them back from his truck, he said no. ACLU Help! As I drove off, he said, "And some of them were in the right of way." Some of them? Today, Montgomery County's spin is all of them were in the right of way. Tragically, they tossed many of them in Montgomery County's landfill. I told permitting services, that donations from senior citizens who are being driven out of their homes due to high property taxes helped to pay for those signs -- they shrugged. VOTE FENNEL FOR COUNTY COUNCIL AND PROPERTY TAX RELIEF APRIL 15 AND MAY 13

4 agree | 3 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
10:19 AM MST on Fri., Mar. 21, 2008 re: "Anti-tax signs disappear before increase proposed"

Robin Ficker, Broker Robin Realty said:
All these signs were put up on the homes of homeowners with the permission of the homeowners. None was put in the right of way. We caught the county employee surreptitiously taking down the signs when he was doing it for the fifth time, after we had filed two police reports. Vote for Fennel for County Council and Property Tax Relief in the April 15 special election.

2 agree | 4 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
5:54 AM MST on Tue., Jan. 22, 2008 re: "Legislation would give charter counties OK to raise property taxes above limit"

Robin Ficker, Broker Robin Realty said:
We have a ballot question on the 2008 ballot in Montgomery County. It would make it more difficult to exceed the county property tax limit, not easier. This ballot question will pass.

31 agree | 52 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
7:56 PM MST on Fri., Dec. 7, 2007 re: "Montgomery home sellers must disclose future tax"

Tony Sharpe said:
I read your article about the Council's decision to have sellers estimate taxes. What a crock. Why don't they make it easy and keep the law simple and say that taxes cannot be increased more than 10% a year. Why does it matter if the property changes hands! This is just another example of the county being greeeeedy taking advantage of the purchasers of real estate. The county should get their hands out of the purchasers pockets. Taxes are way too high the way it is. This will only hamper the already hurting market. Thanks.

56 agree | 48 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
7:07 PM MST on Tue., Nov. 20, 2007 re: "Petition seeks vote to make property tax hikes tougher"

Control spending said:
Monkey County needs to control spending, not try to take our homes.

77 agree | 67 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
7:04 PM MST on Tue., Nov. 20, 2007 re: "Petition seeks vote to make property tax hikes tougher"

Taxed out said:
After all the O'Malley tax increases, I can't believe the council covets out home equity!

53 agree | 50 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Advertisement