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SUNDAY EDITORIAL
Tax relief stands to produce lots of
problems
Sunday, August 20, 2006
~ the issue ~
Tax-relief plan
~
Our opinion ~
School tax increases just one issue facing
lawmakerss
The Legislature was determined to give taxpayers
property tax relief in some form in an election year.
Well
before any relief approved in 2006 takes effect, it appears what
many taxpayers will get is a higher bill. It’s happened locally and
in 20 or so other districts around the state that raised taxes –
largely to avoid using reserves and to put in place tax rates that
will be the basis for funding next year when “relief” kicks in. At
that time, local school districts can no longer levy property taxes
on primary residences.
Another part of the new law also
encourages tax increases. Lawmakers prohibited local governments and
schools, beginning next year, from raising taxes more than the
growth in inflation plus population. Where elected leaders saw a
need for tax increases, this was the year.
The new law will
take school operating costs off of homeowners’ tax bills, to be
replaced with an increase in the state sales tax to 6 cents. The
sales tax on groceries will be reduced from 5 cents to
3.
Orangeburg Consolidated School District 5 trustee Melvin
Crum went to great lengths to explain the situation as trustees were
approving a tax increase here.
“I don’t see anything in that
legislation that says school districts can build reserves,” Crum
said during the public budget discussions. “Pretty much whatever you
have in the bank right now is what you’re going to have for
reserves” for years to come.
“My suggestion is (to) max out
the millage and save as much in the fund balance as you can,” Crum
said. The tax increase “is to be proactive and try to set the stage
for what might come.”
“While it will hit the homeowners a
little bit heavy this year, next year it goes away, so I would think
that any rational-thinking person would agree to the concept to
protect your (interests),” Crum said.
“I want the public to
understand that this is not to be vicious and just slap taxes on
you,” Crum said. “If you cut yourself short and costs increase,
you’ve locked yourself into a quandary. We are simply trying to
protect our interests, and (other school boards are) trying to do
the same.”
In other words, holding the line this year stands
to cost districts next year. That’s surely not what lawmakers had in
mind.
Sen. Larry Martin, R-Pickens, wants to change that –
and he likely will by galvanizing legislative sentiment to roll back
the base of funding to 2005 levels. He’s proposing legislation to do
just that, saying, “It’s about fairness. It’s about equity. It’s
about doing the responsible thing.”
Importantly, the tax
increases do stand to be permanent for businesses and rental
property owners as they were not included in the tax-relief plan.
Arguing that the higher taxes stand as an obstacle to development
here and around the state is logical.
The bigger picture is
the one being talked about by the likes of Orangeburg Sens. John
Matthews and Brad Hutto. School funding should be addressed in a
comprehensive fashion – based on dollars per pupil and needs, not on
tax rates and tax-relief plans. Without such, tax relief as
constituted stands to put at least some schools in a funding crisis
in the coming years.
Let’s hope an examination of education
funding will be high on the list of legislative priorities when
lawmakers return to Columbia in January after the November
elections. Tax-relief problems alone will make it a higher
priority.
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