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Clear • 48° • from the N at 8 MPH • Extended Forecast Here
Local News Web posted Sunday, January 2, 2005

Delegation divided on tax cap veto

BLUFFTON: Area legislators take sides on Sanford's veto of bill changing real estate reassessment rules.

By Frank Morris
Carolina Morning News

Beaufort and Jasper counties' state legislators are split over whether to override Gov. Mark Sanford's veto of a bill to set a 20 percent cap on property reassessment increases.

Among the six legislators living in the counties, while some left some wiggle room, half gave support for sustaining the veto and half favored overriding it.

The assessment cap bill, which would impose a 20 percent cap on increases in property values on homes and businesses for tax purposes was passed by the Republican-controlled Legislature shortly before it ended its most recent session in June.

Sanford, a Republican, vetoed the bill Dec. 16, saying he determined enactment would violate the state Constitution by not taxing property based on fair market value.

Legislators last week said deciding whether to sustain or override Sanford's veto of the assessments cap and numerous other bills would top the body's action list when its new session opens Jan. 11.

Overturning a veto requires a two-thirds vote in the House and then a two-thirds vote in the Senate. If the House sustains a veto, the Senate gets no say and the governor wins.

Lining up for an override vote on grounds something needs to be done to stop massive tax increases were Sen. Scott Richardson, R-Hilton Head Island, Rep. Bill Herbkersman, R-Bluffton; and Rep. Catherine Ceips, R-Beaufort.

On the other side, Sen. Clementa Pinckney and Rep. Thayer Rivers Jr., both Ridgeland Democrats whose districts cross into Beaufort County, said they definitely want the veto upheld. Rep. Richard Chalk, R-Hilton Head, said he probably would vote to sustain it.

Rep. Walter P. Lloyd, D-Walterboro, whose District 121 includes northernmost Beaufort County, was unavailable for comment.

Richardson, who co-sponsored the cap bill while Beaufort County prepared 2004 reassessment notices, said the Legislature should look at overhauling the tax system.

"I would like to see us deal with the whole tax issue collectively, instead of dealing on the edges," he said. "If you want to deal with it right, that's what we need to do, is look at all of those things at one time and tweak them, and some will go up and some will go down. I would like to see sales taxes go up a little bit and property and income taxes go down."

Pinckney said Sanford was right to veto a cap that's "very unfair.

"I think a 20 percent tax cut will have a negative impact on working-class people," Pinckney said. "The most people who would benefit are those who have homes on the beach and homes in expensive subdivisions. Pay your fair share, that's how I look at it."

He said the cap would shift the tax burden, making taxes of people in mobile homes, for instance, increase.

Chalk, who became the local legislative delegation's only new member when he filled former Republican Rep. JoAnne Gilham's seat, said he was leaning toward sustaining the veto.

"I probably would vote to uphold the governor's veto. Because of the constitutional questions and all, I don't think (the reassessment cap bill is) the best way to solve the problem," Chalk said.

"I'm still thinking about it. What I'm thinking about more is if you uphold the governor's veto, how do you solve the problem?" he said. "I'll probably vote to uphold the veto. I may be in the minority. It may pass and let the courts decide it.

"I'd like to see a limit on how much the actually tax would increase after a reassessment," Chalk said.

Herbkersman and Ceips both said the reassessment cap is needed to keep property owners in their districts from being taxed off their land.

"We've got to have a fair system," Herbkersman said. "We've got to override the veto or negotiate something ahead of time."

He said more than 100 people, many of them retirees or owners of heirs' property, have called him saying they would sell their property if the veto is sustained. He also said he agreed with Richardson that the tax system needs to be overhauled.

Herbkersman said that a vote last week probably would have brought the two-thirds majority needed for an override, but a lot could change before the actual vote occurs. He said the cap bill passed the House with 104 votes from its 124 members, and some did not vote.

He also said he agreed with Richardson that the tax system needs to be overhauled.

Ceips, asked if she would vote to override, said: "I probably will as it stands now," and "that might just be the starting of where we go with that issue.

"I've gotten overwhelming calls (from constituents) that they want some type of property tax relief. I'm going to listen to the constituents," she said.

"I know of people who've said they are going to have real trouble paying their property taxes this year," Ceips said.

Her constituents include people who "lived on their land forever and now, through no fault of their own, land values have gone up and their taxes and they can no longer stay there. That strikes straight to my heart that you would throw people out of their home because they couldn't pay their taxes," she said. "I've had some phone calls ... that would break your heart."

Rivers said his first goal for the Legislative session is to uphold the assessment cap veto.

"I have been opposed to (the cap bill) from the start," Rivers said, "and I'm building a million-dollar house in Beaufort County on the Whale Branch River and it would help me a lot financially. It's wrong."

He said the bill was "a rush to judgment . . . introduced in the last days of the session in an election year."

"This is a shift in the property tax from properties that are escalating in value to those that don't increase very much . . . or do not go up in value at all," he said. "The little people are going to be subsidizing the rich people."

But Rivers, too, said the property tax system is a problem, "especially for people on Daufuskie Island that have waterfront property that has been in the family for years.

"The system needs to be looked at, but this is a simple answer to a complex question," he said. The fairness issue includes agricultural use exemptions that give enormous tax breaks on 88 percent of the land in Jasper County, "including miles of waterfront property," he added.

"I'd like to examine the whole tax structure," Rivers said, reaching the same conclusion as Republicans behind the assessment cap.

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