Veto Tax Cap
Bill Sanford hesitation creates
Beaufort County dilemma
Gov. Mark Sanford's dithering on the bill that would cap property
tax assessments on high-end homes has forced Beaufort County
officials into a decision they may regret. This week, they decided
to send out tax invoices based on the higher valuations established
in this year's reassessment of taxable property.
If Sanford vetoes the bill, as he should, the county will be
OK.
But the county will face big trouble financially if Sanford signs
the bill, which would bar S.C. counties from billing taxpayers for
more than a 20 percent increase in property values every five years.
In that eventuality, Beaufort County would have to send refunds to
75 percent of its residential taxpayers.
That would be great for them but a disaster for all other
property taxpayers in the county. Unless the county drastically
slashed public services, they would have to make up for the tax
break accorded to the county's wealthier homeowners.
More seriously, the S.C. constitutional provision requiring fair
and uniform taxation would become a mockery. The only way to apply
that principle to the property tax is to use market values to
determine a given property's tax valuation.
To sign the tax cap bill or let it become law would perpetuate an
outrage. That, especially, is why Sanford should end his long period
of post-legislative-session contemplation and veto it. |