Like Indianapolis, Fort Wayne city officials have chosen to remove large portions of the tax base through the creation of TIF districts and the awarding of tax abatements to the winners it chooses--principally those who line the politicians' pockets with campaign contributions. It has made huge public investments in its downtown. Sound familiar? Instead of blaming the real culprit for a lack of revenues to fund basic city services, Mayor Tom Henry and other local officials are blaming property tax caps. From the
Fort Wayne Journal-Gazette:
Taxes will be going up next year in Fort Wayne. The only real question is by how much and where they will fall.
Mayor Tom Henry and a bevy of local officials gathered Monday to prepare citizens for the reality created by state property tax caps: Either taxes must be raised in other areas or services must be cut.
“We could do no tax increases at all, but that would force major cuts in essential services,” said City Councilman John Crawford, R at-large, the council’s budget hawk. “Or we could consider all the options.”
Though raising property taxes isn’t much of an option – the city can raise them some because it has held them below the maximum in recent years – there are alternatives such as a local income tax that can be used.
At the same time, the city is behind on maintaining essential services, meaning status quo is not a pleasant option either.
The city fire department is 30 firefighters below the 375 authorized but cannot afford an academy class. It also needs to replace six fire trucks but cannot afford to do so.
The police department is 21 officers below its 440 authorized and will lose more to retirement this year. The city is behind on road maintenance by an estimated $60 million.
“The status quo is not an option that’s on the table,” said John Stafford, director of the Community Research Institute at IPFW and a member of the mayor’s fiscal policy group formed to find solutions. “Something will have to change.”
Some of the options being considered by city officials is shifting fire-related costs to utility bills, raising the local income tax and, my personal favorite, annexing more territory into the city. These dogs never learn any new tricks. It also looks like the Republicans on the Fort Wayne city council are as bad as their Democratic mayor when it comes to honesty and transparency in government taxation and spending.
I saw the mayor, Democrat Tom Henry, on some awful public affairs thing on Comcast. He explained how the city sold off its electric company, and now has a bunch of money that he's looking to put to a good cause. More on that here:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.legacyfortwayne.org/major-terms-of-the-city-light-lease-settlement.html
Normal citizens might have thought a Good Cause is owning their damn electric company.
Instead, there's a thing called the Fort Wayne Legacy Fund, basically a slush fund of enormous magnitude - here's the kind of projects it will be blown on: http://www.legacyfortwayne.org/
Construction of college buildings ! Wow, there's an investment ! Like the city doesn't have any vacant office buildings. Like the Internet isn't going to revolutionize education to such an extent that bricks-and-mortar will rapidly diminish in importance.
Basically the mayor sold off the electric company, so he could provide union construction jobs; those unions then of course donate to the mayor and the Democrats.
All part of the trend of Democrats and RINOs building as much brick-and-mortar as fast as possible, before people realize how stupid that is in the Internet age. Other examples include the rash of building projects at state university campuses; rail transit; the new downtown library; the new airport.