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Re: TAX BILLS: MORE -- City: We're holding the line
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Does anyone know how property taxes are calculated?

Posted on: 2008/1/15 15:28
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Re: TAX BILLS: MORE -- City: We're holding the line
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Healy is full of sh- -t!!

just got my tax bill...it is about $100 higher than last year...and for what...I still dont see more cops...still flithy streets...roads still suck....things are ok in JC, but i have not seen many improvments over the past 3 yrs..FYI I live in JSQ.

Posted on: 2008/1/11 22:59
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Re: TAX BILLS: MORE -- City: We're holding the line
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ugh. got my bill the other day. can't say i was surprised by the increase, but damn, between this and the increase in my maintenence fees i'm going to be living on peanut butter and jelly sandwiches in '08. you'd think with all the money we pay in taxes that the city could afford to fill a few hundred #OOPS#ing potholes though.

Posted on: 2008/1/11 21:06
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Re: TAX BILLS: MORE -- City: We're holding the line
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$100 bucks a qtr i would welcome. after our first full year of taxes our escrow fell short, and we paid 1200 more.

since we've bought, our monthly taxes have increased close to $150 a MONTH. we pay essex county taxes for the heights.

Mr. Healy is welcome to come to our house himself ( we stock a full bar) and try and stick a needle in my arm. they can't bleed me anymore dry than they already have.

Posted on: 2008/1/11 19:03
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Re: TAX BILLS: MORE -- City: We're holding the line
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This is just more bait-and-switch.

So "municipal" taxes are steady while "school" and "county" taxes are rising? Next year, it'll be the other way around and Healy will crow about stable county taxes even as city taxes go up. (After all, JC is the biggest city in Hudson county, right?)

The tax burden in JC increases EVERY year without any appreciable gain in services provided by the city. So get used to it.

Still, in the interest of full disclose, I'd like to know how much taxpayer funds were used to pay for printing the self-congratulatory letter Healy sent along with the tax bills. (Oh and while we're at it: was the guy who owns the printer's shop a top contributor to Healy's PAC)?

Posted on: 2008/1/11 18:39
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TAX BILLS: MORE -- City: We're holding the line
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TAX BILLS: MORE
City: We're holding the line

Friday, January 11, 2008

You'd better be seated when you open the first-quarter tax bill just sent out by Jersey City.

According to Tax Collector Maureen Cosgrove, property owners with houses assessed at $100,000 can expect to receive a bill roughly $100 higher than last quarter's bill.

Mayor Jerramiah Healy sent out a letter with the tax bills stating the hike is due to "higher county and Board of Education taxes," but that his administration has "kept municipal taxes stable."

But according to city officials who explained the tax bill more fully yesterday, the total tax revenue to be raised by the city has risen $4 million since July and $9 million since tax bills were sent out this time last year.

City officials said yesterday that hope is on the way as far as the municipal portion of the bill is concerned. Due to an increase of $200 million in ratables in the city, local taxpayers should see the municipal portion of their bills shrink for the next two quarters.

When the new budget is introduced - it is expected in the next few weeks - the tax rate for the municipal portion is going to be $2,533 for every $100,000 of assessed value, or $130 less than it is now, said Business Administrator Brian O'Reilly.

"The city for the second year in a row is keeping taxes stable," O'Reilly said. "(But) school taxes are up $10 million in two years, county taxes are up from $65 million to $80 million."

As state school aid has decreased over the past two years, the local school tax levy has risen. But Jersey City taxpayers are still paying only $81.2 million of the $600 million public school budget due to its status as a "special needs" district.

As far as the county bill goes, Hudson County spokesman Jim Kennelly called Jersey City "a victim of its own success."

"Its property values have gone through the roof. Under state law, the formula that controls county taxation puts the burden on the communities that are growing."

KEN THORBOURNE

Posted on: 2008/1/11 17:54
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