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Re: Mayor Healy: Corzine's plan "spelled terrible financial problems for Jersey City"
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Quote:
Income and sales taxes are state and property taxes are local.
Posted on: 2007/1/11 19:49
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Re: Mayor Healy: Corzine's plan "spelled terrible financial problems for Jersey City"
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Home away from home
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Anyone out there know much about this?
So what is the upshot? What will happen in JC and other places in New Jersey? Where will the city raise taxes in the future? Is it true that only the state can raise income tax or sales tax?
Posted on: 2007/1/11 19:06
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Re: Mayor Healy: Corzine's plan "spelled terrible financial problems for Jersey City"
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Quite a regular
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Ranking Average tax bill for local, school and county services
For towns with at least: 500 homeowners Ranking Town rank 1 of 20 Millburn (Essex) $16,511 rank 2 of 20 Mountain Lakes (Morris) $16,291 rank 3 of 20 Essex Fells (Essex) $15,315 rank 4 of 20 Rumson (Monmouth) $14,964 rank 5 of 20 Glen Ridge (Essex) $14,867 rank 6 of 20 Tenafly (Bergen) $14,412 rank 7 of 20 Mendham Twp. (Morris) $14,246 rank 8 of 20 Alpine (Bergen) $14,201 rank 9 of 20 Princeton Twp. (Mercer) $13,967 rank 10 of 20 Montclair (Essex) $13,547 rank 11 of 20 Mantoloking (Ocean) $13,440 rank 12 of 20 Demarest (Bergen) $13,286 rank 13 of 20 Franklin Lakes (Bergen) $13,051 rank 14 of 20 Upper Saddle River (Bergen) $13,000 rank 15 of 20 South Orange (Essex) $12,877 rank 16 of 20 Princeton Borough (Mercer) $12,857 rank 17 of 20 Saddle River (Bergen) $12,730 rank 18 of 20 Ridgewood Village (Bergen) $12,567 rank 19 of 20 Summit (Union) $12,566 rank 20 of 20 Haworth (Bergen) $12,471 This was the only per household ranking for 2006 that I could find. Source: NJ.com
Posted on: 2007/1/11 15:40
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I'd go over 12 percent for that
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Re: Mayor Healy: Corzine's plan "spelled terrible financial problems for Jersey City"
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Home away from home
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2004/9/12 7:13 Last Login : 2012/5/16 16:22 From beneath the jumping sheep
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Kearny has the highest property tax in Hudson County? Which town has the highest in the state?
Posted on: 2007/1/11 15:34
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Mayor Healy: Corzine's plan "spelled terrible financial problems for Jersey City"
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Home away from home
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Mayor Healy: Corzine's plan "spelled terrible financial problems for Jersey City"
MAD-CAP IDEA? Hudson mayor raps gov's property tax relief plan Thursday, January 11, 2007 By KEN THORBOURNE JOURNAL STAFF WRITER The mayor of the town in Hudson County with the highest property taxes blasted Gov. Jon Corzine's proposal to cut taxes for the average property taxpayer while simultaneously capping how much municipalities can raise them. "If it is a pure cap, it won't work," said Mayor Alberto Santos of Kearny, where the average taxpayer pays a county-leading $7,910 a year in taxes. "On the municipal expense side there are just too many cost drivers that are not in our control," Santos added. According to the Star-Ledger, the average Kearny property taxpayer shells out $7,400 a year in taxes. But Kearny Tax Assessor Sharon Curran said yesterday the figure is actually even higher than that - $7,910 a year for every $100,000 of assessed value. Santos said he would love to limit municipal tax hikes to 4 percent a year, as Corzine proposed Tuesday in his State of the State address. But that's not realistic, given the fixed costs that keep rising, he said. Those expenses include sewage treatment fees, garbage disposal costs, health and pension rates, and raises imposed on the town through labor arbitration procedures - all rising at double-digit rates each year, he said. "If you say I can't raise taxes by more than 4 percent, then I have to impose user fees," Santos said. "Either I do that or I cut back on personnel. But these employees perform a vital service. "The real solution is to address the cost drivers we have to pay." During his speech, Corzine outlined a plan to provide tax credits to 1.9 million New Jersey homeowners with annual incomes of less than $250,000. Treasury Department officials pegged the givebacks as ranging from $820 to $1,080. Jersey City Mayor Jerramiah Healy said Corzine's plan "spelled terrible financial problems for Jersey City and other urban areas," for reasons similar to those Santos cited. A Jersey City property owner with a home assessed at $125,000 pays roughly $6,500 a year in property taxes, officials said. Through a spokesman, state Sen. and Bayonne Mayor Joseph V. Doria Jr. said he's in favor of the 4 percent cap on municipal tax hikes. Based on an average property assessed value of $133,000, the average Bayonne property owner pays $6,983 in taxes. Hoboken Mayor David Roberts didn't return phone calls for comment.
Posted on: 2007/1/11 15:27
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