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Sunday, April 22, 2012

Talbot Considers Breaking Tax Cap to Fully Fund Schools

The Talbot County Council proposed its FY 2013 operating budget on Tuesday, announcing that the county’s property tax cap may have to be broken in order to comply with maintenance of effort.  The proposed budget also calls for an increase in personal income tax from 2.25 percent to 2.4 percent. Talbot County currently has the lowest property tax rate and the second lowest income tax rate in Maryland. The Star Democrat reports:
The budget proposes to override the tax cap by $1,928,545, the amount above last year’s Board of Education funding to meet the MOE level.
Under the proposal, the county’s property tax rate would increase from 44.8 cents to 49.1 cents per $100 of assessed value, which includes a 26-cent “Education Supplement” on properties outside the towns of Easton, Oxford, Queen Anne, St. Michaels and Trappe.
The proposed budget also increases personal income tax from 2.25 percent to 2.4 percent.
The total proposed budget is $69,471,600 compared to $65,945,000 during the current fiscal year.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Wicomico's cap is a carbon copy of Talbot's.

Anonymous said...

Looks as though they are going to court. The school teachers union should be charged with racketeering. The whole MOE concept is price fixing. The Feds really ought to break this stuff up.

Daddio said...

And how do they "break the cap" ??

I figure they'd done it by now if they could ...

Anonymous said...

7:45
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Pollitt and Strausburg might be able to do it here, but the folks in Talbot County would challenge their Council in court, and win.

Anonymous said...

No different than stealing. What good is a vote on a referendum? Our votes don't mean a thing? The first steps to a miltary state.

Anonymous said...

tax caps deprive the needy of extra cash. Hording of money by workers is uncalled for.