>>Valley Patriot>>
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North
Andover Selectmen Vote for Tax Equity
North Andover Selectmen
Wedy Wakeman
Fans of
big government and the big taxes that fund it like sneaky
taxes. Taxes that can be set or raised quietly,
with-out the con-sent of voters, fall into this category.
Fees are often nothing more than sneaky taxes. And the
best kind of sneaky tax, of course, is a tax that the
other guy pays.
I dont like
sneaky taxes. Thats why I voted to increase,
ever so slightly, my own taxes. Now is a good time to
begin righting a wrong.
The particular wrong of
which I speak is called tax classification. I expect
its not a term youre familiar with, as
its special taxation jargon.
Let me explain.
Cities and towns can create different categories of
taxable real estate, namely residential and commercial.
The categories do not need to be treated equally once
separated. Cities and towns can be sneaky, and charge
commercial property a higher tax rate than residential.
North Andover has been doing this for years. Last year,
the tax rate for houses was $11.76 per thousand dollars
of ass-essed value. Businesses paid $14.28. Why do
businesses pay such a premium? It could be because they
dont vote. Government can grow, taxation can
increase to fuel the growth, and the voters, homeowners,
dont feel the pinch.
If youre not pinched, you wont scream.
Businesses require few services: no trash pickup, no kids
to educate, no elders to service. And yet, they pay
higher taxes!
Sneaky, isnt it? Until this year, Ive
had to play along with this scam. You see, the very first
time more of the burden is given to business, people
notice. Homeowners are happy. A tax break! Businesses
grumble, but they cant vote.
The next year, and each subsequent year, spreading the
burden around evenly would be not good.
The voters arent used to carrying their fair share
of the load. They want a small bundle, one just about the
same size as last year, maybe a teensy bit bigger.
Thats what taxpayers expect.
Thats why last year, and the year before, I voted
to preserve the status quo. Okay, I reasoned: Well
be unfair about passing around the burden, but well
be unfair in the same measure as we were last year, so no
one will notice.
This year, something changed. The load got smaller. The
overall tax burden for North Andover decreased a bit,
thanks in part to paying down some debt. So for the first
time, we are a little more fair about distributing the
load, without raising individual tax bills more than a
few percent. Were still not splitting the pie right
down the middle, but were a lot closer than we
were.
Businesses and commercial property owners will benefit.
The economic benefit might create a few jobs or maybe
fill up a few empty storefronts. Thatd be good for
North Andover.
But more important, this year, I left the tax
classification hearing feeling better about the job I do
as your selectman. The board rejected more sneaky tax
games. We didnt just push the tax burden off onto
businesses because we can.
Letting the other guy, the business owner without a say
in the matter, carry a bigger part of our tax burden is
just wrong. We still havent split things up
fifty-fifty. But we have made taxation a whole lot more
fair.
*Send your comments to ValleyPatriot@aol.com
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