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Creating A Modern Property Tax System for Halifax Open Houses (April-June 2008)

Creating A Modern Property Tax System for Halifax Open Houses (April-June 2008). Hit enter for next slide. Version 2. The Current Property Tax System Must Change. Originally designed as a wealth tax Property Values no strong link to income or services

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Creating A Modern Property Tax System for Halifax Open Houses (April-June 2008)

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  1. Creating A Modern Property Tax System for HalifaxOpen Houses (April-June 2008) Hit enter for next slide Version 2

  2. The Current Property Tax System Must Change • Originally designed as a wealth tax • Property Values no strong link to income or services • Property Tax has become less and less Equitable • Property Tax system needs to promote Economic Competitiveness Hit enter for next slide

  3. A Work in Progress • Tax Reform Committee • Has reviewed options for a new municipal tax system: January 2007 to March 2008 • No “off the shelf” solution available • Committee has proposed a “made in HRM” solution • Mission and Principles have been developed with public input from May 2007 Consultations • Now a Mission, Principles, and a proposed Draft Tax Model are put forth for discussion/debate

  4. Foundations and PrinciplesTax Reform Mission Statement • To provide an equitable tax system based on a charge for services provided and ability to pay by: • Linking taxes and fees for services to those who derive the greatest benefit at the individual, community and regional levels, and, • Considering ability to pay. First Mission Statement of its kind anywhere! Provides the logic for a new tax system.

  5. Principles • Equity • Economic Competitiveness • Economic Efficiency • Respect for Other Governments • Stability • Simplicity • Transparency and Accountability Supported by 29 Objectives

  6. What does theProposed Tax Model provide? • Features of the proposed Tax System: • People would pay for the services provided • So, people in the same neighbourhood would pay the same taxes • Taxes charged for 9 services (including a group of regional services) • No urban, suburban or rural tax boundaries • Each service would have its own boundary • Taxes are more stable and transparent • Would not vary with market values • Taxes would increase due to inflation (cost increases) or service improvements

  7. Nine Municipal Services, Nine Municipal Tax Rates Individuals Communities Region Individual Charges: Common Tax Rates: 9 Regional Tax Rate: 1 Hydrants 4 Local Recreation Police 2 Solid Waste 5 Local Sidewalks Fire 3 Local Roads 6 Local Transit Libraries Multi-District Facilities Zone Tax Rates: Sports and Event Facilities 7 Regional Roads (4 Zones) Recreation Programs 8 Regional Transit (4 Zones) Support Services Other

  8. Example of Nine Municipal Tax Rates Individual Community Regional

  9. Shift Away from Property Tax • Recommendation: Dwelling Unit Tax • Considerations: • Easier to understand and administer • Multi-unit buildings (e.g. Apartments, Condos) are taxed at a lower tax rate (per dwelling) • Flat tax on residential vacant land. • Requires stronger tax relief for low income.

  10. Hydrants – Individual Charge • Dwelling Unit Tax for properties within 1,200 feet of a working hydrant • $116 / property • Multi-unit buildings pay once. Hit enter for next slide

  11. Solid Waste – Individual Charge • Dwelling Unit Tax for those receiving pick-up • Applies to those with pick-up (Houses, Condos and some Rural Business) • $256 / home • Does not apply to those without pick-up (Apartments, vacant land, most businesses)

  12. Costing of Individual Charges • Total Costs / Total Users • Eg Solid Waste (Collection and Facility) - $32.6m / 127,000 users = $256 per user • Some homes have higher service levels and/or Cost more to service. • Some get weekly green bin pick-up (8 weeks in summer) • Some get Recycling Pick-up (Blue Bag) every two weeks • Should different rates be charged (more than one average rate)?

  13. Local Roads – Individual Charge • Dwelling Unit Tax for local road network. • Considerations: • Levied on properties bordering on a road. • $176 / property • Paid once by multi-unit buildings. • 75% rate for those on private roads, provincial roads. • $132 / property

  14. Local Recreation Facilities - Common Tax Rate • One Area Rate set for all local recreation centres (Operating and Capital). Flat rate of $36 / home. • Within 5-10 minute “Driving Distance” (8km) – Based on Community Facility Master Plan. • Only for local facilities. Multi-District (eg pools, rinks) in Regional Tax Rate!

  15. Local Sidewalks – Common Tax Rate • Local Sidewalks. Tax on those within “walking distance” (1km) of sidewalks: • Houses = $48 per house • Apartments = $29 per Apartment (i.e. 60%) • Commercial = 4.1 cents on assessment • Sidewalks on arterial roads included in Regional Transportation Rate

  16. Local Transit – Common Tax Rate • Dwelling Unit Tax on any home within walking distance (1 km) of a local transit stop or park and ride. • All communities will have the same tax rate. • $140 per house and $84 per apartment (i.e. 60%) • Excludes MetroLink, Express Rural Transit, Ferries (in Regional Transit Zone).

  17. Map of Tax Zones forRegional Transportation Charges

  18. Regional Transportation Tax Rates • Regional Road – Dwelling Unit Tax • Pays for arterial and collector roads • and sidewalks, lights, etc. on those roads • Regional Transit – Dwelling Unit Tax • Pays for Metro Link, Ferries, Bus Rapid Transit • Four Zones: Pink, Orange, Green, Blue • Tax rates based on Commuter trips for zone. • Lower rate for multi-unit buildings. $148 per Commuter

  19. Regional Tax Rate • Dwelling Unit Tax for services of a broad, regional benefit • Includes Police, Fire, Libraries, larger recreation facilities and programming, support services. • Could use Income Tax or Surtax (if provided authority) Hit enter for next slide

  20. Provincial Property Taxes • Provincial and Other Property Taxes • Education, Corrections, Housing, Assessment • Area Rated based on Provincial formulas • One-third of residential property tax • Recommend that Provincial Property Tax • Treated as responsibility of Province • Remain on Assessment as per formulas • No subsidy from municipal taxes • including from low income rebate

  21. Ability to Pay • Tax at any income level made consistent • Increased Low Income Rebate • $1,000 – Reduced by 7% over $18,000 • Additional $100 per child • Phases out at $33,700 (Family with one child) • Seeking administration by CRA • Province has agreed to discuss • No tool to tax income at progressive rates • Support use of income tax or surtax

  22. Deed Transfer Tax • No Connection to either services or income. • Concern over economic impact • Increases house prices • Cannot be mortgaged • Recommend it be phased-out • Increase Regional Tax Rate for residential portion

  23. Commercial Taxation • Remain on market value assessment • subject to feedback, research • Commercial taxpayers pay on service basis • But, no shift in share of tax revenues • No change to historic multiplier of 2.55 • Except change in Business Occupancy, Provincial Area Rate • Accelerate phase-out of Business Occupancy

  24. Status Quo Logic behind System: Property Tax is based on Wealth. (Assumes value of property is a proxy for wealth). Features Urban, Suburban, Rural boundaries for some services. Low income rebates/ deferrals Deed Transfer Tax Reform Logic behind System Mission Statement – Service based system with recognition of ability to pay. Supported by 7 principles and 29 objectives. Features Taxes based on level of benefit to individual, community or region. Ability to Pay mechanism Recognizes competitiveness Where We’ve Come From

  25. Public Feedback Sought • Public consultations on • Foundations, Principles and Objectives • The Draft Tax Model • Feedback sought: • Accept Tax Reform Suggestions • Modify the Suggestions • Move in Another Direction • Prefer the Status Quo • Suggest other options

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