Council Rock Considering Shift in Tax Structure
Council Rock is considering eliminating the Per Capita and Occupation Assessment tax and replacing it with an alternative revenue source.
Council Rock is considering eliminating the Per Capita and Occupation Assessment taxes due to the high cost of collection and overhead.
The Council Rock School Board last week voted to have its solicitor look into the issue of eliminating those taxes and replacing them with an alternative revenue source.
Board Member Bill Foster, a member of the district’s Finance Committee, said the Per Capita and Occupation Assessment taxes are inefficient and complicated to collect.
The average Council Rock taxpayer receives three tax bills—Real Estate, Per Capita and Occupation Assessment—resulting in a $6.15 collector fee per residence. The tax collector receives $2.05 compensation per bill. Each municipality in the Council Rock School District has a different tax collector, who is elected by its residents.
Between collection fees, printing and postage, the district pays $7.65 per residence just to collect the various taxes, Foster said.
According to Foster’s analysis of the issue, the $10 per capita only tax bills that are sent to more than 21,000 households come with an exceptionally high price tag to execute. In addition to the tax collector compensation for each bill, the district must pay the cost of printing, envelopes and postage. “That's incredible overhead,” Foster noted.
The Occupation Assessment tax, which is calculated based on the residents’ occupation, is confusing to collect, Foster said. There is a high incidence of delinquent and incorrect bills, fines, re-mailing of bills and phone calls, Foster explained.
According to data provided by Foster, last year, the district sent out 28,399 Real Estate tax bills and collected $130,990,994. Tax collector fees were $58,218.
From the 55,300 Per Capita and Occupation Assessment tax bills that were distributed, the district collected $4,603,481 and tax collector fees were $113,365.
Foster said if the district eliminated the Per Capita and Occupation Assessment taxes and slightly increased the Earned Income Tax, “we could reduce the total taxes being collected from the community every year for the same benefit to the district."
Chris
9:06 am on Tuesday, March 12, 2013
If there is no net benefit to a tax, why not discontinue that tax altogether? Also, why does this have to boost earned income taxes if there has not been a benefit in the past? Appears to me this is just another way to jack up taxes during a recession, when all our houses are underwater and work is scarce. Not a smart move to crush the taxpayers further...
mork
11:56 am on Tuesday, March 12, 2013
Politicians are such IDIOTS it's unreal!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! CUT THE F____N spending for over payed teachers and administrators.
PatO
2:17 pm on Tuesday, March 12, 2013
Good idea, these taxes are called nuisance taxes for a reason. Simplify and cut costs.
Dr. Don Tangora
1:26 pm on Wednesday, March 13, 2013
Smart. I'm not a teacher but I have greatly benefitted from the best of them. Getting more revenue for less cost is a must do. Teachers & administrators are fairly paid. All municipal pensions require a fresh look to make them fair to employees and taxpayers.