U.S. towns, cities fear taxpayer revolt
if Republicans kill deduction
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[November 17, 2017]
By Richard Cowan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - From Pataskala,
Ohio, to Conroe, Texas, local government leaders worry that if
Republican tax-overhaul plans moving through the U.S. Congress become
law, it will be harder for them to pave streets, put out fires, fight
crime and pay teachers.
A tax plan approved by the House of Representatives on Thursday would
sharply curtail a federal deduction that millions of Americans can now
claim for tax payments to state, county, city and town governments.
Ending that deduction, the local leaders say, could make their
taxpayers, especially in high-tax communities, less likely to support
future local tax increases or even tolerate local taxes at present
levels.
The proposed repeal of the state and local tax (SALT) deduction is part
of an "assault on local governments" by Republicans in Washington, said
Elizabeth Kautz, the Republican mayor of Burnsville, Minnesota, near
Minneapolis.
"My hope is that we look at being thoughtful about what we're doing and
not ram something through just to get something done before the year is
out," Kautz said of the plan being rushed through Congress by her own
party.
In the United States, local governments run schools, operate police and
fire departments and maintain streets, parks and libraries, among other
essential services. The federal government's role at that level is
limited.
Cities, towns, counties and states collect their own property, sales and
income taxes. Under existing law, payments of those taxes can be
deducted, or subtracted from federal taxable income, lowering the amount
of federal tax due.
The House tax bill just approved would eliminate the deduction for
individuals and families of state and local income and sales tax, while
capping property tax deductions at $10,000.
A bill being debated in the Senate, with Republican President Donald
Trump's support, would kill the SALT deduction entirely for individuals
and families, although businesses would keep it. The fate of that bill
is uncertain.
Ending the SALT tax break is part of a package of changes to deductions
that would help Republicans raise more than $1.2 trillion in new federal
tax revenues over 10 years.
That increase would help offset the $1.4 trillion in revenue that would
be lost from cutting the corporate tax rate, another part of both the
Senate and House plans.
POLICE CONCERNS
Chuck Canterbury, president of the Fraternal Order of Police, which
represents 325,000 law enforcement officers nationwide, wrote a letter
to congressional leaders on Tuesday.
"The FOP is very concerned that the partial or total elimination of SALT
deductions will endanger the ability of our state and local government
to fund these (law enforcement) agencies," said the letter, distributed
to reporters.
Emily Brock, a director at the Government Finance Officers Association,
said if SALT deductions were killed by Congress, voters could revolt.
"Can you blame an individual taxpayer?" she asked. "They try to minimize
their individual tax liability."
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House Majority Whip Rep. Steve Scalise (R-LA) looks on during a news
conference announcing the passage of the "Tax Cuts and Jobs Act" at
the U.S. Capitol in Washington, U.S., November 16, 2017.
REUTERS/Aaron P. Bernstein
Those who want to curb the century-old SALT deduction argue it only
motivates local governments to seek more tax increases and spend
more money. "Maintaining the deduction encourages government
overspending and taxation," argues the American Legislative Exchange
Council, a nonprofit group of conservative state legislators and
private activists.
Various other groups are fighting on Capitol Hill to defend the SALT
deduction, such as the National Association of Realtors and the U.S.
Conference of Mayors.
BRADY'S DISTRICT
Steve Williams, chief financial officer for Conroe, Texas, said its
rapid growth demanded new fire stations, schools, roads and public
safety services.
Conroe is near Houston and in the congressional district of
Republican Representative Kevin Brady, chairman of the House tax
committee and a champion of restricting the SALT deduction.
"Tax reform comes with picking winners and losers and I think in the
final analysis, the people in (congressional) District 8 will be
losers," Williams said.
Conroe is part of Montgomery County, which voted 75 percent to 22.5
percent for Trump over Democrat Hillary Clinton in the 2016
presidential election.
In Pataskala, Ohio, near the state capital, Columbus, city finance
director Jamie Nicholson said the local police department needed a
new station. It now works out of an early 1900s building with no
holding cell for suspects who are under arrest. "They get handcuffed
to a chair," he said.
Given the past difficulty Pataskala has had convincing taxpayers to
approve new taxes, he said, eliminating or paring back the SALT
deduction might trigger demands for chopping local taxes and blow a
huge hole in his budget.
Greg Cox, a Republican member of the San Diego County, California,
Board of Supervisors, echoed similar concerns about the impact on
his community.
He said the Republican plan was unfair partly because it let
businesses keep the SALT deduction, while taking it away from
individuals and families.
(Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Peter Cooney)
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