Lawmakers say SAFE-T Act mandates will raise property taxes in Illinois
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[October 06, 2022]
By Kevin Bessler | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – In a state with the
second highest property taxes in the country, some are concerned that
mandates in the SAFE-T Act will force tax hikes around Illinois.
The criminal justice and police reform package will bring significant
changes to things like police training and accountability and the rights
of detainees and prisoners, including the ending of cash bail.
Kane County officials are discussing its first property tax hike in a
decade to fill a $3 million deficit they say are created by unfunded
mandated reforms in the SAFE-T Act.
During a news conference Wednesday, state Rep. Keith Wheeler, R-Oswego,
said changes have to be made to the law.
“This is not the time to add to our highest in the nation overall tax
burden,” Wheeler said. “The Democratic-majority SAFE-T Act is literally
forcing our local governments to consider raising property taxes to make
our communities less safe.”
Republican Connie Cain, who is running for the 66th House district seat
against Democrat state Rep. Suzanne Ness, said taxpayers are only just
becoming aware of the defunding and tax hikes the legislation causes.
“The SAFE-T Act defunds the police through unfunded mandates and cost
shifts to local taxpayers for administering our criminal justice system
after Jan. 1,” Cain said. “This defunding is forcing local governments
like ours to increase property taxes, decrease public safety, or both.”
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The Illinois Network for Pretrial Justice disputed the claims, and said
the SAFE-T Act does not require counties to raise property taxes to fund
the criminal legal system.
“For the last two years, the Administrative Office of Illinois Courts
has been working with stakeholders from every branch of government to
ensure that counties across Illinois have the guidance and resources
they need to effectively make this transition,” they said in a
statement.
The change that is getting the most attention in the SAFE-T Act is the
ending of cash bail. Law enforcement agencies are worried too many
criminals would be released before trial. State Sen. Scott Bennett,
D-Champaign, wanted to address those concerns with a trailer bill that
tightens up the language in the SAFE-T Act and lays out clear guidelines
for when someone will be detained before trial. That was met with
opposition from supporters of pre-trial release.
At a recent protest outside Bennett’s office, Champaign County Board
member Emily Rodriguez said Bennett’s changes will cause a jail
overpopulation of innocent people.
“Overall, this is a huge bill. This is brilliantly written. It is
inspiring to me as a lower level lawmaker,” Rodriguez said. “A lot of
work is excellent, it just needs a couple more drafts.”
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