Today is the pinnacle of 2010's state tax holidays, during which some municipalities also participate (or are forced to do so).
But some states and cities are at the opposite end of the fiscal spectrum. They've decided they can't afford to forgo any tax collections.
In fact, their revenue situations are so bleak that they've had to cut services.
We learn from Governments Go to Extremes as the Downturn Wears On that one Hawaiian town furloughed its schoolchildren for 17 Fridays, an Atlanta suburb halted its public bus service and Colorado Springs, Colo., which I blogged about in February when it was first considering service cuts vs. tax hikes, turned off street lights.
The results did indeed save the jurisdictions money, but at other costs.
And it looks like many other locales will face similar tough choices until we're fully out of this recession.
"The cuts that have disrupted lives in Hawaii, Georgia and Colorado may be
extreme, but they reflect the kinds of cuts being made nationwide, disrupting
the lives of millions of people in ways large and small," writes Michael Cooper in the New York Times article.
As I've said before, nobody likes to pay excessive taxes, and that's the key distinction: excessive. Some taxes are necessary to provide the services that make a community the place in which we want to live.
Have you experienced any loss of services because your city, county or state couldn't pay for them? What government-funded programs would you be
willing to give up to save tax money or prevent tax hikes?
Related
posts:
- Bet on it, states are struggling
- State-by-state pain index
- Homesteading to increase tax base
- Money-hungry states, cities tax trolling
- The good side of taxes
- Taxes and the worldwide quality of life
- State Tax Departments
- Don't forget your state taxes!
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Elizabeth R.
Indiana is just a mess. Our local school system had the Extra Curricular Activities cut for the upcoming year, thanks to a change the Governor made several years ago to “lower” taxes.
Our Medicaid Benefits for the poor, elderly and disabled have all been frozen. So those who need help now face huge waiting lists until there is money to fund this assistance again.
I keep hoping we are done on the downhill slide of this not so fun economy and start to climb out soon!
Amy
I think there’s another layer to this tax problem. That is the tendency for government to want to at least stay the same size or get bigger. (I’ll call it the Government Bloat theory – *grin*)
In tough times, budgets (and governments) require cutting if taxpayers will not vote for more taxes. It does not always follow, however, that cuts chosen by people who have an interest in, at the very least, maintaining the status quo are logical or in the best interest of the locality in question.
In other words, the wrong kind of city councils/state governments gravitate to cutting high profile services first in attempt to get taxpayers to cry “uncle” and vote in higher taxes.
At least some of the voters of Colorado Springs, I understand, felt exactly the way I just described. The vote for no more taxes had more to do with a vote of no-confidence in the government, rather than a real want to see services cut.
I think it says a lot that taxpayers would be willing to call the bluff, live with less services, and work to vote in better management the next time around. That isn’t to say that governments can’t be starved of money – that certainly happens too. Somewhere in the middle of starvation and a mindless, “here have my wallet”, seems to be the most workable. 😉