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TRENTON - Regional
Plan Association (RPA) today released a report calling for
the current property tax debate in New Jersey to acknowledge
the tax system's massive impacts on land use policy. The
report, "Fundamental
Property Tax Reform: Land Use Implications of New Jersey's
Tax Debate," challenges the Gubernatorial and legislative
candidates to address the implications of tax reform on
land use and its related issues - congestion, open space
protection, housing production and economic development.
The report, which is attached to this email, also identifies
ideas for reform.
"The spirited
debate over property taxes needs to go beyond relief to
discuss real reform and the broader implications for how
we live in New Jersey," said Thomas G. Dallessio, Vice
President and NJ Director for RPA. "By relying so heavily
on property taxes to fund education and other services,
New Jersey has created an environment that works against
open space preservation, reasonably priced housing and sustainable
economic growth. Both candidates for Governor have unveiled
plans that could have tremendous impacts on these issues,
but there's little public discussion about these implications."
The report follows
a series of roundtable discussions on the topic hosted by
RPA and the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy earlier this
year. The experts and public officials at these events agreed
that while the state is ripe for a property tax reform debate,
there is no framework for evaluating complicated proposals
in a comprehensive manner.
Commenting on
the report, former Governor James Florio, a Vice Chairman
of RPA, said, "Regional Plan Association has played
an important role in encouraging a public debate throughout
New Jersey about how to reform the property tax system.
By focusing on land use implications, RPA hopes that elected
and appointed officials on all levels of government will
think about how property tax reform can improve the quality
of life for all citizens of New Jersey."
The report outlines
a series of criteria for judging property tax proposals,
and also puts forth a number of ideas for dealing with the
land use implications of reform that have not been adequately
presented in the gubernatorial and legislative debates,
including:
* Cost-based
state aid
* State assumption of education costs
* Smart growth zoning incentives
* Tax-base sharing
* School district consolidation
* Split rate taxation
* Varying taxes by State Plan designation
According to
Carol Cronheim, former Acting Secretary of State, "The
reform ideas presented in RPA's report raise the property
tax debate to a new level. This report is a positive step
forward in getting people to look at how changes in the
property tax system can improve land use decisions."
Fellow RPA/NJ
Committee member Sean Monaghan, a partner in the firm Drinker
Biddle & Reath LLP, added, "So far, the debate
has focused on property tax relief, not reform. This report
brings to the discussion a crucial element which has been
largely ignored - the impact of local property taxes on
land use policy."
Christopher Daggett,
RPA Vice Chair, concluded by stating, "Regional Plan
Association's report has made clear that the current property
tax system has profound effects on how we use land. We are
pleased to be able to put this issue before the people of
New Jersey, and look forward to a vigorous debate on how
we can not only reduce property taxes but also increase
property values through better planning."
Copies of the
report, "Fundamental
Property Tax Reform: Land Use Implications of New Jersey's
Tax Debate," may be found online at www.rpa.org
<http://www.rpa.org/>
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Regional Plan
Association improves the quality of life and the economic
competitiveness of the New York-New Jersey-Connecticut region
through research, planning, and advocacy. For more than
80 years, RPA has been shaping transportation systems, protecting
open spaces, and promoting better community design for the
region's continued growth. We anticipate the challenges
the region will face in the years to come, and we mobilize
the region's civic, business, and government sectors to
take action.
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