|
COSTA:
LOCAL PROPERTY TAX CUTS ANNOUNCED TODAY
|

Costa |
FOREST
HILLS, May 1 - Homeowners in school
districts throughout Pennsylvania found out
today estimates of how much their property
tax bills will be lowered next year courtesy
of the more than $612 million in state
gaming revenues, state Senator Jay Costa
(D-Allegheny) said today.
The state Department of Education released
their calculation of the estimated property
tax cuts in each school district.
“The tax relief act is designed as pure
relief, with no tax shifting,” Costa said.
“By using gaming revenues, homeowners across
the state will see their tax bills cut by an
estimated 10 percent even without the large
and expansive casinos in Pittsburgh,
Philadelphia and other areas open and
operational.
“That bodes well for deeper and continued
tax cuts well into the future.”
Under the Taxpayer Relief Act of 2006
(Special Session Act 1 of 2006) gaming funds
are distributed annually to school districts
to provide local tax relief. This year’s
distribution marks the first-ever provided
under this law.
In the 43rd Senatorial District
school districts, homeowners will see their
tax bills cut by the following estimated
amounts:
-
Baldwin-Whitehall
$149
-
Penn Hills
$189
-
Pittsburgh
$281
-
Riverview
$174
-
Steel Valley
$235
-
West Mifflin
$219
-
Woodland Hills
$184
Costa said a great benefit is
that this cut will occur without a tax shift
-- no other taxes will have to be increased.
“The tax relief act features tax cuts that
will grow as more casinos come on-line,”
Costa said. “This is the first installment
of an effort to trim homeowner tax bills and
deliver relief without imposing new and
different taxes.”
The Forest Hills lawmaker said that Act 1
also included spending controls that will
help reign-in costs and hopefully stanch
large local tax increases.
“The goal of Act 1 is to address several
aspects of the property tax problem,” Costa
said. “The significant expansion of the
Property Tax and Rent Rebate program—which
was another important aspect of Act
1—coupled with the reduction of homeowner
tax bills means that total state property
tax relief will be $786 million.”
The distribution of funds for general
property tax relief triggers another
important part of Act 1—supplement property
tax relief for eligible seniors.
Eligible seniors living in Pittsburgh with
incomes under $30,000 will see their
property tax rebate increased by an
additional 50 percent. Plus, property tax
rebates are increased by an additional 50
percent for senior households in the rest of
state, so long as those households have
incomes under $30,000 and pay more than 15
percent of income in property taxes.
The kicker was inserted into the tax relief
legislation because seniors living in
Philadelphia, Pittsburgh or Scranton, where
local wage/income tax rates are very high,
will not benefit from tax shifts approved by
voters that are designed to lower taxes on
top of the reduction offered by the state
funded property tax relief.
Costa, and other Senate Democrats, supported
the adoption of Act 71, the gaming law that
now generates revenues used to cut homeowner
property taxes.
|