Showing posts with label election. Show all posts
Showing posts with label election. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

The Numbers Speak

Last year the City of Xenia management and the City Council discussed the proposed tax levy, and revealed some financial projections for 2010 and 2011. The City is projecting that passing the 28% income tax increase on May 4 would prevent a deficit of $1.45 million dollars for 2010 and 2011, however their own projections hint to the fact that the city budget will again be in deficit beyond year 2011! This means that again, the City of Xenia will most likely come back to the taxpayers asking for another income tax increase.

The fact that future projections indicate further deficits -- despite passage of a proposed levy -- should serve as a clear indicator to Xenia management that the City of Xenia is beyond exhausting its revenue capacity. This is being manifested by folks moving out of town, some other folks avoiding Xenia altogether, and businesses being unable to make ends meet in the city. It is generally thought by politicians that a higher rate of taxation is generally speaking, directly connected with higher government revenues…but to a point. Both economists like John Keynes and economists from the Austrian School have been using a very simple concept to illustrate this relationship, a bell curve called the Laffer Curve. The relationship dictates that at a 0% tax of inflation, there are no revenues for a government entity, and also at a 100% rate of taxation, there will be no revenues generated. The "hill" of the curve is, for lack of a better term, the optimum taxation indicator for a given tax base; any further tax increases beyond this point will have in fact the opposite effect on government revenues, namely a loss in revenue, not an increase.
City of Xenia officials do not seem to be willing to face this reality, which indicates that Xenia is well beyond the bearable taxation point; this fact is again, manifested in lower revenues, and projected future deficits even after passing a 28% tax levy increase!

To support the assertions made above, we will reference a 2003 study of local income taxes, titled "Local Revenue Hills: Evidence From Four U.S. Cities", and created by The National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER Working Paper No. 9686). In this study, four U.S. cities were analyzed for the purpose of determining each city's revenue hill, and the path of marginal tax revenues in relation to tax rates. The four cities were Houston, Minneapolis, New York City, and Philadelphia.

For two of the cities studied, New York and Philadelphia, the increase in local income tax led to job losses, and implicitly to lost revenues for the cities. To quote the study,
In 1970, New York City had 5.28 percent of the nation's jobs. By 2001 it had 2.88 percent. The job situation reflects in part the statistically significant negative effect of income tax rate changes: taxes rose from a top marginal rate of 2 percent to 4.66 percent in 1994 before dropping to 3.592 percent in 2001. The authors predict that the city's total job loss because of increases in city income tax rates would have been 490,000 jobs, but Mayor Giuliani's 1994 tax cuts restored 160,000 of those jobs for a final, tax-induced decline in city employment of about 330,000 jobs.
Similarly, Philadelphia lost 173,000 jobs between 1971 and 2001 because of increases in city wage tax rates. However, the authors estimate that without Mayor Rendell's wage tax cuts begun in 1996, Philadelphia's job loss would have been an additional 30,000 jobs. The New York City and Philadelphia experiences lead the authors to conclude that lowering city taxes is likely to be a cost-effective way to increase city employment.

The study further concluded that,
The recent cuts in New York and Philadelphia's income and wage taxes do mean lost tax revenues and presumably lower public services for city residents, but the added city jobs offer an important compensating benefit. The end result is a smaller public sector, but a larger and arguably more productive private city economy.
One of the more important conclusions was that "balanced city budgets will require the city to hold new spending to the rate of inflation" and that,
The authors' study reveals a fundamental tension between the interests of city public employees, poor households within the city, and city taxpayers. Tax increases unmatched by tax-financed compensating benefits for taxpayers -- whether property owners, consumers, or firms -- will drive those taxpayers from the city. Property values fall, business sales decline, and the city's tax base shrinks. To protect city economies, a dollar of taxes paid must be matched by at least a dollar of public service benefits. That was not the case in any of the sample cities, though nearly so in Minneapolis.
All these basic economic conclusions are after all, common-sense conclusions, and someone should not have to point them out to anyone at Xenia City Hall. We can readily observe that property values, jobs, business presence and income levels are all in a decline in Xenia, all proving that Xenia cannot be taxed any further without worsening the effects on government revenues. It is an economic reality that taxation will lead to behavior adjustment by those who are being taxed, so it is natural to conclude that the proposed tax levy will in fact lead to further deficits in Xenia's budget by the way of residents leaving the city, and so on. The City's own budget projections prove it.

So the question Xenia residents need to ask is: how much money will the City ask for again in a few years, when the next deficit rears its head?

Monday, March 1, 2010

New City Documents Paint Another Picture

A recently filed FOIA request with the city of Xenia paints a picture different from the one the City is trying to present to the community. What is claimed to be an "emergency" driven tax levy, turns out to be a carefully crafted and created message by the City, with the helppecu0ktikwd74kf4ixit.jpg of consulting firm Avakian Consulting, from Columbus, OH.
In a completely disregard of its own policies and laws, which are in place for the protection of taxpayers and the prevention of fraud and misappropriation of funds, the City of Xenia awarded an "emergency" no-
bid contract to Avakian for the amount of $25,000 for the purpose of helping "educate" city residents. What the city really means is, "help pass Issue 7." The problem with these actions is that they are in direct violation of Ohio Election laws, and citizens should not, and cannot stand for it. The City of Xenia, to say it in the plainest words possible, is using taxpayer funds to sell taxpayers a tax levy.

Not only this, but as the documents attached show, City Management know what they are doing is highly inappropriate, with City Councilmen being outright confused by the direction taken by Mr. Percival, Xenia City Manager. During a Special Budget Meeting on January 30, 2010, Mr. Percival was asked by Councilman Smith:
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"if the goal [of Avakian] was to pass the levy or improve the city's image. Mr. Percival said both. Councilman Smith asked what the number one priority was. Mr. Percival did not think one could be done without the other...The image, marketing and promotional campaign will be directly tied to the levy campaign; you can't separate the two."

Mr Percival even expressed frustration at the fact that Ohio Election law
prevents the CityCouncil from knocking at doors to directly promote the levy, saying "it was ridiculous the city council couldn't go out and promote it [the levy]."
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The City Manager was also questioned by Councilman Louderback, inquiring about the same issue: was the purpose of the consultants to pass the levy? Clearly, the ultimate and primary goal for retaining Avakian is being reinforced by the answers repeatedly
: to pass the tax levy. Knowing that it would be very difficult to justify the hiring of a consultant for that express purpose however, the City is attempting to bypass election law by throwing in other services, such as "magazine articles and other things to promote the City."

Unfortunately followup emails originating in the Clerk's office paint a different picture, again, that of Avakian's role being that of solely helping the passage of the tax levy by the city, all using public funds and taxpayers dollars. In an email dated January 28, 2010, City Clerk Michelle Johnson sent an email to Joel G. from Avakian, making it clear what the primary purpose of the relationship was: passage of the levy.
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I urge you, if you are a Xenia City resident to stand up to this injustice, to the unjust ways in which the City of Xenia is spending your money, and the ways in which the city is trying to manipulate you and your voting intentions. Please join us on the Stop Xenia Tax Facebook page and voice your opinion about this attempt to undermine your authority as a citizen, and the blatant mismanagement of public funds.

Saturday, February 27, 2010

Can you trust City of Xenia politicians?

Stay tuned - soon to be published: Internal Xenia City documents shine disturbing light into city processes and the City's disregard for the real needs of its citizens!

A FOIA request filed with the city of Xenia revealed internal documents, correspondence, contracts and discussions containing disturbing elements:
  1. City of Xenia awarded no-bid contracts in violation of its own policies and city laws.
  2. City of Xenia spent $4,000 of taxpayers funds on a biased community survey which was in fact a front for reading the community's possible response for a planned tax increase, and a clearly inappropriate spending of city funds.
  3. City of Xenia spent $25,000 of taxpayers funds on a consultant to help sell the tax levy to the community, in apparent violation of Ohio Elections laws.
  4. City of Xenia is using a "fact sheet" and the monthly utilities mailing process as means to advertise and promote the planned tax increase, in apparent violation of Ohio Elections law.
  5. Rather than giving citizens honest and heart-to-heart answers, the City of Xenia is using a secret internal document called "TALKING POINTS" marked "***NOT FOR DISTRIBUTION***" which contains canned answers provided by outside consultants who are not even residents of Xenia, aimed at promoting and advertising Issue 7 by the city, in apparent violation of Ohio Election laws.
Copies of these documents and more will be made available here on this website, and we are counting on YOU, the resident of Xenia to step up and say "enough" to this kind of non-chalant attitude by City Management towards you and your hard-earned income.