KCIndy
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- Joined
- Nov 17, 2007
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Here in Indiana, next month's ballot is going to include a Public Question (Ballot Measure) in which the population of the state is going to vote whether to amend Indiana's Constitution.
The question is whether Indiana's property taxes be capped at one percent for residential property owners, and caps of two percent for agricultural land and three percent for some commercial/non residential properties.
The full text of the measure (it's short!) can be read here:
http://ballotpedia.org/wiki/index.php/Indiana_Property_Tax_Cap_Amendment,_Public_Question_1_(2010)
Basically, by putting state Constitutional caps on property taxes, it makes it impossible for the state government to hike said taxes whenever it overspends and gets in a pinch.
Personally, I'm caught between the practical opportunity to put a severe limit on property taxes that will be almost unbreakable by the state, and the entirely idealistic (and utterly UNrealistic) notion that we need to abolish property taxes completely.
How would you vote?
The question is whether Indiana's property taxes be capped at one percent for residential property owners, and caps of two percent for agricultural land and three percent for some commercial/non residential properties.
The full text of the measure (it's short!) can be read here:
http://ballotpedia.org/wiki/index.php/Indiana_Property_Tax_Cap_Amendment,_Public_Question_1_(2010)
Basically, by putting state Constitutional caps on property taxes, it makes it impossible for the state government to hike said taxes whenever it overspends and gets in a pinch.
Personally, I'm caught between the practical opportunity to put a severe limit on property taxes that will be almost unbreakable by the state, and the entirely idealistic (and utterly UNrealistic) notion that we need to abolish property taxes completely.
How would you vote?