1 00:00:00,080 --> 00:00:03,960 Speaker 1: Don't want to be an American idiot. Scott's flown back 2 00:00:04,000 --> 00:00:08,920 Speaker 1: on seven hundred WLW. Governor Mike Dewin's Property Tax Reform 3 00:00:08,960 --> 00:00:11,400 Speaker 1: Working Group was tasked with coming up with a better system. 4 00:00:11,480 --> 00:00:14,520 Speaker 1: Let's face it, property taxes in Ohio have been a 5 00:00:14,640 --> 00:00:17,560 Speaker 1: mess for a while now. We've seen taxes rise anywhere 6 00:00:17,600 --> 00:00:20,239 Speaker 1: between what thirty to two hundred percent in some areas, 7 00:00:20,680 --> 00:00:24,360 Speaker 1: and that worries folks, especially seniors on fixed incomes, may 8 00:00:24,360 --> 00:00:26,440 Speaker 1: lose their People are actually worried about losing their homes 9 00:00:26,440 --> 00:00:29,600 Speaker 1: over it. The same time, we have to fund schools, 10 00:00:29,640 --> 00:00:34,199 Speaker 1: police fire ems, all those services. And by the way, 11 00:00:34,240 --> 00:00:38,000 Speaker 1: the day after these proposals got released, the Ohio Senate 12 00:00:38,080 --> 00:00:41,280 Speaker 1: voted to override Mike Dewina on this bill. Sites is 13 00:00:41,320 --> 00:00:43,720 Speaker 1: the co chair of the working group and joins the 14 00:00:43,760 --> 00:00:48,479 Speaker 1: shout now on seven hundred WWD former Green Township, Ohio 15 00:00:48,600 --> 00:00:52,400 Speaker 1: House Minority Speaker bill. This was when we talked about this, 16 00:00:52,560 --> 00:00:54,680 Speaker 1: I think a few months ago, when you were assigned 17 00:00:54,680 --> 00:00:57,680 Speaker 1: the task of co chairing this, this working group said this, 18 00:00:57,680 --> 00:01:00,000 Speaker 1: this probably could be one of the most difficult things 19 00:01:00,080 --> 00:01:03,560 Speaker 1: you've ever endeavored to do. You laid out twenty ideas 20 00:01:03,680 --> 00:01:07,679 Speaker 1: the Ohio Senate voted to override explain, first of all, Bill, 21 00:01:07,840 --> 00:01:09,720 Speaker 1: what does that mean and the reasoning behind it? And 22 00:01:10,080 --> 00:01:12,720 Speaker 1: is it simply just that you leaned, as the working 23 00:01:12,720 --> 00:01:14,800 Speaker 1: group leaned towards more the House bills and the House 24 00:01:14,840 --> 00:01:17,240 Speaker 1: proposals for the fixed than the Senate bills? And is 25 00:01:17,240 --> 00:01:18,040 Speaker 1: that all this is? 26 00:01:18,920 --> 00:01:22,759 Speaker 2: No? No, no, no, not at all. No. No. Both 27 00:01:22,760 --> 00:01:25,240 Speaker 2: the House and the Senate have already passed the number 28 00:01:25,280 --> 00:01:29,400 Speaker 2: of things about the governor vichos, and now the House 29 00:01:29,440 --> 00:01:32,920 Speaker 2: and Senate are considering overriding the governor on some of 30 00:01:32,959 --> 00:01:37,120 Speaker 2: those beatos. The one that was overridden last week abolished 31 00:01:37,600 --> 00:01:45,520 Speaker 2: replacement levey le we we're. 32 00:01:45,319 --> 00:01:47,720 Speaker 1: Losing we're losing your cell a little bit there, Bill, 33 00:01:48,200 --> 00:01:48,760 Speaker 1: Can you hear me? 34 00:01:48,840 --> 00:01:49,000 Speaker 2: Yeah? 35 00:01:49,000 --> 00:01:50,080 Speaker 1: I got you, hear me, I got you? 36 00:01:50,120 --> 00:01:54,320 Speaker 2: Okay. They abolished the emergency, they abolished substitute, they abolished 37 00:01:54,320 --> 00:01:57,240 Speaker 2: replacement levees, and and and we didn't have too much 38 00:01:57,280 --> 00:02:02,240 Speaker 2: problem with that, because replacement levees confuse voters replace it 39 00:02:02,360 --> 00:02:07,880 Speaker 2: with what substitute levees confused voters substitute for what emergency 40 00:02:07,960 --> 00:02:12,320 Speaker 2: levees have been abused. There's emergency levees that have remained 41 00:02:12,360 --> 00:02:15,840 Speaker 2: in effect for over ten years. That's not an emergency, 42 00:02:16,120 --> 00:02:19,200 Speaker 2: so we don't have a problem with that. But we 43 00:02:19,320 --> 00:02:23,960 Speaker 2: did recommend that we redefine emergency levees, allow them to 44 00:02:24,200 --> 00:02:27,480 Speaker 2: exist for no more than five years, limit them to 45 00:02:28,880 --> 00:02:31,800 Speaker 2: school districts that are about to go into fiscal watch 46 00:02:31,919 --> 00:02:35,359 Speaker 2: or fistal emergency, and acts of God, you know, things 47 00:02:35,440 --> 00:02:40,160 Speaker 2: like floods and tornadoes. Restrict it strictly to that. That's 48 00:02:40,200 --> 00:02:43,920 Speaker 2: one thing we recommended. The other thing that the legislature 49 00:02:43,960 --> 00:02:46,880 Speaker 2: in their zeal to override the wine on this for 50 00:02:47,000 --> 00:02:51,200 Speaker 2: God is there is a law that passed in twenty thirteen. 51 00:02:51,400 --> 00:02:54,480 Speaker 2: I was very involved with it that says that we 52 00:02:54,639 --> 00:02:58,080 Speaker 2: will only pay the twelve and a half percent credit 53 00:02:58,600 --> 00:03:03,160 Speaker 2: on your property tax for levees that were passed before 54 00:03:03,600 --> 00:03:08,720 Speaker 2: twenty thirteen and levees that were renewed after that time. 55 00:03:08,840 --> 00:03:13,000 Speaker 2: Of those levees, well, when you abolish these levees, you're 56 00:03:13,040 --> 00:03:15,600 Speaker 2: cutting off the right of the folks to get there 57 00:03:15,639 --> 00:03:19,240 Speaker 2: twelve and a half percent on those levees that predated 58 00:03:19,280 --> 00:03:22,400 Speaker 2: twenty thirteen, and that results in a ninety six million 59 00:03:22,440 --> 00:03:27,320 Speaker 2: dollars state wide tax, which is not what the legislature 60 00:03:27,440 --> 00:03:30,080 Speaker 2: probably intended. So they're going to have to fix that, 61 00:03:30,240 --> 00:03:32,400 Speaker 2: I think down the road. But let me take a 62 00:03:32,440 --> 00:03:36,360 Speaker 2: step back spot, because people need to understand something. The 63 00:03:36,480 --> 00:03:39,520 Speaker 2: number one problem here is that real estate values have 64 00:03:39,640 --> 00:03:43,280 Speaker 2: greatly outstripped the general rate of inflation. Your wife is 65 00:03:43,320 --> 00:03:45,640 Speaker 2: in real estate. She knows that like the back of 66 00:03:45,640 --> 00:03:49,120 Speaker 2: her hand. And normally that's not much of a problem 67 00:03:49,200 --> 00:03:54,000 Speaker 2: because a nineteen seventy six law says that for most 68 00:03:54,080 --> 00:04:00,800 Speaker 2: voted levees, when a levee passes in all the millage 69 00:04:01,000 --> 00:04:05,680 Speaker 2: backs as values increase, so that the levee produces no 70 00:04:05,800 --> 00:04:08,640 Speaker 2: more money in the current year than it did in 71 00:04:08,680 --> 00:04:11,800 Speaker 2: the year in which it was originally passed. That's true 72 00:04:11,840 --> 00:04:16,360 Speaker 2: for most levees, but there are two kinds of property 73 00:04:16,440 --> 00:04:20,360 Speaker 2: tax levees that don't have that feature. One is, in 74 00:04:20,400 --> 00:04:25,680 Speaker 2: our constitution, each county gets ten mills of unvoted millage 75 00:04:25,800 --> 00:04:31,159 Speaker 2: to divide up among their schools, cities, township counties. That's 76 00:04:31,279 --> 00:04:35,839 Speaker 2: unvoted millage, and that does go up as property values increased. 77 00:04:35,920 --> 00:04:41,040 Speaker 2: The levee money goes up in lockstep with those valuation increases. 78 00:04:41,480 --> 00:04:46,960 Speaker 2: That's one one problem. The other problem is schools are 79 00:04:47,600 --> 00:04:52,080 Speaker 2: when they collect fewer than twenty mills of taxes for schools. 80 00:04:52,160 --> 00:04:56,160 Speaker 2: All of those mills under twenty mills grow in lockstep 81 00:04:56,440 --> 00:05:01,240 Speaker 2: with property value increases, and once you get over twenty mils, 82 00:05:01,640 --> 00:05:05,599 Speaker 2: none of the mills grow with inflation. So schools have 83 00:05:05,680 --> 00:05:08,479 Speaker 2: an incentive to try to stay below that twenty mils. 84 00:05:09,000 --> 00:05:12,880 Speaker 2: But and when they do again, all of that millage 85 00:05:12,880 --> 00:05:18,080 Speaker 2: grows with increasing property valuations. We in the House and 86 00:05:18,160 --> 00:05:20,279 Speaker 2: the Senate seem to be on pretty much the same 87 00:05:20,360 --> 00:05:23,400 Speaker 2: page about one good idea to deal with that, and 88 00:05:23,480 --> 00:05:28,560 Speaker 2: that is to say, when when property values increase at 89 00:05:28,600 --> 00:05:32,240 Speaker 2: a rate faster than the general rate of inflation, the 90 00:05:32,400 --> 00:05:36,120 Speaker 2: general rate of inflation will service a cap on the 91 00:05:36,400 --> 00:05:40,320 Speaker 2: extent to which those higher property values may be reflected 92 00:05:40,360 --> 00:05:43,480 Speaker 2: in your tax bill, so that if inflation is five percent, 93 00:05:43,839 --> 00:05:46,960 Speaker 2: the property night go up fifteen perca, they would be 94 00:05:47,040 --> 00:05:49,720 Speaker 2: capped at five per sack. That is a bill called 95 00:05:49,720 --> 00:05:52,839 Speaker 2: House Till one eighty six, and we endorsed that in 96 00:05:52,880 --> 00:05:56,680 Speaker 2: the form in which it existed in June. It hasn't 97 00:05:56,720 --> 00:05:59,800 Speaker 2: passed yet, but just a week or two ago they 98 00:06:00,120 --> 00:06:03,760 Speaker 2: mended it in the House and tried to reach back 99 00:06:04,200 --> 00:06:08,440 Speaker 2: and claw back from the schools one point seven billion 100 00:06:08,560 --> 00:06:13,440 Speaker 2: dollars that the schools had collected and spent over the 101 00:06:13,520 --> 00:06:16,359 Speaker 2: years twenty two, twenty three, twenty four and twenty five. 102 00:06:16,920 --> 00:06:20,120 Speaker 2: And we haven't taken a position on that, but obviously 103 00:06:20,160 --> 00:06:23,800 Speaker 2: that's posed of the grave degree of problem for the schools. 104 00:06:23,839 --> 00:06:26,960 Speaker 2: I mean, they lawfully collected the money, they lawfully spent 105 00:06:27,000 --> 00:06:30,720 Speaker 2: the money. Why are they being made to pay this 106 00:06:30,960 --> 00:06:33,880 Speaker 2: back to the property owners, even though the property owners 107 00:06:33,920 --> 00:06:37,560 Speaker 2: I'm sure would love it. So that is the fundamental problem. 108 00:06:37,839 --> 00:06:41,120 Speaker 2: Now you hit on something else that's very important. Senior 109 00:06:41,200 --> 00:06:45,279 Speaker 2: citizens in particular are having a hard time because their 110 00:06:45,279 --> 00:06:49,840 Speaker 2: house is paid for, they've got no kids in schools anymore, 111 00:06:50,080 --> 00:06:53,120 Speaker 2: they're on a fixed income, and they're being hit with 112 00:06:53,200 --> 00:06:57,320 Speaker 2: these property tax increases. Well, there's really only three things 113 00:06:57,320 --> 00:07:00,159 Speaker 2: that you can do to help those needing people. You 114 00:07:00,200 --> 00:07:05,960 Speaker 2: can either expand the existing state homestead exemption, which allows 115 00:07:06,040 --> 00:07:10,560 Speaker 2: folks to exempt part of their valuation from taxes. Or 116 00:07:10,920 --> 00:07:13,840 Speaker 2: you can come up with a tax deferral plan, which 117 00:07:13,880 --> 00:07:18,160 Speaker 2: some states do, which says you can defer payment of 118 00:07:18,280 --> 00:07:21,880 Speaker 2: some of those taxes until you die or until you 119 00:07:21,960 --> 00:07:24,760 Speaker 2: sell the home. Okay, that's the second thing you can 120 00:07:24,800 --> 00:07:27,680 Speaker 2: do to help those needing people. And then the third 121 00:07:27,760 --> 00:07:30,680 Speaker 2: thing you can do is pass something called a circuit breaker, 122 00:07:31,120 --> 00:07:36,680 Speaker 2: which says that when your property tax exceeds a specified 123 00:07:36,760 --> 00:07:40,760 Speaker 2: percentage of your income, you don't have to pay any 124 00:07:40,800 --> 00:07:42,320 Speaker 2: more than that. 125 00:07:42,240 --> 00:07:45,320 Speaker 1: Percentagetcha, Okay, Now, thirty. 126 00:07:45,000 --> 00:07:48,960 Speaker 2: States have done a circuit breaker, Ohio has not. In 127 00:07:49,000 --> 00:07:53,600 Speaker 2: our recommendations, we recommended a modest expansion of the home 128 00:07:53,640 --> 00:07:59,360 Speaker 2: set exemption. We recommended initiation of a modest tax deferral program. 129 00:08:00,040 --> 00:08:02,760 Speaker 2: We also threw in a recommendation that when the state 130 00:08:03,680 --> 00:08:06,480 Speaker 2: feels like they can afford it, they should consider a 131 00:08:06,560 --> 00:08:10,680 Speaker 2: broader exemption of the homestead or expansion of the homestead exemption, 132 00:08:11,040 --> 00:08:14,080 Speaker 2: and they should consider adoption of a circuit breaker. The 133 00:08:14,160 --> 00:08:18,240 Speaker 2: state legislature, my friends and colleagues, and the legislature, they 134 00:08:18,240 --> 00:08:21,320 Speaker 2: don't want to spend any state money on solving this problem. 135 00:08:21,680 --> 00:08:25,000 Speaker 2: And their attitude is, Hey, we're paying the twelve and 136 00:08:25,080 --> 00:08:28,240 Speaker 2: a half percent credit on levi's the past prior to 137 00:08:28,280 --> 00:08:32,560 Speaker 2: twenty thirteen and renewals thereof, and we're paying for the 138 00:08:32,600 --> 00:08:35,800 Speaker 2: existing homestead exemption, and we're not getting any credits for 139 00:08:35,880 --> 00:08:38,360 Speaker 2: that from the voters, So why should we spend more 140 00:08:38,360 --> 00:08:41,680 Speaker 2: state money on it? Well, I understand that point, but 141 00:08:42,120 --> 00:08:46,719 Speaker 2: again I'm concerned about those senior citizens. And you can say, well, 142 00:08:46,800 --> 00:08:49,480 Speaker 2: let the county do it on their dime. Well, the 143 00:08:49,520 --> 00:08:52,600 Speaker 2: problem is not all counties in Ohio have the financial 144 00:08:52,679 --> 00:08:55,200 Speaker 2: whereboom to do that, right, That's why it should be 145 00:08:55,240 --> 00:08:56,640 Speaker 2: done at the state level. Okay. 146 00:08:57,400 --> 00:08:59,400 Speaker 1: He is Bill sites on the show as Marcelonia on 147 00:08:59,400 --> 00:09:02,240 Speaker 1: seven hundred. Well, they're very complicated but important issue of 148 00:09:02,280 --> 00:09:04,520 Speaker 1: property tax reform. He is a co chair of the 149 00:09:04,520 --> 00:09:06,960 Speaker 1: working group test by the governor to come up with 150 00:09:07,000 --> 00:09:10,320 Speaker 1: a plan twenty main recommendations here and certainly can't get 151 00:09:10,360 --> 00:09:12,200 Speaker 1: to all twenty and all twenty and not all twenty 152 00:09:12,240 --> 00:09:13,960 Speaker 1: are not out in the weeds. The number of these are. 153 00:09:14,240 --> 00:09:16,240 Speaker 1: And we're talking about the important facets, the fact your 154 00:09:16,280 --> 00:09:18,920 Speaker 1: bottom line. You know, you mentioned seniors and okay, I 155 00:09:19,000 --> 00:09:22,040 Speaker 1: no seniors, fixed income and people are afraid they're going 156 00:09:22,080 --> 00:09:23,800 Speaker 1: to lose their home that they've raised, their family and 157 00:09:23,840 --> 00:09:25,679 Speaker 1: et cetera. But at the same time, it feels like 158 00:09:25,720 --> 00:09:27,760 Speaker 1: a lot of this comes at the expense of young 159 00:09:27,800 --> 00:09:30,240 Speaker 1: people with kids. We hear about seniors and fixed incomes. 160 00:09:30,280 --> 00:09:32,959 Speaker 1: We never hear about young people going, Hey, what about 161 00:09:33,080 --> 00:09:35,440 Speaker 1: some a couple that has to work two jobs or 162 00:09:35,480 --> 00:09:38,280 Speaker 1: more three or four jobs between the two of them, 163 00:09:38,760 --> 00:09:41,880 Speaker 1: and daycare costs. And you know, we look around the 164 00:09:41,920 --> 00:09:45,800 Speaker 1: country and wonder why we are not replacing old with young. 165 00:09:45,880 --> 00:09:48,000 Speaker 1: You know, young people are not having families and having 166 00:09:48,080 --> 00:09:51,600 Speaker 1: kids anymore, largely because they can't afford them. Doesn't this 167 00:09:51,640 --> 00:09:54,520 Speaker 1: further exacerbate that. I understand the need that seniors have, 168 00:09:54,640 --> 00:09:57,960 Speaker 1: but often in politics and we don't talk about younger families, 169 00:09:58,240 --> 00:10:01,800 Speaker 1: which we really need to drive the economic engine and 170 00:10:01,960 --> 00:10:04,280 Speaker 1: also support us an old age. If fewer people are 171 00:10:04,280 --> 00:10:08,280 Speaker 1: having kids, that's bad for seniors overall. 172 00:10:08,600 --> 00:10:10,679 Speaker 2: Yeah. Well, you know, you make a very good point, 173 00:10:10,720 --> 00:10:13,560 Speaker 2: but every time you try to expand the pool of 174 00:10:13,640 --> 00:10:18,199 Speaker 2: people who should be getting property tax relief, you're dramatically 175 00:10:18,200 --> 00:10:21,360 Speaker 2: increasing the cost. And those younger people do have the 176 00:10:21,400 --> 00:10:22,600 Speaker 2: ability still to work. 177 00:10:22,720 --> 00:10:26,320 Speaker 1: That's a problem with subsidy, right, Okay. 178 00:10:26,400 --> 00:10:31,040 Speaker 2: I mean, you know, obviously, property taxes have been around 179 00:10:31,040 --> 00:10:34,280 Speaker 2: in Ohio since the eighteen thirty They account for twenty 180 00:10:34,280 --> 00:10:37,280 Speaker 2: three point nine billion dollars a year. All of that 181 00:10:37,320 --> 00:10:41,240 Speaker 2: goes to local government services. Only the state gets zero 182 00:10:41,600 --> 00:10:46,280 Speaker 2: from property taxes. And to abolish property taxes as there 183 00:10:46,360 --> 00:10:49,480 Speaker 2: is a move of what to do to a still 184 00:10:49,520 --> 00:10:53,600 Speaker 2: advised constitutional amendment to abolish them would mean we would 185 00:10:53,640 --> 00:10:57,120 Speaker 2: need a ten point two percent statewide flat income tax 186 00:10:57,600 --> 00:11:01,400 Speaker 2: if we wanted to replace property taxes income right or 187 00:11:01,800 --> 00:11:05,800 Speaker 2: a or a statewide sales tax rate of about twenty percent, 188 00:11:06,280 --> 00:11:09,440 Speaker 2: which is neither of those are remotely feasible. And so 189 00:11:09,679 --> 00:11:13,120 Speaker 2: people need to consider before you jump on the bandwagon 190 00:11:13,160 --> 00:11:16,120 Speaker 2: and say I don't want to pay any more property taxes. Right, well, 191 00:11:16,559 --> 00:11:19,200 Speaker 2: either you're going to put every local government out of business, 192 00:11:19,280 --> 00:11:22,000 Speaker 2: which is not a good idea. Your school's out of business, 193 00:11:22,240 --> 00:11:25,520 Speaker 2: or you're going to have to have some replacement source 194 00:11:25,520 --> 00:11:29,880 Speaker 2: of revenue that is probably worse than the property tax 195 00:11:29,920 --> 00:11:33,079 Speaker 2: that you're paying now. I mean, a twenty percent statewide 196 00:11:33,120 --> 00:11:36,640 Speaker 2: sales tax would kill the economy in Hamilton County. Everybody 197 00:11:36,640 --> 00:11:39,200 Speaker 2: would drive over the river to Kentucky to buy every share. 198 00:11:39,320 --> 00:11:43,280 Speaker 1: Sure, absolutely absolutely. I will also point out there's other districts, 199 00:11:43,480 --> 00:11:45,840 Speaker 1: I know, Kings and many others are moving towards just 200 00:11:45,880 --> 00:11:48,040 Speaker 1: going hey, you know what, we're just gonna We're going 201 00:11:48,080 --> 00:11:50,520 Speaker 1: to propose a one percent or whatever the percentage is, 202 00:11:50,600 --> 00:11:54,960 Speaker 1: let's say, uh income tax, and you know that absolves 203 00:11:55,040 --> 00:11:57,520 Speaker 1: people who aren't working unless retirees are close to retirement 204 00:11:57,559 --> 00:12:00,320 Speaker 1: from paying that sharing that burden. So, and you know 205 00:12:00,400 --> 00:12:01,880 Speaker 1: in lou of this too. One of the things we're 206 00:12:01,920 --> 00:12:04,360 Speaker 1: looking at is just saying, okay, well, property taxes are 207 00:12:04,400 --> 00:12:06,280 Speaker 1: a mass, why don't we just get our money from 208 00:12:06,520 --> 00:12:07,360 Speaker 1: income taxes? 209 00:12:08,120 --> 00:12:10,640 Speaker 2: Well, schools, you know, and schools have the ability to 210 00:12:10,720 --> 00:12:15,160 Speaker 2: place before their voters and income tax. That's been around 211 00:12:15,160 --> 00:12:16,840 Speaker 2: for a number of years now, and a number of 212 00:12:16,840 --> 00:12:20,120 Speaker 2: school distis have done it. Perhaps that is a somewhat 213 00:12:20,200 --> 00:12:23,720 Speaker 2: viable for schools. But townships they have no ability to 214 00:12:23,720 --> 00:12:26,640 Speaker 2: do income tax. Libraries have no ability to do that. 215 00:12:26,960 --> 00:12:29,520 Speaker 2: The zoo is no ability to do that. Your mental 216 00:12:29,600 --> 00:12:35,040 Speaker 2: health and developmental disabilities services don't, your senior citizen services don't. 217 00:12:35,320 --> 00:12:38,439 Speaker 2: So the income tax for schools is a partial solution 218 00:12:38,960 --> 00:12:41,880 Speaker 2: and one that might be looked at because remember, we 219 00:12:42,000 --> 00:12:45,800 Speaker 2: have reduced the state income tax over the last twenty 220 00:12:45,800 --> 00:12:49,480 Speaker 2: five years from north of seven percent down to the 221 00:12:49,520 --> 00:12:53,120 Speaker 2: current level of two point seven five percent. We have 222 00:12:53,200 --> 00:12:56,160 Speaker 2: the lowest state income tax rate of any of our 223 00:12:56,200 --> 00:12:59,319 Speaker 2: sister states here in the Midwest. And so because state 224 00:12:59,400 --> 00:13:03,280 Speaker 2: income tax have gone down, maybe maybe the voters in 225 00:13:03,320 --> 00:13:07,679 Speaker 2: these school districts might buy it's propitious to have a 226 00:13:08,960 --> 00:13:14,080 Speaker 2: local income tax. Personally, I think income taxes are worth 227 00:13:14,160 --> 00:13:18,360 Speaker 2: some property taxes. But that's just me, okay, you know, 228 00:13:18,440 --> 00:13:23,240 Speaker 2: and we have to consider that it's not a complete 229 00:13:23,240 --> 00:13:26,760 Speaker 2: solution for the reasons I just gave so many jurisdictions 230 00:13:26,800 --> 00:13:31,280 Speaker 2: dependent on property tax cannot do an income tax, and frank, 231 00:13:31,360 --> 00:13:34,960 Speaker 2: they don't want to. We are doing township no interest 232 00:13:35,040 --> 00:13:37,360 Speaker 2: in doing an income tax when I was on that 233 00:13:37,440 --> 00:13:39,160 Speaker 2: board for seven years in the nineties. 234 00:13:39,240 --> 00:13:41,560 Speaker 1: Bill Sides one. One final question here on the on 235 00:13:41,600 --> 00:13:45,200 Speaker 1: the Budget Commission powers. We talked about the Budget Commission 236 00:13:45,200 --> 00:13:48,439 Speaker 1: to come in and that they balance committee. They they 237 00:13:48,440 --> 00:13:51,000 Speaker 1: have the authority to reduce what are you calling unnecessary 238 00:13:51,080 --> 00:13:55,880 Speaker 1: excessive levees, uh with respecting voter intent, But these are 239 00:13:55,880 --> 00:13:58,240 Speaker 1: the local We talk about local control all the time. 240 00:13:58,280 --> 00:14:01,560 Speaker 1: This is the ultra localis definition of local control is 241 00:14:01,600 --> 00:14:04,800 Speaker 1: that voters approve these levies specifically because they trusted the 242 00:14:04,840 --> 00:14:07,240 Speaker 1: taxing entity's assessment of need. How do you balance that 243 00:14:07,280 --> 00:14:08,160 Speaker 1: with what's happening here? 244 00:14:08,960 --> 00:14:12,640 Speaker 2: Well, what we've done, Okay. The legislation that the General 245 00:14:12,640 --> 00:14:16,560 Speaker 2: Assembly passed said that the Budget Commission, consisting of the 246 00:14:16,559 --> 00:14:20,160 Speaker 2: county Treasurer, the county auditors, and the county prosecutor can 247 00:14:20,240 --> 00:14:23,400 Speaker 2: reduce the millage of any levee that they find to 248 00:14:23,440 --> 00:14:28,080 Speaker 2: be unnecessary or accessive. They never defined unnecessary, they never 249 00:14:28,120 --> 00:14:31,200 Speaker 2: defined accessive. That means you could have eighty eight different 250 00:14:31,240 --> 00:14:34,840 Speaker 2: standards across the eighty eight different counties. They also said 251 00:14:34,880 --> 00:14:38,880 Speaker 2: they also failed to say that the Commission has to 252 00:14:38,960 --> 00:14:41,640 Speaker 2: keep hands off at least for a period of time 253 00:14:41,680 --> 00:14:44,480 Speaker 2: after that levee is passed by the voters, because to 254 00:14:44,520 --> 00:14:47,400 Speaker 2: do otherwise is basically to flap the voters right in 255 00:14:47,440 --> 00:14:49,880 Speaker 2: the face saying you were too stupid to vote for 256 00:14:50,080 --> 00:14:52,440 Speaker 2: We're going to undo what you just voted for. And 257 00:14:52,480 --> 00:14:55,400 Speaker 2: so what we did on our task force is we 258 00:14:55,480 --> 00:14:59,360 Speaker 2: came up with a good type definition of unnecessary and 259 00:14:59,480 --> 00:15:04,000 Speaker 2: a good definition of excessive in both cases, provided by 260 00:15:04,040 --> 00:15:08,960 Speaker 2: our County Auditors Association statewide, and we said the Budget 261 00:15:08,960 --> 00:15:14,080 Speaker 2: Commission cannot reduce levees for the first five years after 262 00:15:14,160 --> 00:15:17,880 Speaker 2: they initially passed, or for the first two years in 263 00:15:17,920 --> 00:15:20,640 Speaker 2: the case of renewal. And so there'll be that poling 264 00:15:20,680 --> 00:15:23,080 Speaker 2: off period, because how wealth are you going to know 265 00:15:23,600 --> 00:15:27,400 Speaker 2: whether it's excessive or unnecessary until it plays out, see 266 00:15:27,400 --> 00:15:31,200 Speaker 2: what I'm saying. So we're trying to again, this is 267 00:15:31,200 --> 00:15:34,800 Speaker 2: an example spot of where we're trying to refine what 268 00:15:34,920 --> 00:15:38,400 Speaker 2: the legislature has done. We're not trying to say forget it, 269 00:15:38,440 --> 00:15:41,440 Speaker 2: don't do it. We're simply saying, there's going to be 270 00:15:41,440 --> 00:15:44,840 Speaker 2: a few bells and whistles, a few guardrails around these 271 00:15:44,880 --> 00:15:48,880 Speaker 2: new and expanded powers of three county wide officials to 272 00:15:49,080 --> 00:15:53,080 Speaker 2: exercise control over school levees and township levees and park 273 00:15:53,200 --> 00:15:56,160 Speaker 2: levees that they have nothing to do with. So you know, 274 00:15:56,240 --> 00:15:59,480 Speaker 2: we're just trying to balance that against the will of 275 00:15:59,480 --> 00:16:00,800 Speaker 2: the voters, is what we're trying. 276 00:16:00,800 --> 00:16:03,840 Speaker 1: And that that is indeed the billion dollar question because 277 00:16:03,840 --> 00:16:05,680 Speaker 1: something to listen, this is going man. There's a lot 278 00:16:05,720 --> 00:16:08,320 Speaker 1: of moving parts at bill sites laid out and eloquently 279 00:16:08,320 --> 00:16:10,880 Speaker 1: of course, as always too, but lots we don't understand. 280 00:16:11,840 --> 00:16:15,000 Speaker 1: And I'm hoping that gets sorted out during a debate 281 00:16:15,040 --> 00:16:16,800 Speaker 1: on both sides of this in the Senate of the House, 282 00:16:16,800 --> 00:16:18,320 Speaker 1: and the Governor's going to have a say in this 283 00:16:18,360 --> 00:16:21,240 Speaker 1: thing too. So what is the timeline before this shakes out? 284 00:16:22,240 --> 00:16:25,040 Speaker 2: Well, I know the House and Senate our team to 285 00:16:25,080 --> 00:16:28,800 Speaker 2: do something definitive before the end of the year. There 286 00:16:28,880 --> 00:16:32,520 Speaker 2: is nothing that can be done that would provide any 287 00:16:33,160 --> 00:16:37,440 Speaker 2: relief prior to the second half twenty twenty six property 288 00:16:37,480 --> 00:16:40,360 Speaker 2: tax bills. That's just a matter of timing. You can't 289 00:16:40,360 --> 00:16:43,880 Speaker 2: do anything. I would my focus would be how do 290 00:16:43,960 --> 00:16:47,480 Speaker 2: we fix the system going forward rather than trying to 291 00:16:47,600 --> 00:16:51,320 Speaker 2: recreate history by going backward. Yeah, and so you know, 292 00:16:51,440 --> 00:16:54,400 Speaker 2: I mean, is this a problem, yes, and we should 293 00:16:54,400 --> 00:16:58,360 Speaker 2: fix it going forward. And that was what our group recommended. 294 00:16:58,400 --> 00:17:01,840 Speaker 2: Mostly of our recommendation, we had a great group. It 295 00:17:02,040 --> 00:17:07,320 Speaker 2: was a county auditors, it was school superintendents, the county commissioners, 296 00:17:07,480 --> 00:17:12,560 Speaker 2: county treasurer, you know, we had the mayor, We had 297 00:17:12,560 --> 00:17:15,280 Speaker 2: a mayor in there, a couple of business people in there. 298 00:17:15,520 --> 00:17:17,399 Speaker 2: So it was a good balanced group of people that 299 00:17:17,520 --> 00:17:21,360 Speaker 2: actually are in charge of implementing the whole property tax system. 300 00:17:21,680 --> 00:17:25,159 Speaker 2: And so their expertise really was great and guided us 301 00:17:25,480 --> 00:17:29,080 Speaker 2: very very strongly in the work we did. We met 302 00:17:29,160 --> 00:17:32,880 Speaker 2: every week for two months, every Thursday, for at least 303 00:17:32,880 --> 00:17:36,920 Speaker 2: two hours at a time, and heard from a lot 304 00:17:36,920 --> 00:17:40,240 Speaker 2: of folks that got a lot of written testimony, a 305 00:17:40,240 --> 00:17:43,399 Speaker 2: lot of oral testimony, and did our best away through it. 306 00:17:43,480 --> 00:17:47,440 Speaker 2: On that very short timeline that Mike DeWine gave us. 307 00:17:46,720 --> 00:17:49,639 Speaker 2: He gave us till September thirty. 308 00:17:50,119 --> 00:17:54,600 Speaker 1: Yeah, you and turn that in. What's going to happen 309 00:17:54,640 --> 00:17:57,400 Speaker 1: now is the great debate will continue here in pieces 310 00:17:57,400 --> 00:17:59,399 Speaker 1: of this and we'll get debated and I'm sure we'll 311 00:17:59,440 --> 00:18:02,280 Speaker 1: discuss this in the future too. But yeah, it's been 312 00:18:02,320 --> 00:18:04,680 Speaker 1: an interesting few months for you, I know, co chairing 313 00:18:04,720 --> 00:18:07,120 Speaker 1: this group. Anyway, he's built sites of Green Township. Thanks 314 00:18:07,160 --> 00:18:08,680 Speaker 1: again for coming on the show, appreciate it. 315 00:18:09,359 --> 00:18:12,160 Speaker 2: Happy to be with you. Better. 316 00:18:12,840 --> 00:18:15,200 Speaker 1: I'm working on that. You work on the property tax 317 00:18:15,280 --> 00:18:15,560 Speaker 1: how's that? 318 00:18:15,840 --> 00:18:17,119 Speaker 2: Yeah? There you go? All right. 319 00:18:17,280 --> 00:18:18,879 Speaker 1: I gotta feel in my foot it's going to be 320 00:18:18,880 --> 00:18:22,080 Speaker 1: better before we figure out property taxes. That's your damn sure. Anyway, Well, 321 00:18:22,119 --> 00:18:24,240 Speaker 1: let's get a news update in. Did that confuse you? 322 00:18:24,800 --> 00:18:27,080 Speaker 1: Probably did. It's a lot going on there and a 323 00:18:27,080 --> 00:18:31,520 Speaker 1: lot of millages and uh clawbacks and levy structure changes 324 00:18:31,600 --> 00:18:34,679 Speaker 1: and words like unnecessary and excessive kind of makes your 325 00:18:34,720 --> 00:18:37,040 Speaker 1: head swim. But the good news is this will get 326 00:18:37,040 --> 00:18:40,080 Speaker 1: that parceled out in pieces and will debate each each 327 00:18:40,080 --> 00:18:42,400 Speaker 1: element of this at some point to figure out why 328 00:18:42,440 --> 00:18:44,760 Speaker 1: property taxes are so screwed up, and how we can 329 00:18:44,760 --> 00:18:47,320 Speaker 1: get some sanity back to what we pay Scott's Loan 330 00:18:47,400 --> 00:18:48,560 Speaker 1: Show seven hundred ww