Posts Tagged ‘taxes’

FriMar15

IN OUR SCHOOLS: Local superintendents reach out

Posted by rrichardson March 15th, 2013, 11:20 am Post a Comment

Michael D. Clark reports:

It’s a weekday afternoon, but the leader of Mason Schools isn’t anywhere near a school. Instead, she’s sitting on an ottoman in Diane Pfennig’s living room.

Gathered around Mason Superintendent Gail Kist-Kline are a half-dozen school mothers, all making some history as this top education official of their Warren County community pioneers a very personal way of reaching out to them.

It’s a scene increasingly common as superintendents across Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky are creatively reaching out to their residents to better connect, persuade and enlist support in these budget-conscious times.

Poll: How do you want to communicate with your superintendent?
Live results: See how other readers are responding

Years of stagnant or lagging state funding are fueling the trend. While Ohio Gov. John Kasich’s proposed school funding plan is generally well-received – 22 of Southwest Ohio’s 49 school districts would receive more money – lean budgets continue to be the norm.

Mason, which has consistently been among Ohio’s top 10 academic performers the past decade, once boasted a school levy winning streak that dated to 1970. But that streak ended in 2011 when residents rejected by a wide margin an operating tax hike, resulting in millions of dollars in school budget cuts.

(more…)

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MonMar11

Mason High School is the biggest… best?

Posted by rrichardson March 11th, 2013, 10:28 am Post a Comment

Michael D. Clark reports:

Brooke Middleton glances up from her lunch in the gigantic cafeteria of Mason High School and mulls over a fact of life about attending Ohio’s largest high school.

“I don’t know if I’ll ever recognize all my classmates,” the high-school junior says about the other 3,330 students joining her each school day under the roof of the expansive Warren County school. “There are always some people you pass in the hallways that you’ve never seen before.”

Each school day, more students congregate in Mason’s massive high school building than the total district enrollment for nearly two-thirds of all school systems in Southwest Ohio and Northern Kentucky. And all those Mason students – according to the Ohio Department of Education – mean their high school is the most populous in the state.

Mason officials embrace the enormousness they created. They say it’s part of their decades-old strategy of “bigger is better” that has three of its five schools – high school, middle school and intermediate school – on a single, 73-acre campus along South Mason-Montgomery Road.

They point to the district’s consistent Top 10 academic ratings among Ohio’s 614 school systems and the high school’s long-running “Excellent” state ranking. Last month, Mason High School celebrated a record number of National Merit finalists – 19 – second in the region, behind Cincinnati’s Walnut Hills High School.

(more…)

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FriFeb8

Tepid reception for new Kasich tax plan

Posted by rrichardson February 8th, 2013, 7:49 am Post a Comment

‘There’s too much taxes,’ says Cliff Kerr, who owns a barber shop. / The Enquirer/Paul McKibben

Paul McKibben reports:

At Cliff’s Barber Shop in Morrow, with Fox News Channel playing in the background, Ohio Gov. John Kasich’s proposal to tax services such as haircuts isn’t popular.

“It’s ridiculous, to tell you the truth,” said owner Cliff Kerr, a Republican who voted for Kasich in 2010.

“It’s just more government; something we need less of. …

“There’s too much taxes.”

Kerr, of Blanchester, charges $13 for a haircut. He expects he’ll have to pass the tax onto his customers.

Kasich is proposing to expand Ohio’s sales tax to 81 previously untaxed services.

The proposal also cuts state income taxes by roughly $2 billion a year, which would cause a fundamental shift in how state government is funded – from the income tax to the sales tax.

After three years, the new setup would deliver an overall tax break of $1.4 billion, the administration says.

He also wants to take over counties’ rates to prevent too big of a windfall.

If the plan unveiled Tuesday is approved by the General Assembly, counties would see increased revenue for three years starting with fiscal year 2014, which begins July 1.

Counties would receive at least a 10 percent increase in revenue during the first 19 months compared with collections over the next few months.

Still, interviews Thursday with residents and government officials across Southwest Ohio indicate largely a wait-and-see-approach.

Butler County officials aren’t sure how much additional sales tax they’ll see, although the Ohio Department of Taxation pegs it at $3.2 million a year.

County Administrator Charles Young said commissioners have decided that any additional money would be spent on several issues put off for the last five years while they tightened spending because of the economy.

“There have been little to no capital expenditures,” Young said. “There has been a significant amount of deferred maintenance on our facilities.”

In addition, the county will focus on reducing its $70 million debt.

The state estimates Clermont County could gain $2.2 million a year in additional sales tax.

“Until it gets rolled out, I think it’s a little too premature to talk about what we are going to do with it,” said Sukie Scheetz, director of Clermont County’s Office of Management and Budget.

Commissioners will make that decision, and Ed Humphrey, board president, said he had not yet given the matter any thought.

Warren County would get an extra $3 million per year.

But Commissioner Dave Young said he is leery of any type of new taxation on businesses and is concerned about giving up control to the sate of something that local government historically has overseen.

(more…)

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Posted in: News, Ohio, Warren County |

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TueFeb5

Kasich unveils budget plan for Ohio

Posted by rrichardson February 5th, 2013, 2:35 pm Post a Comment

Ohio Gov. John Kasich presents the fiscal year 2014-15 executive budget proposal during a news conference Monday in Columbus. / AP Photo/Jay LaPrete

Paul E. Kostyu reports:

Ohio’s governor wants to spend more money, but cut tax rates significantly over the next two years in a budget called “Jobs 2.0” he released Monday.

But the tax rate cuts would come as the sales tax would be levied on more services.

The fiscal year 2014 budget would climb 6.1 percent over current spending to $63.7 billion for all funds. Then another 4.8 increase would come the following fiscal year when the budget would reach $66.8 billion.

Even as the budget increases, Gov. John Kasich wants to reduce the state’s sales-tax rate from 5.5 percent to 5 percent. He also would slash income tax rates by 50 percent for small businesses and 20 percent on individual Ohioans. Those cuts come over three years, along with the spending cuts he implemented in the current two-year budget.

“Avoiding tax increases, combined with government restraint, has put us in a position where we can realize the fruits of our labor,” the governor said.

(more…)

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Posted in: News, Ohio |

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FriDec28

Enquirer In-Depth: Warren County debt free – and proud of it

Posted by rrichardson December 28th, 2012, 10:24 am Post a Comment

Paul McKibben reports:

As the nation teeters on a fiscal cliff due to growing deficits, Warren County sits pretty.

Warren is one of nine Ohio counties – the only one in Southwest Ohio – with no general obligation-limited tax debt as of Dec. 15, according to an Enquirer analysis of financial data provided by the Ohio Municipal Advisory Council. The other eight are generally more rural than Warren.

• Interactive map: Track Ohio counties’ debt

“Some governments prefer to pay as they go and do much less in terms of the scale of their capital projects so that they can finance a lot of current operations,” said Mark Robbins, a professor in public policy at the University of Connecticut.

That’s the approach in Warren County, which has grown rapidly as a Cincinnati exurban area and held down property taxes. It pays cash for big-ticket items, including $12 million for a new administration building in 2001. But there’s a downside. Its Common Pleas Courts Building, for example, has employees working in hallways because of overcrowding and commissioners’ refusal to go into debt for a large expansion.

Warren County’s conservative approach – “aversion to debt,” Commissioner Dave Young calls it – dates to the late 1980s, according to former Commissioner Mike Kilburn, who served 28 years on the board before leaving office two years ago.

Kilburn, a new commissioner in January 1983, recalls that the county couldn’t meet its payroll. So a bank advanced the county $500,000. Kilburn said he and other commissioners asked, “ ‘Do we need it? Can we afford it?’ And many times the answer was no. … We just ran that budget like it was our own company (and) like it was our own money.”

The county has experienced tremendous growth during this period long of tight fiscal management. Its population more than doubled from 1980 (99,276) to 2010 (212,693).

While Warren’s approach is uncommon in Ohio, Robbins said it’s not that rare for local governments to have no general obligation debt because other forms of financing are available. Those include leasing arrangements and revenue-backed debt that’s not general obligation.

(more…)

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WedDec26

Ohio schools’ budget squeeze means fewer teachers

Posted by rrichardson December 26th, 2012, 11:35 am Post a Comment

The Associated Press

Fewer dollars for Ohio schools has meant fewer teachers in classrooms in many districts across the state.

State records show the number of full-time teachers in public schools fell by nearly 6 percent over a decade ending in the 2010-11 school year, and surveys by education associations and The Associated Press indicate the downward trend has continued the last two school years. There’s little expectation of immediate improvement as districts grapple with reduced state funding, declines in property tax revenues and voter reluctance in many districts to approve new levies as households slowly recover from the Great Recession.

“There’s no bright light on the horizon,” said Damon Asbury, legislative services director for the Ohio School Boards Association. “Schools will continue to do more with less.”

The results of cuts for many schools: more students per teacher, fewer electives in areas such as foreign languages and arts classes, reduced support staff.

Gov. John Kasich and his administration have urged schools to focus their dollars on classroom instruction, raise standards such as lower-elementary reading proficiency, and to stretch their budgets by pooling resources in such areas as technology, office functions and transportation.

“We do need to manage our schools better financially,” the Republican governor said in June while signing an education reform package including a “guarantee” that third-graders will be able to read before being passed ahead. “And in addition to that, what are we teaching kids in kindergarten, first and second grade if we’re not teaching them to read?”

Ohio voters last year turned back a Republican-led effort to restrict collective bargaining rights for teachers and other public employees amid criticism of teacher unions for making it difficult to target ineffective teachers for cuts.

Personnel costs are usually the major portion of a district’s budget, so any significant budget cuts usually mean job losses. The state School Boards Association surveyed districts this year and, with 268 of the state’s 613 districts responding, found they have reduced staff by an average of 13 full-time employees each since 2008, with some big city districts cutting hundreds of employees. Cleveland Municipal Schools slashed 658 jobs, to 3,311 total, according to the survey. Lakota Local Schools, a major northern Cincinnati suburban district, says it is down to 915 full-time teachers, 236 fewer than the 2007-’08 school year.

Ohio Department of Education statistics show full-time public school teachers totaled 115,453 statewide in 2001-2002, then were at 108,888 by 2010-11 after falling to 107,924 in 2007-08 amid the national financial meltdown. Enrollment fell slightly between ‘01 and 2010-’11, by about 6,000 students, to nearly 1.75 million statewide. And recent AP sampling of 30 school districts across the state found that 24 reported fewer teachers compared to the last academic year, with four districts increasing teaching staff numbers and two staying the same.

It’s not just Ohio.

(more…)

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ThuDec20

Kasich promises lower taxes for small businesses

Posted by rrichardson December 20th, 2012, 10:15 am Post a Comment
Gov. John R. Kasich

Gov. John R. Kasich

Paul E. Kostyu reports:

Income taxes on small businesses will go down next year, Ohio’s governor promised Wednesday, but he wouldn’t say by how much.

In a year-end press conference with statehouse reporters on Wednesday, Gov. John R. Kasich said the “income tax is too darn high. We’ve lowered it, but it’s too high.”

Kasich said he will send legislation to the General Assembly to lower income taxes on small businesses, but he didn’t say how that would be accomplished or by how much. The state income tax rate ranges from 0.58 percent to 5.92 percent based on income.

Incorporated businesses pay federal income taxes, state income taxes in most states and local income taxes in some areas. The bulk of small businesses in Ohio pay their taxes through the personal income tax, according to the Kasich administration.

“We’re talking about something that’s reasonable,” he said. “We can significantly lower it to help us grow faster.”

Democrats criticized the governor for not being specific.

“The governor’s comments covered a wide range of issues,” said Senate Minority Leader Eric H. Kearney, D-North Avondale, in a statement, “but offered few specifics about his forthcoming proposals for school funding and tax reform. If he truly wants to be bipartisan, then Gov. Kasich should invite Democrats to be part of the process from beginning to end.”

(more…)

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Posted in: News, Ohio |

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MonSep24

200K-plus locals on food stamps

Posted by rrichardson September 24th, 2012, 12:34 pm Post a Comment
Mason Food Pantry

Mason Food Pantry director Gina Grown instructs pantry client Janet Dale of Mason on the best way to peel a pomegranate. The pantry serves 500-600 people a month. The Enquirer/Rachel Richardson

Benjamin Lanka and Sheila McLaughlin report:

More than 200,000 Southwest Ohioans are on food stamps – including nearly 1 in 6 Hamilton County residents.

Data analyzed by CentralOhio.com and The Enquirer show in the four Southwest Ohio counties, those local food stamp benefits now cost taxpayers $30 million a month, triple the amount five years ago.

Federal spending has become a centerpiece in this year’s presidential campaign with programs from Medicare to Social Security being targeted.

•Database: Food stamps in Ohio

Even food stamps – now called Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program – have become the target for reform as participation and costs have spiked due to the Great Recession.

Yet people working with those needing assistance said the help is critical for families struggling to find their next meal.

Nationally 1 out of every 7 Americans receives federal food assistance, according to August data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. That is after a nearly 70 percent jump in participation since 2007, a spike closely mirrored in Ohio.

In June there were nearly 1.8 million Ohioans receiving food assistance – 15 percent of its total population – costing nearly a quarter of a billion dollars per month.

The story is no better in Southwestern Ohio, where Butler, Clermont, Hamilton and Warren counties have seen tremendous leaps on their food assistance rolls in the past five years as more and more people lost their jobs to the recession.

(more…)

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MonJul9

City Council to vote on tax increase today

Posted by rrichardson July 9th, 2012, 8:51 am Post a Comment

Paul McKibben reports:

Residents – and people who just work here – could end up paying higher taxes for fire and emergency services.

Mason City Council is expected to vote today on a proposed charter amendment that would go before voters this fall.

The goal is to raise more money for the city’s 33-member fire department.

The income tax hike would affect employees at some of Greater Cincinnati’s key employers that have facilities in Mason, such as Procter & Gamble and Cintas. An estimated 21,000 people work in the city, which is home to more than 1,100 businesses.

The city already has a 1 percent income tax. It also has a 5-mill property tax levy for fire and EMS scheduled to expire at the end of 2013.

The proposed ballot measure would add a 0.12 percent income tax for fire/EMS on top of that 1 percent income tax, though only for nonresidents.

The fire income tax and the existing income tax would cost someone working 40 hours a week at $10 an hour $4.48 a week.

That’s 48 cents a week more than what he or she pays now.

Councilwoman Char Pelfrey said at a June 11 meeting she was initially concerned about “messing with” the earnings tax because the city has held it at 1 percent. She called it a minuscule increase.

“I don’t even feel bad about the fact that a nonresident would be contributing to our fire service … and EMS because once they enter into the city of Mason we are providing for them the quality service that every Mason resident has,” she said.

The city responds to about twice as many fire calls at homes and apartments than at businesses, city statistics show.

Covington resident Wayne Best works in Mason and doesn’t like the proposed fire income tax.

He called it “a tax without any kind of representation. We have no say in it. They’ve got to live within their means and provide service to what they need to,” he said.

The proposed charter amendment also includes a property tax levy for fire/EMS not to exceed 5 mills.

That would take effect Jan. 1, 2014.

It would cost the owner of a $100,000 home about an extra $18 a year if council decided to take the full 5 mills.

The 5-mill levy under the proposed charter amendment would cost a homeowner more than the existing levy because the new levy is adjusted for inflation.

The proposed charter amendment also gives City Council the flexibility to set the rate of the proposed levy and the fire income tax.

“The charter amendment seeks to come up with a long-term solution to secure funding for fire services and to do that in a way that does not increase the real estate tax rate and does not increase tax rates for Mason residents,” City Manager Eric Hansen said.

The current fire levy does not produce enough money to pay for the fire department, forcing the city to dip into a fire reserve fund, Hansen said.

By the end of this year, the reserve fund will have $3.2 million, down from $4 million at the end of last year.

The fire department’s budget runs between $5 million and $6 million.

Factors contributing to the fire department’s funding woes as outlined by Hansen in a May 11 memo to council are:

• The amount collected from residents from the fire/EMS levy hasn’t increased or been adjusted for inflation for the past nine years.

• The state eliminated the personal property tax and state reimbursement that decreased funding for the fire and EMS operations by more than 12 percent or $700,000 per year.

Hansen said the city’s fire department has reduced spending by joining the Northeast Fire Collaborative (Blue Ash, Loveland, Sharonville, Sycamore Township and Symmes Township), delaying capital purchases and using part-time employees to maintain minimum staffing levels.

Also, Hansen said the department has continued to work with Deerfield Township and other surrounding communities to improve coverage and reduce redundancies.

He said current agreements provide for mutual aid for all fire and EMS runs by dispatching the closest department regardless of jurisdiction.

Anyone who works in Mason pays the current income tax. Mason residents who work in another community with a 1 percent income tax don’t pay Mason’s income tax, according to Hansen.

If voters reject the charter amendment this fall, Hansen said, “We reduce our services or we stabilize our revenues. And council would have to determine whether they want to go back and just change the services. … Or they go back and look at other revenue alternatives.”

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TueApr17

Deadline today for filing taxes

Posted by rrichardson April 17th, 2012, 9:25 am Post a Comment

Most area post offices are staying open until midnight today so you can make the deadline to file your federal and state income taxes.

While April 15 is typically the tax-filing deadline, taxpayers got a two day reprieve this year.

If you don’t plan to file your taxes yet, the extension request still is required to be in the mail by midnight.

The IRS extension form is 4868, and you can get it from the IRS.gov website.

While this gives you an additional six months to file, anything you owe on your 2011 taxes is due now. Send in a check with the extension form.

Mason income tax returns must be postmarked or dropped in the city drop box by  today. The city drop box is the black box at the end of the passenger drop-off drive in front of the Mason Municipal Center, 6000 Mason-Montgomery Road.

Residents can mail their state or federal returns at the postal unit in the Mason Community Center or via the post office mailbox in front of the Mason Municipal Center.  Mail is picked up at 3 p.m. there on weekdays.

Mason Public Information Officer Jennifer Trepal cautions residents that letters mailed after 3 p.m. via these two locations will be postmarked the next regular business day, so care should be taken when mailing returns on Tuesday.  Same-day postmarks are available until 5 p.m. at the Mason Post Office at 6338 Snider Road.

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