Dear Bloomfield Residents,
We are all suffering under the continuing tax burden placed upon us by the current administration.
In the 10 years of McCarthy's reign, we have seen our property taxes increase about 110%.
That is completely unacceptable. Increased taxes, decrease in services.
The Bloomfield Taxpayers Association will be hosting a workshop with an attorney so you can find out how to appeal your property taxes.
Last year there was an unprecedented number of appeals, especially in the Third Ward. Most of us have homes that are worth a lot less, but we're paying property taxes on a higher value that no longer holds true.
While we may be able to get a reduction in our property taxes based on a current value of our homes, we must also be careful that the town does not raise the property tax rate and put us back to the same level.
They will try to get this money from us one way or the other.
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
Thursday, December 22, 2011
A New Year's Resolution
I would like to urge you all to make a New Year's resolution to attend at least one council meeting a month.
Did you know that local and state government affect your day-to-day life more than the federal government?
It's where a bulk of your hard-earned tax dollars go, so this is a place of real power for residents of any town or city. You can have issues addressed face-to-face with you councilman by attending Town Council meetings; you can ask questions about upcoming proposals before it's voted on and you can learn who is running the town.
Knowledge is power. When you are aware of issues before they are voted on, action can be taken. It's hard to fight something after the fact.
Yes, it takes time. Yes, we are all busy. But this is your neighborhood. It's where you choose to call home and where your children go to school.
And yes, Bloomfield is still worth fighting for.
Did you know that local and state government affect your day-to-day life more than the federal government?
It's where a bulk of your hard-earned tax dollars go, so this is a place of real power for residents of any town or city. You can have issues addressed face-to-face with you councilman by attending Town Council meetings; you can ask questions about upcoming proposals before it's voted on and you can learn who is running the town.
Knowledge is power. When you are aware of issues before they are voted on, action can be taken. It's hard to fight something after the fact.
Yes, it takes time. Yes, we are all busy. But this is your neighborhood. It's where you choose to call home and where your children go to school.
And yes, Bloomfield is still worth fighting for.
Township Employees Get 2.5% Salary Increase
On December 5, 2011, the Bloomfield Town Council voted to raise the salary range for some township employees 2.5%
The last time they had received such a raise was in 2009.
This increase comes at at time when the census just came out with the statistic that 1 in 2 Americans are at or below the poverty level.
Not only are they receiving a 2.5% increase, there are 7 steps to go through to get from the bottom of the salary range to the top of the range. Each step can be completed in a year.
That means that some positions, such as Township Administrator, can go from the bottom of the salary range, which is $123,000 to the top of the range, which is $153,000.
That is a $30,000 pay increase in 7 years, plus 2.5% increases along the way.
So, your family has to do with LESS because you must pay the salaries and raises of Bloomfield Township employees.
You have to do with less so township employees can have more.
Does this sound fair to you?
Here is the link for the township meeting agenda for December 5, 2011:
http://bloomfieldtownnj.iqm2.com/Citizens/Default.aspx
The agenda that was given at the meeting did not containt this information. The full agenda is only available on the township website.
Maybe requests should be made to have the FULL agenda available at meetings, not the edited version.
And be sure to use the above link and check out the agenda before attending town council meetings to be sure you get all the necessary information to know exactly what is going on.
You can also verify these salary increases by calling the Township Clerk at 973. 680. 4015.
The last time they had received such a raise was in 2009.
This increase comes at at time when the census just came out with the statistic that 1 in 2 Americans are at or below the poverty level.
Not only are they receiving a 2.5% increase, there are 7 steps to go through to get from the bottom of the salary range to the top of the range. Each step can be completed in a year.
That means that some positions, such as Township Administrator, can go from the bottom of the salary range, which is $123,000 to the top of the range, which is $153,000.
That is a $30,000 pay increase in 7 years, plus 2.5% increases along the way.
So, your family has to do with LESS because you must pay the salaries and raises of Bloomfield Township employees.
You have to do with less so township employees can have more.
Does this sound fair to you?
Here is the link for the township meeting agenda for December 5, 2011:
http://bloomfieldtownnj.iqm2.com/Citizens/Default.aspx
The agenda that was given at the meeting did not containt this information. The full agenda is only available on the township website.
Maybe requests should be made to have the FULL agenda available at meetings, not the edited version.
And be sure to use the above link and check out the agenda before attending town council meetings to be sure you get all the necessary information to know exactly what is going on.
You can also verify these salary increases by calling the Township Clerk at 973. 680. 4015.
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
The Redevelopment Boondoggle
Redevelopment.
Sounds like something great that every town and city in America would want to be involved with, doesn’t it?
Who wouldn’t want their downtown area redeveloped – bringing in new businesses, shoppers and revitalizing a blighted area?
While that may be the way your local government presents redevelopment to you – that’s not the way it works. And in Bloomfield we have a 10 year project that has bonded more than $20 million and not one single, solitary building has been built.
So, what’s the real story behind redevelopment?
The real story is that redevelopment has become the “unknown government.”
The truth is that town councils can create redevelopment agencies/authorities to administer redevelopment projects. These projects, governed by the redevelopment authority, usually have their own staff and governing board appointed by the town council.
Legally, these redevelopment authorities are an entirely separate government authority, with its own revenue, budget, staff and powers to issue debt and condemn private property.
Redevelopment is an important “tool” created by state law to assist local governments in eliminating blight from a designated area to achieve the goals of development, reconstruction and rehabilitation of residential, commercial, industrial and retail districts within the city.
And the "tools" they use for redevelopment are the:
· Ability to assemble land for development and rehabilitation
· Ability to utilize tax increments and issue bonds
· Ability to invest in infrastructure to make the area suitable for private investment
· Ability to create affordable housing opportunities
Redevelopment should not be confused with the federal “urban renewal” programs. Redevelopment is a state-authorized layer of government, without federal rules, funds or requirements. It’s entirely within the power of the state legislature and voters to control, reform, amend or abolish.
Urban Renewal is the process where an urban neighborhood or area is improved and rehabilitated. The renewal process can include demolishing old or run-down buildings, constructing new, up-to-date housing, or adding in features like a theater or stadium. Urban renewal is usually undergone for the purposes of persuading wealthier individuals to come live in that area. Urban renewal is often part of the gentrification process.
In order to use the first tool of redevelopment – the ability to assembly land for redevelopment or rehabilitation – the local government must hire consultants to go out there and declare an area blighted.
Most state law is so vague, that to meet the definition of blighted doesn’t take much.
The consultants are chosen with the approval of the town council. Hmm. I wonder if they are also contributors to campaigns? Anyway, consultants know their job isn’t to determine “if” there is blight, but to declare an area blighted.
So, privately owned structures in areas that have been deemed blighted not only fear loss of property value, but eminent domain.
Once an area is designated blighted, look out. Your town will probably then try to expand the area.
Now we have upset private property owners who want to fight having their area being termed blighted or who now need to fight against eminent domain.
As part of the team, the town retains a law firm to write the paperwork and defend against legal challenges. And the final part of their team is bond brokers.
The redevelopment agency has four extraordinary powers in place that no other government authority has:
- Tax Increment – a redevelopment agency has the exclusive use of all increases in property tax revenues generated in its designated project area. Any increases in property taxes go directly to the agency and impacts the town budget. That part of the tax increase that would have gone to the town’s general fund is lost and can only be used by the redevelopment agency. There’s money for the project, but not enough money for police, fire and libraries.
- Bonded debt – the agency has the power to sell bonds secured against future tax increments and does so without voter approval. For many states, in order to receive tax dollars it must first incur debt and property tax increments can only be used to pay off outstanding debt. Of course, redevelopment staff is supportive of incurring bond debt because more debt means more job security and larger payrolls. Bonded debt is done without voter approval and they don’t have to be justified or approved by the taxpayers. Bond brokers love to sell redevelopment debt. Commissions are high and there are plenty of buyers. The debt is secured against future property tax revenue. And if a town overextends, the general fund will cover the debt. This debt obligates property taxes for decades to come. A nice gift from your local government to you, your kids, your grandkids and your great-grandkids.
- Business Subsidies – the agency has the power to give public money directly to developers or other private entities in the form of cash, grants, tax rebates, free land or public improvements.
- Eminent domain – the agency has expanded powers to condemn private property, not just for public use, but to transfer to other private owners.
This an enormous expansion of government into our system of private property and free enterprise.
Our free enterprise system becomes totally distorted and redevelopment deals are given to favored developers.
These public private partnerships are crony capitalism and only transfer wealth to developers and corporate retailers with small business owners and taxpayers footing the bill.
So, is it any wonder with all this nonsense going on that economic development and the abolishment of blight never happen? There is no evidence that blight is ever eradicated or that local economies have been stimulated.
Redevelopment believes the free market system is not adequate. It presumes government planners can allocate resources more efficiently than the free market.
What redevelopment agencies will not acknowledge is that if new development is justified by market demand, it will be built anyway. If not, they will fail, regardless of the subsidies.
Those who are for redevelopment show nice pictures of stadiums, malls, shopping areas.
As a country that respects property rights and free enterprise, and outperforms countries that do not, it’s amazing that we are allowing our local and state governments to institute economic policies that have repeatedly failed elsewhere.
A local case in point is Harrison, NJ. The town is on the verge of bankruptcy due to the building of Red Bull Stadium. The stadium that was supposed to alleviate blight and bring economic bliss is wrecking the city.
Bloomfield NJ pays $7 million off the top of its budget to pay debt service (interest on bonds).
But this tangled web is what your local officials want. They want you to not understand what is going on.
Problem for them is – now you do.
*Information courtesy of "Redevelopment: The Unknown Government", Published by Municipal Officials for Redevelopment Reform
Read the full report here: http://www.missionviejoca.org/pdfs/rug_2004.pdf
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)