The Louisiana budget crisis is an opportunity to
shift a business tax burden onto individuals.
A brewing legislative push to reduce or eliminate parish inventory taxes
could trigger automatic property tax increases — without additional
voter approval — by local governments that carry long-term debt, some
parish assessors and state officials say.
Whitney Joseph Jr., assessor of St. John the Baptist Parish,
estimates that St. John’s School Board and parish government would have
to raise the tax rate by a combined 16.6 mills to keep meeting their
debt payments for what are known as general obligation bonds. That would bring the total millage rate to about 134 mills and raise a typical homeowner’s tax bill by about 14 percent.
“You’ve got to be able to pay your debts,” Joseph said. “So whatever
my bond millage needs to be to pay that debt, that’s what you have to
raise it to.”
Remember Jindal's idea ostensibly was to cut out the tax credit by which the state reimburses businesses who pay local inventory taxes. Predictably, business owners large and small across the state
howled that Jindal had raised taxes on them thus violating his
sacred pledge to Governor Grover Norquist never to do that. It was "
a tax increase we simply cannot afford"
LABI president Stephen Waguespack wasted no time calling the inventory
tax credit change a tax hike. He said repealing the credit and leaving
the inventory tax in place would "throw sand in the gears of our growing
economy ... and lower the number of jobs in Louisiana." He added,
"Repealing the inventory tax credit is bad policy and a tax increase we
simply cannot afford."
So, nevermind that. Now we're on to repealing the inventory tax altogether. Which, in turn, leaves local governments to
find other ways to make up the revenue.
Officials in parishes that rely most heavily on inventory taxes, such
as St. John, St. James and others, are raising concerns that in
addition to making draconian cuts to services, they would ultimately
have to pass on tax increases to homeowners and small businesses to
recoup some of the revenue lost for the benefit of the biggest
industries and the state budget.
“We are going to shift the tax burden,” St. Charles Parish Assessor Tab Troxler said.
Guess someone will have to afford it.
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