Proposition 2½

Proposition 2½ (Mass. Gen. L. c. 59, § 21C) is a Massachusetts statute that limits property tax assessments and secondarily, automobile excise tax levies by Massachusetts municipalities. The name of the initiative refers to the 2.5% ceiling on total property taxes annually as well as the 2.5% limit on property tax increases. It was passed by ballot measure,[1] specifically called an initiative petition within Massachusetts state law for any form of referendum voting, in 1980 and went into effect in 1982. The effort to enact the proposition was led by the anti-tax group Citizens for Limited Taxation.[2] It is similar to other "tax revolt" measures passed around the same time in other parts of the United States. This particular Proposition followed the movements of states such as California.[3]

Real and personal property taxes

Under Proposition 2½, a municipality is subject to two property tax limits:

  1. Ceiling: The total annual property tax revenue raised by a municipality shall not exceed 2.5% of the assessed value of all taxable property contained in it.
  2. Increase limit: The annual increase of property tax cannot exceed 2.5%, plus the amount attributable to taxes that are from new real property.

These limits refer to the entire amount of the annual tax levy raised by a municipality. The property taxes are the sum of: (a) residential real property; (b) commercial real property; (c) industrial real property; and (d) business-owned personal property. In practice, it usually limits the tax bills of individual taxpayers, but only as an indirect result.

A side effect of Proposition 2½ is that municipality income will decline in real terms whenever inflation rises above 2.5%. Historically inflation has been above 2.5% for a significant majority of the years since 1980 (22 out of the 28 years to date), thus resulting in a real decline in local tax rates and local spending ability.

An exception allows the citizens of each municipality to override the 2½ restriction to address specific needs of the community thus giving the citizens direct control over their taxation.

What Exactly is a Levy?

The property tax levy is the revenue a community can raise through real and personal property taxes. It is the largest source of revenue for most cities and towns. Proposition 2 ½ puts constraints on the amount of the levy raised by the city and how much it can be increased each year. It had two types of levy limits. The first of the two stated that a community cannot levy more than 2.5 percent of the total full and fair cash value of all taxable real and personal property. The full and fair cash value limit is known as the levy ceiling.The second type stated that it can only increase a certain amount from year to year. This is known as the levy limit. The levy limit will always be below or equal to the levy ceiling. The limits for each community is calculated by the Department of Revenue. [4]

Vehicle excise tax

The excise tax for automobiles registered in Massachusetts was also lowered by Proposition 2½. Previously, this tax was levied at a rate of $66.00 per $1,000 of car valuation (6.6%). Proposition 2½ lowered this rate to $25.00 per $1,000 of car valuation, resulting in a 2½ per cent excise tax rate,[5] but can still increase 264%, to the previous 6.6% tax rate if a Proposition 2½ operational override (see below) is approved by ballot in a community during a general (or special referendum) election.

Exclusions

Proposition 2½ excludes four cases from the limitation on tax levy increases:

And three types of exclusions granted by the majority those voting in a municipal referendum:

Overrides and underrides

Municipalities may exceed or reduce the limits with the prior approval of the majority those voting in a municipal referendum to:

The proposition originally required a two-thirds majority for passage of overrides, but the state legislature changed this to a simple majority in 1981.[11]

General Consensus

A Professional survey firms conducted half-hour phone interviews in 58 randomly selected cities in Massachusetts where 1,561 household heads answer questions about Proposition 2 1/2. The results of the interview concluded that the people of Massachusetts thought that Proposition 2 1/2 would lead to a more responsible government, more efficiency in local government, and more voter control over schools. The people also thought that public sector jobs would become riskier. Some feared for the loss of their jobs or the decline in quality of them. Another thing people expected were effects on clusters of services. The peoples' household services were feared to be changed greatly. The people of Massachusetts desired spending and taxing by state government, local government, and local public schools more than other places to spend tax dollars. Many people expected Proposition 2 1/2 to lead to welfare reductions. Finally, analysis of the survey shows that voters who expected welfare to be cut back were more likely to support Proposition 2 1/2.[12]

Results

Following the mandating of actual revenue reductions within the first couple of years, the effects and results of Proposition 2 ½ were limited. The lack of significant changes was due in part to the state government increasing general purpose aid to municipalities, which helped them to stay away from budget shortfalls. Effective property tax rates declining and an increase in community taxes were a result of various factors including a 64% increase in real estate aid to municipalities between 1981 and 1988, declining school expenses, and a region wide real estate boom. Reduced revenues in the 1980’s caused the state to reduce local aid, which fell 12% in 1990, along with over 30% between 1989-1992. Over time, Proposition 2 ½ would have become more binding due to the fact that it is operated in nominal terms, meaning that the rules it follows do not change in response to prices, costs, or spending. [13]

As of January 2009, municipalities had requested, via referendum, 4,449 overrides of Proposition 2½, of which 1,798 passed; 16 underrides were requested, of which 9 passed.[14]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Frum, David (2000). How We Got Here: The '70s. New York, New York: Basic Books. p. 325. ISBN 0-465-04195-7.
  2. Denison, Dave (Summer 1996). "The Odd Proposition". Commonwealth Magazine.
  3. LADD, HELEN F.; WILSON, JULIE BOATRIGHT (1982-01-01). "WHY VOTERS SUPPORT TAX LIMITATIONS: EVIDENCE FROM MASSACHUSETTS' PROPOSITION 2-1/2". National Tax Journal. 35 (2): 121–148.
  4. "Live Edit." Marblehead MA. N.p., n.d. Web. 02 Nov. 2016.
  5. Tompkins, Susanne. "Proposition 2½". McCormack Institute. Archived from the original on March 14, 2007.
  6. Mass. Gen. Laws Ch. 59 § 21C(i½), via Malegislature.gov
  7. Mass. Gen. Laws Ch. 59 § 21C(j,k), via Malegislature.gov
  8. Mass. Gen. Laws Ch. 59 § 21C(n), via Malegislature.gov
  9. Mass. Gen. Laws Ch. 59 § 21C(g), via Malegislature.gov
  10. Mass. Gen. Laws Ch. 59 § 21C(h), via Malegislature.gov
  11. Zimmerman, Joseph F. (1995). State-local Relations: A Partnership Approach. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-0-275-95235-8.
  12. Gist, J. R. (1988), FISCAL AUSTERITY, GRANT STRUCTURES AND LOCAL EXPENDITURE RESPONSE. Policy Studies Journal, 16: 687–712. doi:10.1111/j.1541-0072.1988.tb00679.x
  13. Bradbury, Katharine and Mayer, Christopher J. and Case, Karl E., Property Tax Limits and Local Fiscal Behavior: Did Massachusetts Cities and Towns Spend Too Little on Town Services under Proposition 2.5 (April 1997).
  14. "Proposition 2 1/2". Massachusetts Department of Revenue. Archived from the original on December 10, 2011.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/26/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.