
10-15-2022, 11:52 AM
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Sage
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Join Date: Mar 2015
Location: The Villages
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Bill14564
If you can give me the address of a $1.5M home I can work the calculations. I don't want to try to guess what the actual numbers might be.
Making it much more simple, we live in the "Robin Hood" system today, approval of the IFD does not change that. We can talk about how we would prefer to pay for fire protection but we have not been given that choice. We have a choice between paying Sumter County and letting them fund the VPSD or we can approve the IFD and fund the VPSD directly.
If we consider the $1.5M and $350K to be assessed values then the property tax paid today is $8,385 and $1,957. If fire protection is $124+1.65mils then the two are paying $2,599 and $702 today.
It does make some sense to charge more for fire protection of a larger home than for a smaller home. More floors, more rooms, more flammables all could require more resources and effort. Does it cost $75 more to protect a home that cost 30% more? I don't know.
A flat fee for fire protection? Great idea but.....
- I suspect it was politically unpopular to suggest raising the $124 to $700.
- The guy in the 1,000 sq ft home is not going to feel it's fair to be charged the same as the guy in the $1.5M home
- The guy in the $1.5M home is not going to feel it's fair to be charged the same as the owner of the Publix
- That is not the option being offered to us in this referendum
Just a small note: A flat rate is not a "progressive tax," it is generally referred to as a regressive tax. Both the current property tax and the proposed IFD tax are flat rate: everyone pays the same rate, you just pay more if you have a more expensive property. A progressive tax would be like our Federal Income Tax where the rate increases as your income increases.
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I agree. I wasn’t questioning the reality of punishing the successful by giving their assets to the less successful, I just stated I don’t like it
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