Miami Herald: Form, Not Substance

Today the Miami Herald gave a “cable news” description of the candidates and campaign for commissioners and mayor of the city of Coral Gables.  They walked through the slimmy methods of the current campaign, but not a word of substance about the candidates (sorry, there were three lines about the issues here).

This is good “form-not substance” journalism, which does little for the voters of Coral Gables who, by the way, already know about the disgusting smear campaign through which we have been living.

More on Fees and Property Taxes–Taxes or Fees Will Rise For Sure

Anyone who imagines that property tax rates and revenues will not have to be increased in the city of Coral Gables this year and in the coming budget cycles are dreaming.

There is no one in this crowd of candidates who will be able to stop the pressure to increase tax rates and revenues as property values continue to decline in the face of huge budget liabilities.

Now you are voting on firm increases in taxes( a la Slesnick) or more moderate increases.  Mr. Kerdyk will be reelected and he votes for taxes.  Ms. Anderson plus (say) Cason or Korge plus Rosenblatt or Sanabria will be on the commission.  Well meaning people they are, but they know how to add up revenues and expenses and some are big spenders.

They all mostly want the Mircle Mile/Giralda project so that means more spending.  It takes years to reorganize the Building and Zoning services.  We should charge for the trolley, but Mr. Kerdyk and friends of Miracle Mile will not stand for that.  Be sure that the Biltmore liabilities will not be fixed that easily and taxpayers will continue to subsidize that albatros.  Even with favorable negotiations with police and firefighters (who favor Rosenblatt and Sanabria, maybe others), the impact on pension liabilities is years away.  If Miami-Dade holds the line or reduces property taxes that is another opening for the city of Coral Gables to increase property taxes.

That is why I favor increasing fees across the board with a user-pays approach for fire services, trash, and permits and others, rather than increasing unfair property taxes again and again.

In summary, I hope I am wrong, but the financial problems of the city will take several years to fix, even with a good economy and rising real estate market.

Coral Gables’ Fees Vs Property Taxes: Which Is Fair? Sanabria Is Wrong

Actually, fees are much fairer than property taxes in the State of Florida.  Through fees everyone pays the same for the same service (the poorest taxpayers might be excluded if you like), whereas, property taxes are paid more by newcomers than property owners who are long-time residents with homestead protection.

Sanabria’s proposal to cut fees is wrong because, again, it protects long-term property owners versus newcomers–a highly unfair system.  Fees are great because the user pays.  I say, give use more fees based on the real cost of the services.  For example, trash collection is highly subsidized in Coral Gables through (unfair) property taxes.  If fire services were charged through fees, then taxpayers would be screaming about the pensions and salaries of firefighters.  I wonder, is that why Sanabria is against fees?

(And I will not get into why we need an income tax in Florida along with an equalized property tax system, like many modern state governments.)

The Ryan Budget Is Health Care Fiction, Not Reform

Nothing like cutting back on health care spending of the government this way.

…the Congressional Budget Office looked at Ryan’s plan, they said it would make Medicare more expensive for seniors, not less. The reason the deficit goes down is because seniors are paying 70 percent of the cost of their insurance out-of-pocket rather than 30 percent. But that’s not sustainable: We’ve just taken the government’s medical-costs problem and pushed it onto families.

via The Democrats have a plan for controlling health-care costs. Paul Ryan doesn’t. – Ezra Klein – The Washington Post.