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Chapter 5 Taxation Issues

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Title: Chapter 5 Taxation Issues


1
Chapter 5 Taxation Issues
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8
Competition for Education Dollars
  • Taxpayers want lower taxes
  • Agencies agendas
  • Parental choice
  • Tuition tax credits
  • School vouchers

9
Public Public Scrutiny
  • Most people believe that the correct taxation
    level is somewhat less than what they currently
    pay, the level of service they want is somewhat
    higher than currently exists.

10
The More You Understand About School Finance
  • The better you can explain to your parents
    community WHY they need to support public
    education with their tax dollars.

11
Schools Finance
  • Schools do not operate as a for-profit company
    designed to generate dividends increase stock
    prices for shareholders, such as IBM
  • They are not a professional fee for service
    organization like a dentists practice

12
Schools Are a Public Service
  • Schools are a public service on a scope
    scale unlike anything else in our society.

13
Paying for Education
  • Public schools are no longer
  • funded by user fees or tuition
  • In fact, the United States Supreme Court has
    repeatedly indicated that public education must
    be free of tuition
  • Education services are not sold to consumers
    based on price points derived by economists
  • .

14
A Tax Primer
  • The purpose of a tax is to pay for a government
    function
  • A tax should be equalized
  • The government should have a formal mechanism to
    calculate a lower cost to those who can least
    afford the service have a higher cost to those
    who can most afford the service.

15
Taxes Operating Revenue
  • In a public service company like education,
    taxes are the operating revenue.

16
School Finance Issues
  • Understanding school finance vocabulary
    concepts is the first step in understanding
    school finance issues.

17
Understanding Tax Terms That Underlie School
Funding Issues
  • Tax Equalization
  • Floor of Services
  • Property Taxes Historical View
  • Tax Categories
  • Stock of Wealth
  • Flow of Production
  • Capacity Effort
  • Equity v. Equality



18
Understanding Tax Terms That Underlie School
Funding Issues, cont.
TAXES ON
Stock of Wealth
Flow of Production
In Personam Ad Valorum
In Rem Ad Valorum
Tax Structures Proportional
Regressive Progressive
19
Understanding Tax Terms That Underlie School
Funding Issues, cont.
  • Tax Revenue Sources
  • Property
  • Income
  • Sales
  • Lotteries
  • Severance
  • Corporate
  • Sumptuary

20
Tax Equalization
  • Tax equalization tends to make the most needed
    services more affordable to those who are least
    able to pay
  • Taxes have the effect of redistributing wealth
    at the local, state, or federal levels.
  • This equalization tends to level the playing
    field as we invest in human capital

21
Taxes Should be Spread Out As Much As Possible
  • A federal service -- defense -- should be spread
    out over the entire country
  • A state service-- education -- should be extended
    over the entire state
  • A local service -- a city or county park --
    should be distributed over the entire locality

22
Legal Moral Reasons Require Equalization of
Funds
  • Dispersing educations tax bill over the
    entire state allows smaller, remote, or
    economically-disadvantaged localities with little
    local wealth to provide a quality education for
    its citizens.

23
People Dont Want to Give Away, but
  • Our country holds a moral legislative
    imperative that wealth must be redistributed, in
    part, to promote equity of educational
    opportunity and democratic citizenship.

24
Without this Resource
  • Reallocation, poverty ignorance would spiral
    downward, reaching a critical mass that would
    ultimately restructure our society to a lower
    standard of living general well-being, increase
    deprivation, foment civil unrest.

25
Taxation Supports U.S. Freedoms Lifestyles
  • Taxation perpetuates our democratic
    government, permits our comfortable lifestyles to
    continue, allows all educated individuals
    regardless of race, ethnicity, gender, age, or
    creed to participate in
  • the good life.

26
Paying for the Floor of Services
  • The tax burden must be spread over as large a
    group as possible
  • Each state has established a minimum floor of
    educational services that localities must
    provide
  • With the No Child Left Behind Legislation of
    2001, the federal government is ratcheting up
    the floor level of services

27
Equalizing Wealth Lets All Meet the Standard
  • Wealthy localities may have no problem meeting
    these standards
  • Poor localities may be unable to meet the
    required levels of increasing progress
  • The state, therefore, has a legal responsibility
    to help redistribute monies or equalize funding
    to help less wealthy localities meet these
    educational benchmarks

28
Property Taxes
  • In the U.S., states
  • rely primarily on
  • property tax
  • revenues for the
  • majority of their
  • income to operate
  • schools.

29
Brief History of Property Taxes Funding Public
Schools
  • Massachusetts Law of 1647, Ye Olde Deluder,
    Satan Act
  • Property owners taxes were used to hire a
    teacher in towns of 100
  • The communitys sons servants could be educated

30
Property was Taxed Because It was How Most People
Earned Their Living
  • A farmer made his living from the land
  • A merchant earned money from goods sold on his
    property
  • A carpenter sold furniture made in a workshop on
    his property

31
Not All These Transactions Were Cash Sales
  • Many items were
  • bartered or traded
  • as a money
  • substitute.

32
Property Taxes Were a Realistic Proxy for
Measuring Income
  • It was logical, then, for government to tax
    property because that property was the basis for
    making ones income.

33
Todays Property is NOT a Source of Wealth
  • Today, for many of us, our homes represent more
    of a revenue drain than a revenue source
  • a stock rather than a flow of accumulated
    wealth.
  •  

34
Two Tax Categories
  • Taxes levied on the flow of production or
    services, i.e.
  • Personal income taxes
  • Corporate income taxes
  • Retail sales taxes
  • Taxes levied on the stock of wealth
  • This wealth has ceased to move in the flow of
    production
  • It has become an asset of the individual or the
    company

35
Taxes Levied on the Stock of Wealth
  • Property, as measured in our home valuation,
    is therefore a stock of wealth.
  • Taxing property is taxing an individuals or
    companys portion of wealth.

36
Ad Valorum Tax
  • Ad Valorum means a portion of the value.
  • Property taxes are known today as an ad valorum
    tax because a portion of the assessed value of
    the home is taxed to support a service.
  •  

37
In Rem Taxes
  • In rem taxes include those that are imposed on
    things such as machinery, cars, and houses
  • These taxes are based on the value of the thing
    being assessed
  • In rem taxes do not consider whether an
    individual owns the thing free clear or
    whether the thing is bought entirely on credit

38
In Rem Taxes - DISadvantage
  • Individuals may pay taxes on items they do not
    really own cannot claim as an asset
  • While they have the taxable item, the item may
    not actually be theirs the bank may hold the
    title
  • .

39
In Personam Taxes are Imposed on People
  • If you have 100,000 salary, you are WORTH
    100,000 of tangible value ---
  • The best example of in personam taxes are those
    imposed on peoples earned income
  • Personal income determines the amount of tax to
    be paid

40
In Rem vs. In Personam Taxes
  • In Rem Taxes
  • 100,000 house
  • 0 (zero) assets
  • 100,000 liability
  • 0 (zero) net worth
  • This is NOT a realistic indicators of your wealth
  • In Personam Taxes
  • 100,000 income
  • 100,000 net worth
  • This is a better indicator of your wealth

41
Funding Education
  • Each of these types of taxes is used to generate
    funding for public services such as education.
  • It is important for educators to know what types
    of taxes support their funding what taxes are
    more generally favored by the public.
  • The different types of taxes can have different
    effects on taxpayers.

42
Tax Structures
  • Under the proportional taxes, each income group
    has the same percentage rate of tax to pay 10
  • In the regressive tax structure, the lower income
    individuals pay a greater percentage of their
    income in taxes than do the upper income
    individuals
  • In the progressive scenario, the lower income
    individuals pay a lower percentage of their
    income than do the upper income. As income
    increases, so does the percentage of taxes paid

43
Proportional Taxes
  • A proportional tax requires the same percentage
    from each persons income
  • A sales tax is an example
  • This tax affects the less wealthy persons more
    heavily than it does the richer ones
  • The amount taxed on any item is the same dollar
    amount for each, but it represents a larger share
    of the less well-off persons financial resources

4.5 Sales Tax
44
Proportional Sales Taxes can be Regressive on
Individuals
  • Poorer people tend to spend a greater age of
    their income on basic living cost items
  • Food, Clothing
  • Shelter, Transportation
  • in contrast to those at the higher income
    levels.

45
Proportional Sales Taxes, cont.
  • The spending habits of two families with incomes
    of 50,000 and 75,000 may differ significantly.
  • The basic necessities of life bread, milk, and
    butter, for example differ little in quantity
    purchased by a family of four at these income
    levels.

46
Example Proportional Tax -- Regressive Effect
  • Groceries for a family of 4
  • (2 teenagers) might cost 200/week
  • A sales tax of 4.5 would be 9/wk
  • Over 1 year, the sales tax on groceries would
    total 468
  • For a family with an income of 100,000/yr.
    .468 of income
  • For the same family (same eating habits) earning
    50,000/yr., sales tax on groceries .936 of
    income

47
Proportional Sales Taxes Tax the Wealthier, Less
  • The family with the higher income level spends a
    lower percentage on the sales tax related to
    these items.

48
But Proportional Sales Taxes Tax The Less
Wealthy, More
  • The family with the lower income level spends a
    higher percentage on the sales tax related to
    these items.

49
Regressive Taxes
  • A regressive tax requires those with higher
    incomes pay lower percentages of their income.
  • Social security taxation system
  • At the beginning income levels all individuals
    pay 7.65 of their income in FICA tax
  • FICA taxes are not collected after ones income
    reaches 68,400

50
Regressive Taxes, cont.
  • FICA is a regressive tax.
  • An individual earning 68,400 would pay 5,232.60
    each year in FICA taxes.
  • An individual earning twice that rate, or
    136,800, would pay the same FICA tax amount or
    3.825 -
  • 1/2 the of income that the 68,400 earner
    would pay!!

FICA - Federal Insurance Contributions Act
51
Progressive Taxes
  • Progressive taxes are those that increase as a
    percentage along with income
  • Federal income taxes are designed to be
    progressive

52
Tax Brackets 2002 Taxable Income
Joint Return
Rate
Single Taxpayer
53

Examples of the 3 Tax Classifications
  • Individual Taxes Paid
    Taxes as a
  • Income of Income
  • Proportional Taxes
  • 1 10,000 1,000 10
  • 2 50,000 5,000 10
  • 3 100,000 10,000 10
  • Regressive Taxes
  • 1 10,000 500 5
  • 2 50,000 2,000 4
  • 3 100,000 3,000 3
  • Progressive Taxes
  • 1 10,000 300 3
  • 2 50,000 2,000 4
  • 3 100,000 5,000 5

Illustration Proportional, Regressive,
Progressive Taxes
54
  • Good taxes
  • are generally considered to be
  • progressive
  • while Bad taxes
  • are considered to be
  • regressive.

55
Property Taxes
  • Property taxes are the primary source of revenue
    for financing education
  • This tax would be referred to as an ad valorum
    tax because it taxes a portion or a percentage of
    the propertys value
  • Mills are the tax rate on a certain portion of
    the assessed value of a home

56
Property Taxes, cont.
  • Property taxes are supposed to be
  • proportional
  • but have the effect
  • of being regressive

57
Property is Taxed in Mills
  • Property taxes are frequently expressed in terms
    of mills
  • A mill is a unit of monetary value equal to 0.001
    of a dollar or one tenth of one cent
  • The method for determining the tax rate is as
    follows
  • Rate
  • Amount of Tax
  • Revenue to be
  • Raised
  • Tax Base or
  • Property Value

58
Taxing in Mills
  •   According to this formula, if there is a total
    value of 500,000,000 of real estate in a
    locality and 5,000,000 in taxes needed to be
    raised for services, the formula would look like
    this
  • 5,000,000
  • 500,000,000 1.0 or 10 mills

59
Mills Are the Tax Rate on a Portion of a Homes
Value
  • Most frequently, the tax rate is expressed as a
    dollar figure based on 100 of the assessed
    homes value
  • For example, the tax rate may be 1.50 per each
    100 of homes assessed value

60
Property Taxes Have a Down Side
  1. Taxing a homes value is taxing unrealized
    profits the owner would have to sell the home
    to get the assessed monetary value versus the
    price that was paid. It is a paper profit
    until the home is sold
  1. Property taxes are seen as a threat to the
    American Dream of home ownership

61
Property Taxes are Costly to Administer
  • 1st, locality needs a system to inventory all the
    localitys property
  • 2nd, personnel must make periodic physical
    assessments of the property
  • 3rd, locality needs a system of appeals for
    contesting valuation
  • 4th, tax bills must be sent out collected
  • 5th, locality needs a system to collect
    delinquent taxes

62
Fair Market Value is Difficult to Calculate
  • Realtors use a comprehensive market analysis to
    determine a homes correct selling price
  • A 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick rancher on a 1/2 acre
    lot on one side of town may have a greater value
    than the same house on another side of town or in
    another neighborhood
  • Comparing assessments generally brings confusion
    anger

63
Property Taxes Per Capita, 2002, Selected States
  • State Property Tax Rank
  • Per Capita
  • Alabama 273 50
  • California 767 31
  • Virginia 838 24
  • Illinois 1,163 10
  • New York 1,361 4
  • New Jersey 1,761 1

64
Property Taxes Incite Public Interest
  • Since the majority of property taxes support
    schools, it is logical for the taxpayers to voice
    their frustration over tax bills with the schools

65
Tax Capacity - Introduction
  • Capacity is the ability to pay for
  • goods and services
  • There are approximately 15,000
  • school systems in the United States
  • The variance in each
  • communitys wealth is great
  • The wealth or tax base behind each of these
    school systems to finance the educational program
    is known as fiscal capacity

66
Personal Income is a Better Measure of Wealth
  • For example, an income of 100,000 per year is a
    better measure of wealth than a home of the same
    value
  • The home may or may not have a mortgage. In some
    cases, individuals finance 100 of their home
    through a mortgage
  • They have accumulated no net worth in their home
    it is an unrealized asset a paper profit not
    to be realized until it is sold

67
Capacity Contributors to an Areas Wealth
  • Personal income
  • Real estate taxes
  • Sales taxes
  • Corporate income taxes
  • Lotteries other
  • gambling
  • Other revenues

68
Capacity Contributors to an Areas Wealth,
cont.
  • Capacity cost of living vary from locality to
    locality, state to state, region to region
    nation to nation.

69
Fiscal Effort Introduction
  • Fiscal effort means putting your money where
    you say your priorities are
  • A state or locality can have a great deal of
    capacity to fund education and may elect not to
    do so
  • On the other hand, a state or locality can have
    limited capacity and apportion a great deal of
    effort into funding education

70
Factors Influencing Effort
  • History of effort, attitudes toward taxes
  • The overall taxation structure
  • The percentage of students attending public
    versus private schools in the area
  • The percentage of the population with school-aged
    children or grandchildren in the area
  • Many factors determine the level of fiscal
    effort the public is willing to provide for
    education

71
Effort
  • Effort may be defined as the level to which a
    governmental entity uses its capacity to support
    public education.
  • A simple formula for determining fiscal effort is
  • Fiscal Effort
  • Revenue Collected
  • for Education

Overall Tax Base (Capacity)
72
Effort Equalizes for Capacity When Comparing
Expenses
  • It would be unfair to compare a locality,
  • state, or nation with others by education
  • expenditures, alone draw conclusions
  • except how wealthy a locality, state or nation
    is
  • Effort is a vehicle to determine how much of
  • a priority education is within some
  • jurisdiction

73
Equity An Introduction
  • Equity has been at the core of school finance
    reform efforts court decisions since 1976s
    Serrano v. Priest decision from the California
    Supreme Court
  • Basically, the court found that while
    Californias system for financing education did
    tend to equalize funding among the school
    districts, the system also generated revenue
    proportional to the wealth of the school and the
    school district. Such funding violated the idea
    of equity.

74
Equity v. Equality
  • Equity can be defined as a fairness issue both
    for students and for taxpayers
  • Equity should not be confused with equality
  • Equity is providing for what students need while
    equality is providing the same for all students

75
An Equity Scenario
School System A
  • Two relatively similar school systems have
    roughly the same level of capacity to fund
    education the same number of students, about
    10,000
  • Both receive about the same funding from the
    locality and the state
  • Both school systems draw from upper middle class
    neighborhoods

School System B
76
An Equity Scenario, cont.
School System B
School System A
20 of its students eligible to receive special
education services .
10 of its students identified as eligible to
receive special education services.
Equality OK financing to meet needs of these 2
schools systems Equity NOT OK. School System
Bs students needs are greater than School
System As. School System B must spend more
funds to meet the identified special education
populations needs than does School System A.
77
Income Taxes 2nd Major Source of State Income
  • State Per Capita Rank
  • Personal Income, 2000
  • Mississippi 20,856 50
  • S.Carolina 23,952 40
  • Vermont 26,904 30
  • Illinois 31,842 10
  • California 32,225 8
  • New York 34,502 4
  • Connecticut 40,870 1

78
U.S. Income Taxes Single Taxpayer
  • If Taxpayer Income is Tax Rate is
  • Between But Not More Than
  • 0. 6000. 10
  • 6000. 26,250. 15
  • 26,250. 63,550. 27
  • 63,550. 132,600. 30
  • 132,600. 288,350. 35
  • 288,350. ------ 38.6

79
U.S. Income Taxes Joint/Married Taxpayer
  • If Taxpayer Income is Tax Rate is
  • Between But Not More Than
  • 0. 12,000. 10
  • 12,000. 43,850. 15
  • 43,850. 105,950. 27
  • 105,950. 161,450. 30
  • 161,450. 288,350. 35
  • 288,350. ------ 38.6

80
Sales Taxes
  • Sales tax revenues (from all sources, not just
    retail sales) generated approximately
    290,993,000,000 in the United States in 1999
  • Gasoline
  • Utilities
  • Telephone
  • 911 services
  • Other

81
Lotteries Legal Gambling
  • Government-sponsored lotteries are a legal form
    of gambling
  • Sells chances to win a prize
  • When a government sponsors a lottery, it may be
    considered a voluntary tax

82
Lotteries Gambling Revenue Sources for
Education
  • When a lottery winner claims the prize, the state
    and federal governments collect income taxes

83
Lotteries Legal Gambling
  • Legal gambling in the United States grossed more
    than 50 billion in 2000
  • That amounts to 180 for every man, woman,
    child in the country

84
Legal Gambling Revenue by State, 2000
  • State Gross Revenue Per Capita Rank
  • (in millions) Revenue
  • Oklahoma 62 18 40
  • Rhode Island 298 285 30
  • California 2,629 78 6
  • Illinois 2,680 216 5
  • New York 2,739 144 3
  • New Jersey 5,451 648 2
  • Nevada 9,632 4820 1

85
Severance Taxes
  • The Department of Commerce defines it as taxes
    imposed distinctively on removal of natural
    products e.g. oil, gas, other minerals, timber,
    fish, etc. from land or water and measured by
    value or quantity of products removed or sold.

86
Severance Taxes, cont.
  • This tax is quite lucrative for some states, but
    overall, accounts for less than 1 of all states
    revenue
  • Some states collect no revenue from severance
    sources while others collect a substantial amount
    of taxes

87
Per Capita Severance Tax Revenue for Selected
States
  • State Per Capita Revenue Rank
  • Alaska 856.33 1
  • Wyoming 604.76 2
  • New Mexico 244.71 3
  • Indiana .09 48
  • Illinois .02 49
  • Missouri .01 50

88
Corporate Taxes
  • The corporate income tax began at the federal
    level in 1909
  • Congress levied it as an excise tax for the
    privilege of doing corporate business
  • Corporate income taxes once generated
    approximately 1/4th of all federal revenue.
    Today, it accounts for less than 10 of federal
    revenue

89
Corporate Taxes, cont.
  • Corporate income taxes are calculated on
  • Sales revenue less production costs, interest or
    rent payments
  • Depreciation on capital equipment and facilities
  • Any state or local taxes paid

90
Corporate TaxesA Double Taxation?
  • This tax has an impact
  • on the price of many
  • stocks and pension plans
  • The higher the corporate taxes, the lower the
    stock dividends or stock appreciation to
    investors or the higher the retail price of their
    goods and services to end consumers

91
Corporate Taxes Education Funding
  • Where there are thriving businesses
  • People are employed paying income taxes
  • More purchasing and maintaining homes that
    generate property taxes
  • More buying goods and services that generate
    sales taxes
  • This is a healthy cycle for a local economy that
    will have greater capacity to fund public
    education

92
Sumptuary Taxes
  • Sumptuary taxes are those imposed by a government
    to help regulate or control activities that are
    seen not to be in the best interest of the public
  • They are sometimes referred to as sin taxes

93
Sumptuary Taxes, cont.
  • Smoking and drinking are deemed not to be in the
    public interest
  • Governments then regulate their activity by
    taxing them at varying rates above and beyond the
    sales tax

94
A Conundrum for Educators
  • We receive some of our school operating revenue
    from the sale of substances that we teach our
    students are harmful to them
  • Without this revenue, however, our funding
    (already too low) would be further reduced

95
Measuring Tax Impact
  • Funding for education should be a national
    priority
  • The tax impact to fund education needs to be
    equitable
  • In a climate of high stakes testing high levels
    of accountability for educators students,
    resources are sorely needed in our classrooms

96
Urgent Need for More Resources
  • Making AYP for all students will require
    additional funding for professional development,
    supplies, remediation for students especially
    in poor urban schools
  • The No Child Left Behind (NCLB) legislation with
    required Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) goes into
    full effect in 2014

97
Securing More Taxes to Support Public Schools
  • Results include
  • Higher student achievement levels
  • Increased public satisfaction with their school
    system
  • Customer friendly schools for students the
    community
  • Taxpayers must see their extra tax dollars
    impact with positive results in the schools
  • Educators must will be held accountable for
    results

98
Diminishing Marginal Utility
  • Utility means satisfaction
  • Consumers try to maximize their satisfaction when
    using their income to buy goods services
  • Buying ONE unit of a novel desired item brings
    HIGH satisfaction
  • Buying MORE units brings LESS satisfaction

99
Diminishing Marginal Utility, cont.
  • Buying ONE unit of a novel desired item brings
    HIGH satisfaction
  • Buying MORE units brings increasingly LESS
    satisfaction

100
Diminishing Marginal Utility, cont.
U2 U1 1 2 3
4 5
U5
U4 U3
Utility
Quantity
101
Marginal Utility Taxes
  • Citizens are proud of the new roads, new schools,
    accomplishments of the school district
  • As taxes rise, however, and consume a larger age
    of income, the utility or satisfaction with
    paying taxes tends to decrease unless citizens
    see that the cost brings utility for them in some
    way

102
Marginal Utility Taxes, cont.
  • People will only be willing to pay taxes for
    schools as long as they see it has utility for
    them
  • It is the job of all educators to make certain
    that the tax-paying public sees educational
    utility in a personal way that makes sense to
    them

103
Indicators of a GOOD Tax
  • Good taxes have utility make sense.
  • Fairness of the Tax System
  • Everyone pays something
  • Economic Neutrality
  • Adequacy of Yield
  • Administration Costs
  • Convenience of Payment
  • Visibility of Benefit

104
Fairness of the Tax System
  • A fair tax structure has a greater burden on the
    rich than on the poor
  • Virtually all agree that a regressive tax system
    is unfair
  • Fairness is often in the eye of the beholder

105
Everyone Pays Something
  • All citizens enjoy the benefits of government
  • Police protect
  • Teachers teach
  • Fire fighters fight fires
  • Soldiers defend
  • Roads transport
  • All citizens contribute something to the common
    good

106
Economic Neutrality
  • Ideally, taxes should leave individuals in the
    same relative position after taxes as before
    paying taxes
  • Everyones relative position is maintained in
    spite of taxes
  • As taxes are diversified through income,
    property, sales, lottery, sumptuary, the like,
    we lessen the non-neutral impact of any one tax

107
Adequacy of Yield
  • The cost of administering a tax should not exceed
    the revenue generated by that tax
  • If a bridge were built and a toll placed on the
    bridge to pay for the construction, the toll
    should pay for the bridge the means of toll
    collection

108
Administration Costs
  • The cost of administering collecting the tax
    should be low
  • The income tax is collected with much greater
    efficiency than is the property tax
  • Your company deducts your income tax sends it
    to the proper state authority. Minimum personnel
    are involved.
  • Property taxes, on the other hand, require a much
    more personnel-intensive collection operation

109
Convenience of Payment
  • A good tax is one that is convenient for the
    citizen to pay
  • If the public must stand in line for hours,
    shuffle from one office to another, face
    arrogant, rude government workers, tax utility is
    lost

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Visibility of Benefit
  • People need to SEE the obvious value their tax
    dollars bring.


YOUR TAX s At Work
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