09-09-2010, 10:51 AM
Hold on to your wallets, here come the new taxes. I think the forest preserve maybe better custodian for the beach front, but I will never pay to use a beach with PCB's,diapers and asbestos.
'We are in a bind'
Council mulls idea of selling Municipal Beach
September 9, 2010
Saying that municipal revenues continue to decline and more funding deficits are possible, Mayor Robert Sabonjian led a brainstorming session at Tuesday's City Council meeting that mulled such possibilities of taxing rental property and/or selling Municipal Beach.
"The latest (revenue report) was disheartening to say the least," Sabonjian said. "We are getting hammered out there, and it doesn't seem to be abating. It seems to be getting worse."
The idea of taxing both residential and commercial rental property was detailed by corporation counsel Newton Finn, who said home-rule communities like Waukegan are authorized to tax lease receipts.
"Virtually every municipality in the state of Arizona taxes rental property," said Finn, adding that Mesa, Ariz., collects $18 million annually through a 2.2 percent tax on commercial rentals and 1.75 percent on residential.
"It's one of their largest sources of revenue," Finn said. "No one likes to raise taxes, (but) this would not raise taxes for owner-occupied, single-family homes. This would tax landlords."
Ninth Ward Ald. Rafael Rivera questioned the concept, saying "the bottom line is the renter is going to be affected by this, because the landlord's going to raise the rent, and those (renters) are people that are struggling."
The lease-receipts tax, like all of the proposals aired Tuesday, are slated to be analyzed by the city's finance department before any concrete proposals move before the council. Among the ideas suggested by Sabonjian as "a few areas where we can leverage assets or make changes in order to raise significant revenues":
⢠Selling Municipal Beach -- which Sabonjian described as a "valuable asset that the city has held onto for many years but always struggled to turn into a profitable operation" -- to either the Waukegan Park District or the Lake County Forest Preserve District.
Acknowledging that the idea might be considered "a highly controversial suggestion," Sabonjian said such a deal could bring in "millions of dollars (and) could include provisions to provide Waukegan residents access" at a discounted rate.
⢠A 3- to 5-percent tax on all packaged or poured alcoholic beverages.
⢠Increased parking rates at municipal lots, possibly including monthly passes with discounted rates for residents.
⢠Increased rates at the lakefront Metra lot, and searching for what Sabonjian described as "a more profitable food and beverage vendor" at the station.
⢠Improving and leasing the two city-owned retail spaces in the parking garage along Clayton Street for commercial use. Citing the "hundreds" of people who visit the nearby County Building each day, Sabonjian said "that is a market we should be capturing."
Sabonjian also suggested that a deal to privatize or sell the Genesee Theatre could be constructed to include "an upfront payment into the price to cover some of our past costs, and then require the buyer to pay our yearly debt-service costs for the remainder of the life of the bonds that were used to build it."
Some aldermen offered revenue concepts, with Rivera calling for a review of fines and fees, and 8th Ward Ald. Rick Larsen suggesting a public/private lakefront campground to offer an alternative to sold-out sites at Illinois Beach State Park.
While it remains to be seen what if anything will be considered by the council, Sabonjian asked members of the council to keep ideas coming.
"We are in a bind, and it's going to take a whole lot of things to get out of it," he said. "We haven't gone through the worst yet. It's still coming."
'We are in a bind'
Council mulls idea of selling Municipal Beach
September 9, 2010
Saying that municipal revenues continue to decline and more funding deficits are possible, Mayor Robert Sabonjian led a brainstorming session at Tuesday's City Council meeting that mulled such possibilities of taxing rental property and/or selling Municipal Beach.
"The latest (revenue report) was disheartening to say the least," Sabonjian said. "We are getting hammered out there, and it doesn't seem to be abating. It seems to be getting worse."
The idea of taxing both residential and commercial rental property was detailed by corporation counsel Newton Finn, who said home-rule communities like Waukegan are authorized to tax lease receipts.
"Virtually every municipality in the state of Arizona taxes rental property," said Finn, adding that Mesa, Ariz., collects $18 million annually through a 2.2 percent tax on commercial rentals and 1.75 percent on residential.
"It's one of their largest sources of revenue," Finn said. "No one likes to raise taxes, (but) this would not raise taxes for owner-occupied, single-family homes. This would tax landlords."
Ninth Ward Ald. Rafael Rivera questioned the concept, saying "the bottom line is the renter is going to be affected by this, because the landlord's going to raise the rent, and those (renters) are people that are struggling."
The lease-receipts tax, like all of the proposals aired Tuesday, are slated to be analyzed by the city's finance department before any concrete proposals move before the council. Among the ideas suggested by Sabonjian as "a few areas where we can leverage assets or make changes in order to raise significant revenues":
⢠Selling Municipal Beach -- which Sabonjian described as a "valuable asset that the city has held onto for many years but always struggled to turn into a profitable operation" -- to either the Waukegan Park District or the Lake County Forest Preserve District.
Acknowledging that the idea might be considered "a highly controversial suggestion," Sabonjian said such a deal could bring in "millions of dollars (and) could include provisions to provide Waukegan residents access" at a discounted rate.
⢠A 3- to 5-percent tax on all packaged or poured alcoholic beverages.
⢠Increased parking rates at municipal lots, possibly including monthly passes with discounted rates for residents.
⢠Increased rates at the lakefront Metra lot, and searching for what Sabonjian described as "a more profitable food and beverage vendor" at the station.
⢠Improving and leasing the two city-owned retail spaces in the parking garage along Clayton Street for commercial use. Citing the "hundreds" of people who visit the nearby County Building each day, Sabonjian said "that is a market we should be capturing."
Sabonjian also suggested that a deal to privatize or sell the Genesee Theatre could be constructed to include "an upfront payment into the price to cover some of our past costs, and then require the buyer to pay our yearly debt-service costs for the remainder of the life of the bonds that were used to build it."
Some aldermen offered revenue concepts, with Rivera calling for a review of fines and fees, and 8th Ward Ald. Rick Larsen suggesting a public/private lakefront campground to offer an alternative to sold-out sites at Illinois Beach State Park.
While it remains to be seen what if anything will be considered by the council, Sabonjian asked members of the council to keep ideas coming.
"We are in a bind, and it's going to take a whole lot of things to get out of it," he said. "We haven't gone through the worst yet. It's still coming."