成人X站

MYNORTHWEST NEWS

Can Seattle really stomach more taxes?

Mar 22, 2017, 3:05 PM | Updated: Mar 23, 2017, 2:18 pm

property taxes...

Seattle councilmember Tim Burgess questions if the city can handle more taxes. (AP)

(AP)

Seattle City Councilmember Tim Burgess is questioning the fairness of Seattle’s taxes.

Related: Seattle keeps quite on gun tax

, Burgess points out the city almost always tends to focus on raising more revenue, instead of shifting current funding the city already has.

“Alas, we almost always go for more revenue,” he writes.

He’s not wrong. Property taxes continue to rise as voters approve new measures, most recently the Sound Transit 3 tax package in November that also increased the amount people will pay for car tabs.

And the tax proposals keep coming. Seattle Mayor Ed Murray announced he wants to increase property taxes this year to generate $275 million over a five-year period. He also proposed a tax on sugary drinks — minus diet sodas — to generate $16 million a year for education programs.

And let’s not forget the proposed sales tax for King County to fund arts, science, and cultural education.

As previously reported, Seattle’s property tax is in the middle of the pack compared to other cities in King County — .

However, Burgess points out that Seattle’s low-income residents end up paying more in taxes in relation to total household income, as opposed to wealthier residents, who pay a low percentage of their total household income.

Burgess writes and : “In fact, among America鈥檚 largest cities in each state, Seattle鈥檚 tax burden is the fourth highest for low-income families and the fourth lowest for upper-income families. That鈥檚 upside down. That鈥檚 very unfair.”

shows that Seattle property owners of a median-valued home paid more than $4,000 in taxes total last year, and if more proposals are approved, that number would skyrocket.

Burgess says, “this is the tax environment we live with in Seattle. The overall tax burden is unfair to low-income families.”

Fair point.

Burgess says some tax levies are important — including the and . However, he says there needs to be a system that’s more fair to low-income families and proposes more progressive taxes, such as a general income tax or “more specific capital gains tax.”

But we should remember that the councilmember was also the one pushing for a gun tax in the city which, according to has collected significantly less than expected.

The City of Seattle said it expected to bring between $300,000 to $500,000 in its first year, but collected less than $200,000. In an email to the Times, Burgess said there were only about 15 potential taxpayers in the first year.

The exact amount collected from the tax wasn’t provided.

The tax is supposed to go to Harborview Medical Center for gun violence research, but it hasn’t yet because of a lawsuit filed over the tax — the research is moving ahead and the city has set aside $275,000 from the general fund this year for it.

Because of the gun tax, Seattle’s two stores that dealt solely in firearms ended up leaving the city and others stopped selling guns and ammo products altogether. One store owner called the tax “unfair” and predicted that it wouldn’t do as well as the city said it would.

Maybe this is one of those that’s not so important after all.

MyNorthwest News

FILE - Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, R-La., talks to reporters just after House Republicans na...

Associated Press

What’s in Trump’s big bill? Money for migrant clampdown but tax breaks and program cuts hit ‘bumps’

WASHINGTON (AP) 鈥 Congress is deep into drafting President Donald Trump’s big bill of tax breaks, spending cuts and beefed-up funding to halt migrants, but it’s 鈥渂umpy,鈥 one Republican chairman says, with much work ahead to meet House Speaker Mike Johnson’s goal of passing the package out of his chamber by Memorial Day. In fact, […]

44 minutes ago

activists at UW building...

Julia Dallas

‘Masked activists’ take over new UW engineering building, stage blockade

The University of Washington (UW) Jewish Alumni organization has reported that “black-clad, masked activists” have taken over the UW’s new engineering building. Photos posted on X show the “activists” piling furniture outside the building to block entry. University police are reportedly at the scene. BREAKING NOW @UW: Black-clad, masked activists have TAKEN OVER the brand […]

3 hours ago

Rite Aid...

Julia Dallas

All Rite Aid stores to close or be sold as company files for bankruptcy

Rite Aid faces bankruptcy as it closes stores in western Washington, impacting employees and furthering pharmacy deserts.

6 hours ago

burglary...

Frank Sumrall

Bremerton woman found guilty of 16 burglary counts across 7 counties

A Bremerton resident was found guilty of multiple burglaries and thefts all throughout Washington.

8 hours ago

RFK Jr....

MyNorthwest Staff

Washington joins lawsuit accusing RFK Jr. of ‘illegally gutting’ public health

Washington AG Nick Brown joins lawsuit against RFK Jr. for alleged illegal actions affecting public health policies in WA.

9 hours ago

everett fire apartments...

Frank Sumrall

One dead in Everett apartment fire Monday morning

One person died in a fire that occurred in an Everett apartment complex Monday morning, the Everett Fire Department (EPD) confirmed.

9 hours ago

Can Seattle really stomach more taxes?