Community Corner

Leaders of Connecticut Small Towns: Keep the Car Tax

Officials from local communities will go to Hartford today to testify against Gov. Dannel P. Malloy's proposal to eliminate the car tax. They say the plan will force them to raise other local taxes.

 

Already concerned about the budget proposed by Gov. Dannel P. Malloy, leaders of small towns from across Connecticut, including North Branford Interim Town Manager Bonnie Therrien and Mayor Anthony Candelora, will be in Hartford today to testify against the governor's request to eliminate local car taxes.

In East Hampton that plan would cost the town $2.5 million annually, according to figures drafted by the state's Office of Fiscal Analysis. In North Branford, the town would lose $3,043,98 if the General Assembly accepts Malloy's proposal to eliminate the local tax on all cars valued at less than $28,500.

Find out what's happening in North Branfordwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Malloy has offered the plan as tax relief for the middle class, arguing that car taxes don't provide as much local revenue as officials believe because it is difficult and costly to collect, according to a report on the website Ct News Junkie.

But local officials complain that Malloy's proposal would put a serious dent in their budgets, costing some towns millions of dollars annually, revenue that will have to be made up by raising local taxes on other business property and real estate.

Find out what's happening in North Branfordwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

The proposal, which is being aired today in a hearing befor the legislature's Finance, Revenue, and Bonding Committee, would leaver her community "no other option but to raise property taxes on business and homeowners,” Somers First Selectwoman Lisa Pellegrini told Ct News Junkie.


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