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About this column: Cartoonist Charley Krebs has won multiple awards from the Illinois Press Association and Suburban Newspapers of America since he began his career with a weekly Chicago newspaper chain in 1979. Charley's opinions are his own and do not represent the opinions of Patch.Related Topics:Comics and Sunday Comics Patch
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Atlas Shrugged part two comes out in a couple of months.. i hope the sequel is better than the first movie. The book, of course, is about what happens when big gov't squashes capitalist businesses.
Make it to retirement? What happens when you reach retirement and your income becomes fixed but your property taxes go up $1000 a year so that school superintendents can make 300 grand? And you can't sell out and leave because no one will buy your house? Retirement in Grayslake is something to be feared.
Well Sandra, you could use the Illinois Senior Freeze Exemption that locks your property taxes in at the rate of the first year of the exemption. Then, so long as you remember to file your exemption each year, they will never go up. Or you could use the Senior Citizen Exemption which is not as generous as the freeze but has a looser eligibility requirement.
Actually Jim, here are the requirements for the Illinois Senior Freeze Exemption:
- Be born prior to or in the year 1946,
- Have a total gross household income of no more than $55,000 for 2010,
- Own the property, or have a legal, equitable or leasehold interest in the property on January 1, 2010 and January 1, 2011,
- Be liable for the payment of 2010 and 2011 property taxes, and
- Use the property as a principal place of residence on January 1, 2010 and January 1, 2011.
I would think living on $50,000 still qualifies as a decent standard of living, hardly the "dire straits" you speak of. Nor do I see anything on there that would preclude the North Shore, whether in Cook or Lake counties, from being eligible to receive the Senior Freeze.
Bucephalus, What happens when your EAV goes down, which just happened on the North Shore? The Senior Freeze Exemption allows qualified senior citizens to apply for a freeze of the equalized assessed value (EAV) of their properties for the year preceding the year in which they first apply and qualify for this exemption. For example, a senior citizen who qualifies and applies for this exemption in taxable year 2011 will have the EAV of the property frozen at the 2010 EAV. Those who qualify and receive this exemption should be aware that this does not automatically freeze the amount of their tax bill. Only the EAV remains at the fixed amount. The amount of dollars that the taxing districts asks for (levy) may change and thus alter a tax bill.
DCB, as the link says, the Senior Freeze Exemption must be applied for each year. If your EAV goes down, there is no reason to apply for the exemption that year. The point of the exemption is to limit the single biggest component of your property taxes (the starting point). If the EAV goes down, your share of the levy will also decrease, thus no need for the freeze.
The EAV tracks the inverse of the tax rate for the most part and is used to try and spread the payments around so everyone is paying their fair share.
If the EAV goes down, your taxes will not necessarily go down. The levy determines the actual tax, if it goes up, so do your taxes. If it goes down, so do your taxes.
If the EAV goes down, or stays the same, true Lenny, your taxes may not change. But more than likely, they will change and for the better. Your share of the tax burden is decreased by lowering the EAV. A property on which the EAV which shrinks will have a lower tax bill than and otherwise identical property whose EAV stayed the same.
Remember, a tax bill is formulated by taking the aggregate of all the taxing agencies and multiplying that by the EAV. An EAV of $20,000 multiplied by 8.521, for example, will have a higher tax bill than an EAV of $19,000. If a levy goes up and your EAV goes down, the devil is in the math, but you would still pay less than if your EAV didn't go down.
If your EAV goes down your exemtion is smaller or in many cases it's gone. On top of that the tax rate more than likely will go up (never see them go down!). A lower EAV rarely overcomes a higher tax rate and the loss of your exemption. That's what happened to many taxpayers. Taxes for many have increased 40% in just two years.
THE CRUSHING WEIGHT WEIGHT OF PROPERTY TAXES ???? TO PAY FOR THE ILLEGALS WHO GET FREE HOSPITAL CARE---FREE WELFARE---HOUSING--FOOD STAMPS..
LOOK AT CALIFORNIA, THEY HAVE OVER 5 MILLION ILLEGALS USING THEIR SERVICES FOR FREE..
BUT THEY ARE BLAMING PENSIONS..
WHEN ARE WE GOING TO HAVE THE GUTS TO POINT FINGERS AT ILLEGALS ???
ILLEGALS GET HURT ON THE JOBS, WHO PAYS ?? TAX PAYERS DO, NOT THE BUSINESS THEY WORK FOR...
ST THERESE HOSPITAL OUT OF BUSINESS, WHY ?? ILLEGALS FLOODING THEIR E.R. .
WAUKEGAN---ILLINOIS WILL GO UNDER TO LIKE CALIFORNIA..
Sorry Jose, but I am going to make two comments that are not really relevant to your comments. One, it hardly takes any guts to point fingers, which is why everyone does it. Two, when you write all in capital letters, you seem hysterical.
AMERICA IS BEING INVADED BY ILLEGALS FROM MEXICO---SOUTH AMERICA---ARAB COUNTRIES AND WHAT ARE WE DOING ABOUT IT ??? PROMISING THEM AMNESTY----THE DREAM ACT--FREE COLLEGE---FREE EVERYTHING.
IS SO OBVIOUS WHY CALIFORNIA----ILLINOIS AND OTHER STATES ARE IN DEBT..TOO MANY ILLEGALS.
If you want people to read your posts you should probably not post in caps. FYI most people just ignore those posts regardless if you have something intelligent to say or not.
I'm curious which principals in District 15 have an income over $380,000. But I suppose it is easier to say things than to research them before spouting off.
The highest paid principal in Illinois earned $205,730. That would be $174,270 less than the top 1%. The average principal earned $85,805 or $294,195 less. You may be well enough off to wave away $294,195 but most people aren't. The average principal would have to earn 4.4 times their salary to make it into the top 1%.
I understand the tax bills very well. I even have held townhalls to discuss them and teach people that is it the Taxing Bodies that causes their property taxes to go up, not the Assessor. The Assessor just spreads the pain around evenly or at least is supposed to if they are doing their job properly.
Bucephalus, please do better research. Almost every superintendent and assistant superintendent's pay is north of $200K on the North Shore and many of other chicago suburbs.
DCB, you should try reading what I typed before commenting, it prevents you from sounding like an idiot.
1: I referred to principals. I said nothing about superintendents and the link I provided said nothing about superintendents.
2: You attack my research by just claiming something. Where is your research? You should really do better research, by say doing any, before attacking me.
3: Even if a superintendent's pay is above $200k, that still does not put it above $380,000, which is the cutoff for the top 1%. Therefore my critique of Burt's absurd statement still stands.
4: Here's the salary data for superintdents in Illinois. Note that the average salary is $120,168. The highest salary comes in at $262,264. Yes that is above $200,000, but again, that is nowhere the $380,000 that Burt claims they make.
http://www.iasb.com/pdf/Suptsalary.pdf
5: Even if you decide to factor in other forms of compensation, let's say all "total creditable earnings," then not even the highest paid superintendent makes $380,000. That superintendent comes in at $358,750. Again, not $380,000 and not in the top 1%.
http://www.familytaxpayers.org/salary.php
6: There are other school districts in Illinois besides the North Shore. Just because some, or most, of the superintendents there make over $200k does not mean all superintendents make that. That's why I cited this thing called a mean (also known as an average).
If the State would give vouchers for private schools it would cut the costs.It is to expensive running the schools.So many chiefs and not enough Indians.When you call to complain about taxes they tell you to call the school district which is like talking to a brick wall.I would love to be able to sell my house.I am 70 and taxes are killing me.Next year Obama care will put a sales tax on homes.Taxes taxes taxes
Yet sadly, most people here keep tolerating the antics of some of the current D46 board members. A few have been voted out, but it is far from solving the problem. Start showing up to meetings. Start voting. Start holding these people accountable. Ever since the old Lakeland Newspapers were sold, no one covers village or school board meetings in this county. It's pathetic.
Please start reading more reliable sources of information. The "Obamacare sales tax on home sales" only affects you if you make more than $200k/year ($250k if married) AND you sell your house for a profit of more than $250k ($500k if married). So, if you're in that situation, you're not going to get a whole lot of sympathy from me.
Nice Gary. A comment asking me if I've run for school board when we know darn well you haven't either. Sorry, but the fact I have a family to support and have to work multiple jobs doesn't absolve the current or past boards of their general ignorance, ineptitude or corruption.
Everything we do is taxed. They collect so much tax money its insane, and they are always broke.The basic evil and greed of mankind is killing this nation. Why are we working for the government? What a shame that our "leaders" are such scum.
And if people keep putting up with it and voting for who the system tells us to, nothing will change. Collectively, we live in a country full of stupid people.
Got news for all of you blatherers. Good schools cost money. We have some of the best public schools anywhere because our predecessors were willing to commit to pay for the education of all who live within a given area. Vouchers for "Charter Schools" is just another way of adding profit to someone's bottom line at the expense of quality education for all. And making the best schools unaffordable for those who can't sweeten the pot and have to settle for what a voucher might buy in a competitive market is just taking the public education system one step closer to privitization. Just like they want to do with Medicare. It is unfortunate that only about 20 to 25% of a given community actually has kids in the schools at any one time, but the value of where you live is inextricably tied to the quality of the schools in your neighborhood. Support your public schools; Support your property values. And provide the best education for the next generation, not just those who can afford a more expensive option.
Really D'skidoc, how much money, please tell us? Should we give schools a blank check, which is pretty much what's going on now? I would like to know what evidence you have that property taxes must be so burdensome before you can have high student achievement.
Are you honestly suggesting that after one year of the first school for young kids, Harvard was founded because those young kids (most of whom ended up going to Harvard) were utterly poor material?
By the way, 1636 was 139 years before the Declaration of Independence, so even if Harvard was founded on the basis of your insane idea, it couldn't have been to combat the public school system of the United States because the United States didn't exist.
No offense, but if you can't run a school district effectively on $3,000-$5,000 a HOME locally, then the district has some serious problems. Perhaps if the superintendent would take a pay cut from her cushy $200,000 a year job, or find other ways to cut expenses, that money could be funneled into things like teachers' salaries. And furthermore, I love the teachers, but if the amount of money given to a district was the direct result of how much money they get, then Lake County schools should be the best in the country ALL the time, since the property taxes here are highest in the country.
""Charter Schools" is just another way of adding profit to someone's bottom line at the expense of quality education for all. And making the best schools unaffordable for those who can't sweeten the pot and have to settle for what a voucher might buy in a competitive market is just taking the public education system one step closer to privitization."
You have several pieces in here to respond to:
1. Charter schools are for the most part spend less per child than the public schools so they are not the profit machine you state.
2. Second they actually save the entire system money.
3. Lastly, not only do they improve the educational outcomes for the children who obtain the voucher, it improves the educational outcomes for those still in public schools, i.e. it provides a better quality education for all.
"Support your public schools; Support your property values. And provide the best education for the next generation, not just those who can afford a more expensive option."
I don't know anyone who doesn't support schools. Take a look around you and see the devastation of this economy. In Grayslake D46, 50% of the homes on the market last year were in distress, i.e. foreclosure, short sale, etc. Our property values are crashing and the high taxes are not helping anyone. You talk about those that cannot afford a "more expensive option", well the property taxes are the more expensive option and they are driving businesses and families out of the area and Lake County.
If you didn't know, Lake County has the highest property taxes in the midwest and depending on the year, from 14-17th highest in the entire country. We don't have the 14-17th highest ranked schools on average either.
Lastly, it is very disingenuous on your part to tell people to may more taxes, which it sounds like you can afford, when they are struggling and can no longer afford to even live here. Where is your compassion?
There is a limit upon the number of characters per post, so I am going to have to leave it there, unless people would like more states that have found charter schools don't outperform public schools.
First since you keep telling everyone to read what you wrote before responding you should do the same. You claimed I said, "saying that charter schools are better than public schools" when I said
"1. Charter schools are for the most part spend less per child than the public schools so they are not the profit machine you state.
2. Second they actually save the entire system money.
3. Lastly, not only do they improve the educational outcomes for the children who obtain the voucher, it improves the educational outcomes for those still in public schools, i.e. it provides a better quality education for all."
After Katrina, how charter schools helped recast New Orleans education
New Orleans has become a laboratory for education reform since hurricane Katrina. Charter schools, which are free to experiment, make up the majority of the city’s schools.
"A sample of students in Milwaukee's private voucher schools made gains in reading in 2010-'11 that were significantly higher than those of a matched sample of peers in Milwaukee Public Schools, but math achievement remained the same last school year, according to the results of a multiyear study tracking students in both sectors." -- http://www.jsonline.com/news/education/voucher-students-improve-on-reading-study-finds-ef4ahcf-140522733.html
"... standardized math test scores rose significantly more rapidly for students who used vouchers to attend private schools than for their counterparts in public schools." -- http://www.nber.org/digest/nov97/w5964.html
The battery of empirical studies, conducted by the School Choice Demonstration Project, examined a broad array of questions. One study found that the Milwaukee program saves major taxpayer money, confirming what we knew from previous studies: private schools are more efficient than the bloated government bureaucracy. Another found that private schools in the voucher program are more racially diverse, also confirming a large body of earlier research unanimously showing that vouchers provide a more racially integrated school environment. Yet another study found that vouchers have not affected home prices. -- http://pjmedia.com/blog/dont-believe-the-spin-milwaukee-voucher-program-a-success/
"Table [A] shows that the addition of one voucher-accepting school anywhere in Milwaukee will improve student achievement on the Language Arts portion of either the WKCE or the Terra Nova by .055 NCE points. The addition of a voucherreceiving private school would increase a student’s standardized Math score by .047 NCE and Reading score by .058 NCE." -- http://www.uaedreform.org/SCDP/Milwaukee_Eval/Report_11.pdf
First of all, I don't know what you are claiming if you are saying that saving "save the entire system money" and providing "a better quality education for all" do not in fact equate to being "better than public schools." If I misinterpreted you, I am sorry, but then what are you saying? You claim they save money and a provide better education compared to public schools. I interpreted that as being better than public schools. How is that interpretation wrong? What does a charter school have to do, in your definition, to be "better than public schools."
Now, Lennie, we both cited Michigan to support our claims. The link I gave showed that charter schools in Michigan did no better than public schools. They weren't worse, but they weren't better either. Charter schools in Michigan fell along the same averages that the public schools did.
Your link doesn't change that point. For starters the chart is misleading. It compares the top 25 Districts or top charter schools. A public school district that has one amazing high school and one average high school will not be in the top 25 whereas those academies on the list only need to be exceptional themselves. It is a lot easier to have one exceptional school than an entire exceptional school district.
Even then, 16 of the top 25 are public school districts while three of the charters are self-managed by the public school districts they are supposedly superior than.
Next, your New Orleans story doesn't dispute what I said. I claimed, as all the links I provided said, that charter schools are a mixed bag. Some are better, others are not. On the whole the charter system doesn't "provide a better quality education for all," it provides a roughly equal education for all.
Indeed that's what your New Orleans story showed. Before Katrina, scores were rising. After Katrina, scores rose faster. Before Katrina, the overwhelming number of schools were "academically" unacceptable. After Katrina, that decreased by was still 42%.
Furthermore, the article actually says two very specific things, firstly, that "it’s difficult to pinpoint the cause of such gains." That was from one of the people at Tulane who helped prepare the report on New Orleans schools. Additionally, they received substantially more money. "An influx of federal funds, as well as private donations, has enabled schools to offer extended days or school years, invest in technology, and boost teacher salaries." That's an interesting point to raise when claiming that charters will result in lower spending.
But again, the story here doesn't dispute the claim that some charters are better than the average public school and some charters are not better than the average public school. It does, however, specifically warn against trying to pin those gains in New Orleans on any one factor.
Turning to Milwaukee, there is again a disconnect between what you seem to believe the articles say and what they actually do say. The first article's byline even says "Public, private school progress about same overall." You even quoted one section that said "math achievement remained the same."
More to the point, it doesn't contradict anything I said because none of those articles deal with charter schools. They are all about private schools, which are entirely separate entities from charter schools. Charters are public schools in that they accept all who apply with a lottery to determine if there is an excess of applications. Private schools take whoever they want. A voucher lets you afford the tuition of a private school, it doesn't force that private school to accept a specific student.
Furthermore, the supposed Arkansas study includes this quote: "the students in the voucher program performed at higher levels in the upper grades in reading and science but at lower levels in math at all grade levels examined and in reading and science in fourth grade."
That website also links to several other articles and studies which do not support the idea that charters are a magically ticket to academic success. For example, here's a quote from the website you linked: "Overall the test scores of students who use vouchers are largely indistinguishable from students who stay behind in public schools."
By the way, do you like your clean Lake Michigan water? Do you like your police and fire and paramedic services? Do you like roads free of potholes? Do you want a warning when there's a tornado. All of that is paid for by local taxes and when there isn't so much corruption (like in Springfield) government actually can do some good stuff. See the Hoover Dam sometime. Government at work.
You seriously think there's no corruption in Lake County? Wowwwwwwww. Talk about one-sighted vision. See my post below, because most of things things you speak of are a bunch of union members who are in bed with the politicians locally and keep raising your taxes to give more funding to these things....they then find creative ways to funnel this cash to these people, which I won't sit and explain here.
The trouble is, that corruption DOES exist here, and it's getting worse.
You should get out more. I've traveled to many other parts of the country that have good schools, clean water, and reliable emergency services. They also have better maintained roads and bridges. Guess what? There taxes are lower. Here in IL we have 4 problems that are out of control. 1)Waste 2)Corruption 3)Too many taxing bodies (most in the country), 4)Higher labor costs do to union control.
I live in Libertyville and between our great schools, amazing lake county forest preserve, and progressive village government I feel we get a great value for our property taxes. Now what happens to my federal income taxes I have no idea but I can't complain about my property taxes!
Chances are you are making a lot more than the average Lake County resident, number one. And secondly, I know a slew of military veterans who served for decades, yet are insulted with retirement pensions of about $1,000-$1,200 a month. So there are a large group of 50-64 year-olds who have to also still work a second job after they retire, usually at some place that gives them a terrible wage because other places that pay well refuse to hire them because they are now old. The problem is way, way more widespread than those who have a ton of money in places like Libertyville or Green Oaks or Vernon Hills, among other places, are willing to admit. And that's because it doesn't affect them directly. At least not yet....
So if someone is living in, say, a $125,000 property near Grayslake, as one person I know is, and getting $1,100 a month in military retirement and has to pay a $4,000 property tax this year...what does that mean? Well, it means unless they have an extra job those property taxes are taking a THIRD of their income in one swoop. No offense, but that is ridiculous. $4,000 to even someone who owns their property is a lot of money in this economy for many people. And if it doesn't affect you directly, the tendency from board members and politicians who are better of is a "we don't care" attitude.
If someone's only income is $1,100 a month they most likely can't afford the house reguardless of property tax amount. Clark - I don't understand your point: you complain that military pensions are too low but public service pensions are too large??
That's one of my many points about the pensions cmeller. The military people usually served far longer and in way more dangerous circumstances than any public official. Yet they are insulted with terrible pensions while being double-insulted by funding all these people's huge rising pensions with their property taxes.
Try spending a day with some of these veterans that are retired yet not old enough to cllect social security one day, for just one day, and see the difficulties many of them face. There are TONS of them in Lake County.
Here's an idea: Start making people who have 4 or 5 kids, or however many pay a greater share. If they want to keep burdening our system and costing us our tax dollars, start passing legislation that says you will also incur a greater property tax burden because of it. Tired of seeing families with 7 or 8 kids walking around while mom or dad is on a cellphone and half of them are screaming or fighting. Just an honest observation and thought.
Wow Clark, where are these famlies with 7 or 8 kids. Certainly not on the North Shore. Every family I know has at most "3". In fact, it getting to the point that this country's total fertility rate is at replcement level. That's too bad for the pensions and social security these kids will have to fund for us old geezers.
Apparently Deadcatbounce is in denial and has never visited the greater Round Lake area, or walked into the health care clinic on Clarendon Drive and seen what I am referring to.
Ah yes, one person who believes he has seen every family in Round Lake can now make vast pronouncements about the birth rate in the entire state. After all, Round Lake is exactly the same as Highland Park which is the same as Macomb which is the same as Marion.
What other grand observations should we take from Round Lake?
I don't think Bucephalus bothers to think before posting. Your Round Lake/Highland Park comparison makes zero sense whatsoever, and we are all now dumber for having read your post. Seriously, go walk into the Lake County clinic at the location I gave you sometime, walk around, and tell me what you see. Until you do, you have zero frame of reference toward my comment whatsoever.
And lastly, enough is enough with the pensions. Just because you are a public servant doesn't mean you should get a ridicuslouly large retirement pension compared to other people. Those were almost the only thing that went up on my taxes this year. Everyone else has to do with less, so should those people. It's the same reason people in Wisconsin elected Scott Walker...because they were tired of public employee unions basically stealing taxpayer money and bankrupting entire states.
@Jose - If you want to be an effective troll, you will need to be less obvious. I suggest that you make up a new screen name and then start writing in a more subtle tone. As it stands, you aren't fooling anyone.
The bottom line is that all forms of revenue are down for local, state and Federal after the crash. New programs were started, more VPs, higher pay raises;, people spent all their money and the rest was taken by the markets and banks.
The Chicago city colleges want new buildings to improve education but swear they will not raise taxes they will just borrow the money from private sources. Spending is a problem for sure. They will raise taxes at all levels until we all leave. No one wants to make a sacrifice , especially the politicians. The only solution is to bring back jobs and the government needs to support American industry. Illinois supports several million illegals and immigrants. They just keep pouring in with no stop in sight.
IL has more levels of government (7000+) than any other State in the USA. Our property taxes pay the salaries, benefits & pensions for each of those public employees. Fiscal mismanagement, back door deals, rampant nepotism, overlapping service areas and unnecessary jobs all contribute to the problems facing Illinois. Once a year, for a short 30 day period, property owners can provide evidence to contest their property tax assessment. Winning an assessment appeal can shave significant $$$ off your property tax bill. Township filing requirements and deadlines are available through your County Assessor.
@Clark W. Griswold, it might cost a bit of $ to hire a property tax consultant to contest your assessment - if you don't, you are paying more than your fair share of property taxes to the State of IL. Most folks obtain a 2-3 yr benefit from a winning appeal. My clients say it's money well spent.
For homeowners I charge a $55 analysis fee & nothing is further is due - unless we WIN the appeal. If we win, my fee is one-third of the first year tax savings. Some of my clients have saved over $2000/yr on their 2012 taxes. You can view testimonials at htttp://www.k2consultingil.com.
I must thank all of you for your comments, particularly those with informed opinions and those with all those links that support your argument. I had decided not to have that little sign read 'your school district thanks you' so as to avoid touching that nerve, but its pretty much inherent to the topic, the tax-draw of the schools, something I recall my older neighbors railing against in a near-west suburb even in the 1960s. This thread debating all sides of any property tax has provided a pretty well-rounded (ahem) assessment. As for the Atlas Mugged title, honestly it is there for the word-play only, not any deep Rand-ian meaning or endorsement thereof. Thank you for almost 100 comments prompted by my cartoon. I appreciate everyone who takes time to comment.
The burden on all property tax payers can be lessened if the automatic 6% raise for the last 4 years of teacher employment was removed. This 25% income spike then calculates into the retirement formula so if a teacher retires at 55 and lives until 85 its a 30 year boot on the throat of area taxpayers. Add the fact that some D211 high school Drivers Ed and PE teachers salaries are making $160k (9 mo) How this can be justified?
Here's another way to look at school overspending:
Collected revenue via property taxes is about $15K per D211 student.
20 average students per class room x $15k = $300,000 collected per classroom.
Pay the teacher $100k. Pay a backup teacher/administrator $50k. Where does the extra $150,000 go?
Now multiply by 600 classrooms in D211 .... $90 million, year after year
Now lets collect some revenue for the grade school and do the same exercise.
Thanks again to everyone taking time to comment on this topic and related issues as instigated by my cartoon! Whew! We all can catch our breath now while I to return to drawing about weather and baseball!
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Dan Arenov
7:24 am on Sunday, July 15, 2012
Atlas Shrugged part two comes out in a couple of months.. i hope the sequel is better than the first movie. The book, of course, is about what happens when big gov't squashes capitalist businesses.
this is a cute drawing by Charlie.
Willie Wilmette
9:24 am on Sunday, July 15, 2012
The sign says "the county thanks you", but the vast majority of property taxes goes to school districts.
Johny
9:28 am on Sunday, July 15, 2012
How true the drawing is! Funny thing Dan, the government is run by the biggest businesses of them all!
Sandra Sims
9:48 am on Sunday, July 15, 2012
Make it to retirement? What happens when you reach retirement and your income becomes fixed but your property taxes go up $1000 a year so that school superintendents can make 300 grand? And you can't sell out and leave because no one will buy your house? Retirement in Grayslake is something to be feared.
Carl Lambrecht
10:30 am on Sunday, July 15, 2012
Sandra your correct. In addition the superinendent gets a free car and the students have to pay for the books. Carl Lambrecht 847 432 8255
Mr Bill
12:53 pm on Sunday, July 15, 2012
Amen...
Bucephalus
7:57 pm on Sunday, July 15, 2012
Well Sandra, you could use the Illinois Senior Freeze Exemption that locks your property taxes in at the rate of the first year of the exemption. Then, so long as you remember to file your exemption each year, they will never go up. Or you could use the Senior Citizen Exemption which is not as generous as the freeze but has a looser eligibility requirement.
Jim Sullivan
8:50 pm on Sunday, July 15, 2012
Senior freeze only applies to those folks who already are in dire straights and probably do not live anywhere near to the north shore.
Jim
Bucephalus
9:02 pm on Sunday, July 15, 2012
Actually Jim, here are the requirements for the Illinois Senior Freeze Exemption:
- Be born prior to or in the year 1946,
- Have a total gross household income of no more than $55,000 for 2010,
- Own the property, or have a legal, equitable or leasehold interest in the property on January 1, 2010 and January 1, 2011,
- Be liable for the payment of 2010 and 2011 property taxes, and
- Use the property as a principal place of residence on January 1, 2010 and January 1, 2011.
From these two sources:
http://www.cookcountyassessor.com/exemptions.aspx
http://www.lakecountyil.gov/Assessor/BoardofReview/Documents/2012bFreezeFormInstructions.pdf
I would think living on $50,000 still qualifies as a decent standard of living, hardly the "dire straits" you speak of. Nor do I see anything on there that would preclude the North Shore, whether in Cook or Lake counties, from being eligible to receive the Senior Freeze.
Deadcatbounce
9:37 pm on Sunday, July 15, 2012
Bucephalus, What happens when your EAV goes down, which just happened on the North Shore? The Senior Freeze Exemption allows qualified senior citizens to apply for a freeze of the equalized assessed value (EAV) of their properties for the year preceding the year in which they first apply and qualify for this exemption. For example, a senior citizen who qualifies and applies for this exemption in taxable year 2011 will have the EAV of the property frozen at the 2010 EAV. Those who qualify and receive this exemption should be aware that this does not automatically freeze the amount of their tax bill. Only the EAV remains at the fixed amount. The amount of dollars that the taxing districts asks for (levy) may change and thus alter a tax bill.
Bucephalus
11:04 pm on Sunday, July 15, 2012
DCB, as the link says, the Senior Freeze Exemption must be applied for each year. If your EAV goes down, there is no reason to apply for the exemption that year. The point of the exemption is to limit the single biggest component of your property taxes (the starting point). If the EAV goes down, your share of the levy will also decrease, thus no need for the freeze.
Lennie Jarratt
11:40 pm on Sunday, July 15, 2012
The EAV tracks the inverse of the tax rate for the most part and is used to try and spread the payments around so everyone is paying their fair share.
If the EAV goes down, your taxes will not necessarily go down. The levy determines the actual tax, if it goes up, so do your taxes. If it goes down, so do your taxes.
Bucephalus
12:11 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
If the EAV goes down, or stays the same, true Lenny, your taxes may not change. But more than likely, they will change and for the better. Your share of the tax burden is decreased by lowering the EAV. A property on which the EAV which shrinks will have a lower tax bill than and otherwise identical property whose EAV stayed the same.
Remember, a tax bill is formulated by taking the aggregate of all the taxing agencies and multiplying that by the EAV. An EAV of $20,000 multiplied by 8.521, for example, will have a higher tax bill than an EAV of $19,000. If a levy goes up and your EAV goes down, the devil is in the math, but you would still pay less than if your EAV didn't go down.
Nightcrawler
2:24 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
I saw that too Carl. I'd love to know who audits where the superintendent drives that vehicle, if anyone.
Deadcatbounce
9:45 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
If your EAV goes down your exemtion is smaller or in many cases it's gone. On top of that the tax rate more than likely will go up (never see them go down!). A lower EAV rarely overcomes a higher tax rate and the loss of your exemption. That's what happened to many taxpayers. Taxes for many have increased 40% in just two years.
Jose
10:01 am on Sunday, July 15, 2012
THE CRUSHING WEIGHT WEIGHT OF PROPERTY TAXES ???? TO PAY FOR THE ILLEGALS WHO GET FREE HOSPITAL CARE---FREE WELFARE---HOUSING--FOOD STAMPS..
LOOK AT CALIFORNIA, THEY HAVE OVER 5 MILLION ILLEGALS USING THEIR SERVICES FOR FREE..
BUT THEY ARE BLAMING PENSIONS..
WHEN ARE WE GOING TO HAVE THE GUTS TO POINT FINGERS AT ILLEGALS ???
ILLEGALS GET HURT ON THE JOBS, WHO PAYS ?? TAX PAYERS DO, NOT THE BUSINESS THEY WORK FOR...
ST THERESE HOSPITAL OUT OF BUSINESS, WHY ?? ILLEGALS FLOODING THEIR E.R. .
WAUKEGAN---ILLINOIS WILL GO UNDER TO LIKE CALIFORNIA..
Burt
11:30 am on Sunday, July 15, 2012
Those are your state taxes
Nightcrawler
2:23 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
Go look at your property taxes, they are paying for pensions also.
James Iverson
7:35 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
Sorry Jose, but I am going to make two comments that are not really relevant to your comments. One, it hardly takes any guts to point fingers, which is why everyone does it. Two, when you write all in capital letters, you seem hysterical.
Jose
10:05 am on Sunday, July 15, 2012
AMERICA IS BEING INVADED BY ILLEGALS FROM MEXICO---SOUTH AMERICA---ARAB COUNTRIES AND WHAT ARE WE DOING ABOUT IT ??? PROMISING THEM AMNESTY----THE DREAM ACT--FREE COLLEGE---FREE EVERYTHING.
IS SO OBVIOUS WHY CALIFORNIA----ILLINOIS AND OTHER STATES ARE IN DEBT..TOO MANY ILLEGALS.
Jim
11:03 am on Sunday, July 15, 2012
Jose
If you want people to read your posts you should probably not post in caps. FYI most people just ignore those posts regardless if you have something intelligent to say or not.
Burt
11:28 am on Sunday, July 15, 2012
Illinois has no money to fund schools in large part to illegals
Burt
11:29 am on Sunday, July 15, 2012
school principals and upper management are part of the 1 %
Bucephalus
8:12 pm on Sunday, July 15, 2012
The top 1% of income earners make $380,000 a year.
http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/01/17/measuring-the-top-1-by-wealth-not-income/
I'm curious which principals in District 15 have an income over $380,000. But I suppose it is easier to say things than to research them before spouting off.
Burt
10:45 pm on Sunday, July 15, 2012
In other words "They get paid way too much for what they do" We pay for it!!!! Might as well be the 1 %
Bucephalus
11:15 pm on Sunday, July 15, 2012
So after asking you to back up your claim with any shred of evidence you now say it doesn't matter.
Well Burt, let me supply you with some materials.
http://www.iasb.com/pdf/Principalsalary.pdf
The highest paid principal in Illinois earned $205,730. That would be $174,270 less than the top 1%. The average principal earned $85,805 or $294,195 less. You may be well enough off to wave away $294,195 but most people aren't. The average principal would have to earn 4.4 times their salary to make it into the top 1%.
Lennie Jarratt
12:20 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
I understand the tax bills very well. I even have held townhalls to discuss them and teach people that is it the Taxing Bodies that causes their property taxes to go up, not the Assessor. The Assessor just spreads the pain around evenly or at least is supposed to if they are doing their job properly.
Deadcatbounce
9:31 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
Bucephalus, please do better research. Almost every superintendent and assistant superintendent's pay is north of $200K on the North Shore and many of other chicago suburbs.
Bucephalus
10:15 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
DCB, you should try reading what I typed before commenting, it prevents you from sounding like an idiot.
1: I referred to principals. I said nothing about superintendents and the link I provided said nothing about superintendents.
2: You attack my research by just claiming something. Where is your research? You should really do better research, by say doing any, before attacking me.
3: Even if a superintendent's pay is above $200k, that still does not put it above $380,000, which is the cutoff for the top 1%. Therefore my critique of Burt's absurd statement still stands.
4: Here's the salary data for superintdents in Illinois. Note that the average salary is $120,168. The highest salary comes in at $262,264. Yes that is above $200,000, but again, that is nowhere the $380,000 that Burt claims they make.
http://www.iasb.com/pdf/Suptsalary.pdf
5: Even if you decide to factor in other forms of compensation, let's say all "total creditable earnings," then not even the highest paid superintendent makes $380,000. That superintendent comes in at $358,750. Again, not $380,000 and not in the top 1%.
http://www.familytaxpayers.org/salary.php
6: There are other school districts in Illinois besides the North Shore. Just because some, or most, of the superintendents there make over $200k does not mean all superintendents make that. That's why I cited this thing called a mean (also known as an average).
Burt
11:29 am on Sunday, July 15, 2012
The old people will start rioting in the streets soon
Burt
11:31 am on Sunday, July 15, 2012
Vote for Romney and he can stab the illegals with scissors
Shirley
4:53 pm on Sunday, July 15, 2012
I would vote for you, Burt, if you ran. Your comments are the most intelligent here!
Robert Roehl
11:56 am on Sunday, July 15, 2012
If the State would give vouchers for private schools it would cut the costs.It is to expensive running the schools.So many chiefs and not enough Indians.When you call to complain about taxes they tell you to call the school district which is like talking to a brick wall.I would love to be able to sell my house.I am 70 and taxes are killing me.Next year Obama care will put a sales tax on homes.Taxes taxes taxes
Nightcrawler
2:26 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
Yet sadly, most people here keep tolerating the antics of some of the current D46 board members. A few have been voted out, but it is far from solving the problem. Start showing up to meetings. Start voting. Start holding these people accountable. Ever since the old Lakeland Newspapers were sold, no one covers village or school board meetings in this county. It's pathetic.
Internet Tough Guy
9:32 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
Robert,
Please start reading more reliable sources of information. The "Obamacare sales tax on home sales" only affects you if you make more than $200k/year ($250k if married) AND you sell your house for a profit of more than $250k ($500k if married). So, if you're in that situation, you're not going to get a whole lot of sympathy from me.
Gary
9:45 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
Clark,
Have you run for the school board?
Nightcrawler
2:39 pm on Monday, July 16, 2012
Nice Gary. A comment asking me if I've run for school board when we know darn well you haven't either. Sorry, but the fact I have a family to support and have to work multiple jobs doesn't absolve the current or past boards of their general ignorance, ineptitude or corruption.
Robert Roehl
11:57 am on Sunday, July 15, 2012
Tax and spend democrats.They are killing this state
The Q
7:17 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
amen!
Lennie Jarratt
1:24 pm on Sunday, July 15, 2012
Learn how to adopt your school district and start bringing fiscal sanity to them at http://ForOurChildrensFuture.com.
Palatine Sparty
3:23 pm on Sunday, July 15, 2012
Everything we do is taxed. They collect so much tax money its insane, and they are always broke.The basic evil and greed of mankind is killing this nation. Why are we working for the government? What a shame that our "leaders" are such scum.
Nightcrawler
2:28 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
And if people keep putting up with it and voting for who the system tells us to, nothing will change. Collectively, we live in a country full of stupid people.
Say it isn't so
7:02 pm on Sunday, July 15, 2012
70% of your Lake County property tax goes to schools...... Go to your school board meetings before they approve another "Study"
Deadcatbounce
7:33 pm on Sunday, July 15, 2012
You are so right. Go to school board meetings. Most School board members are just a bunch of bobble heads for the school's administration.
Lennie Jarratt
11:54 pm on Sunday, July 15, 2012
Learn how to adopt your school district and start bringing fiscal sanity to them at http://ForOurChildrensFuture.com.
D'skidoc
8:12 pm on Sunday, July 15, 2012
Got news for all of you blatherers. Good schools cost money. We have some of the best public schools anywhere because our predecessors were willing to commit to pay for the education of all who live within a given area. Vouchers for "Charter Schools" is just another way of adding profit to someone's bottom line at the expense of quality education for all. And making the best schools unaffordable for those who can't sweeten the pot and have to settle for what a voucher might buy in a competitive market is just taking the public education system one step closer to privitization. Just like they want to do with Medicare. It is unfortunate that only about 20 to 25% of a given community actually has kids in the schools at any one time, but the value of where you live is inextricably tied to the quality of the schools in your neighborhood. Support your public schools; Support your property values. And provide the best education for the next generation, not just those who can afford a more expensive option.
Deadcatbounce
9:39 pm on Sunday, July 15, 2012
Really D'skidoc, how much money, please tell us? Should we give schools a blank check, which is pretty much what's going on now? I would like to know what evidence you have that property taxes must be so burdensome before you can have high student achievement.
Burt
10:49 pm on Sunday, July 15, 2012
Harvard was opened as a private school to combat the public school system of the US which has never been that good
Bucephalus
11:10 pm on Sunday, July 15, 2012
Burt, do you just say the first thing that jumps into your head?
Harvard was founded in 1636.
http://www.harvard.edu/harvard-glance
The first public school in America was founded a year earlier in 1635, in Boston as well.
http://www.cityofboston.gov/freedomtrail/firstpublic.asp
Are you honestly suggesting that after one year of the first school for young kids, Harvard was founded because those young kids (most of whom ended up going to Harvard) were utterly poor material?
By the way, 1636 was 139 years before the Declaration of Independence, so even if Harvard was founded on the basis of your insane idea, it couldn't have been to combat the public school system of the United States because the United States didn't exist.
Nightcrawler
2:47 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
No offense, but if you can't run a school district effectively on $3,000-$5,000 a HOME locally, then the district has some serious problems. Perhaps if the superintendent would take a pay cut from her cushy $200,000 a year job, or find other ways to cut expenses, that money could be funneled into things like teachers' salaries. And furthermore, I love the teachers, but if the amount of money given to a district was the direct result of how much money they get, then Lake County schools should be the best in the country ALL the time, since the property taxes here are highest in the country.
Lennie Jarratt
9:20 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
D'skidoc, let's look at your statements:
"Good schools cost money." -
1. How much is enough?
2. What should the consequences be if they fail once they are given that amount?
Lennie Jarratt
9:21 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
"our predecessors were willing to commit to pay for the education " - Boards raises taxes every year, so it's not our predecessors doing this.
Lennie Jarratt
9:26 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
""Charter Schools" is just another way of adding profit to someone's bottom line at the expense of quality education for all. And making the best schools unaffordable for those who can't sweeten the pot and have to settle for what a voucher might buy in a competitive market is just taking the public education system one step closer to privitization."
You have several pieces in here to respond to:
1. Charter schools are for the most part spend less per child than the public schools so they are not the profit machine you state.
2. Second they actually save the entire system money.
3. Lastly, not only do they improve the educational outcomes for the children who obtain the voucher, it improves the educational outcomes for those still in public schools, i.e. it provides a better quality education for all.
Lennie Jarratt
9:36 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
"Support your public schools; Support your property values. And provide the best education for the next generation, not just those who can afford a more expensive option."
I don't know anyone who doesn't support schools. Take a look around you and see the devastation of this economy. In Grayslake D46, 50% of the homes on the market last year were in distress, i.e. foreclosure, short sale, etc. Our property values are crashing and the high taxes are not helping anyone. You talk about those that cannot afford a "more expensive option", well the property taxes are the more expensive option and they are driving businesses and families out of the area and Lake County.
If you didn't know, Lake County has the highest property taxes in the midwest and depending on the year, from 14-17th highest in the entire country. We don't have the 14-17th highest ranked schools on average either.
Lastly, it is very disingenuous on your part to tell people to may more taxes, which it sounds like you can afford, when they are struggling and can no longer afford to even live here. Where is your compassion?
Bucephalus
10:35 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
Lennie, where is your information for saying that charter schools are better than public schools?
The first review of the Chicago charter schools did not come out well for them. Some did better than the Chicago average, most did not.
http://www.suntimes.com/news/education/9145306-418/story.html
Only 1/3 of St. Louis charter schools outperformed the public schools.
http://www.stltoday.com/news/local/education/article_257a26a9-a103-5183-97cc-067ec0fde828.html
The state of Michigan found the same thing.
http://www.suntimes.com/news/education/9145306-418/story.html
Georgia also saw charter schools don't outperform public schools across the state.
http://blogs.ajc.com/get-schooled-blog/2012/02/16/new-review-of-georgia-charter-school-performance-finds-they-dont-outperform-traditional-public-schools/
Minnesota also has 20 years of stats supporting that claim.
http://minnesota.publicradio.org/display/web/2012/06/16/education/charter-schools/
A national study found very mixed results for charter schools with no clear results to back up claims that charter schools are simply better than public schools.
http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/inside-school-research/2012/01/study_finds_grad_college-going.html
There is a limit upon the number of characters per post, so I am going to have to leave it there, unless people would like more states that have found charter schools don't outperform public schools.
Lennie Jarratt
11:29 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
First since you keep telling everyone to read what you wrote before responding you should do the same. You claimed I said, "saying that charter schools are better than public schools" when I said
"1. Charter schools are for the most part spend less per child than the public schools so they are not the profit machine you state.
2. Second they actually save the entire system money.
3. Lastly, not only do they improve the educational outcomes for the children who obtain the voucher, it improves the educational outcomes for those still in public schools, i.e. it provides a better quality education for all."
Lennie Jarratt
11:32 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
Top 25 Public Schools in Michigan (including Charter): http://cmucso.org/modules.php?name=Documents&op=viewlive&sp_id=707
Lennie Jarratt
11:32 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
After Katrina, how charter schools helped recast New Orleans education
New Orleans has become a laboratory for education reform since hurricane Katrina. Charter schools, which are free to experiment, make up the majority of the city’s schools.
http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Education/2010/0829/After-Katrina-how-charter-schools-helped-recast-New-Orleans-education
Lennie Jarratt
11:38 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
Milwaukee:
"A sample of students in Milwaukee's private voucher schools made gains in reading in 2010-'11 that were significantly higher than those of a matched sample of peers in Milwaukee Public Schools, but math achievement remained the same last school year, according to the results of a multiyear study tracking students in both sectors." -- http://www.jsonline.com/news/education/voucher-students-improve-on-reading-study-finds-ef4ahcf-140522733.html
"... standardized math test scores rose significantly more rapidly for students who used vouchers to attend private schools than for their counterparts in public schools." -- http://www.nber.org/digest/nov97/w5964.html
University of Arkansas study finds Milwaukee voucher students go to college at higher rate -- http://drwilda.wordpress.com/2012/03/05/university-of-arkansas-study-finds-milwaukee-voucher-students-go-to-college-at-higher-rate/
Multiple reports: http://www.choiceineducation.org/SchoolChoiceBetterEducation.php
Lennie Jarratt
11:41 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
The battery of empirical studies, conducted by the School Choice Demonstration Project, examined a broad array of questions. One study found that the Milwaukee program saves major taxpayer money, confirming what we knew from previous studies: private schools are more efficient than the bloated government bureaucracy. Another found that private schools in the voucher program are more racially diverse, also confirming a large body of earlier research unanimously showing that vouchers provide a more racially integrated school environment. Yet another study found that vouchers have not affected home prices. -- http://pjmedia.com/blog/dont-believe-the-spin-milwaukee-voucher-program-a-success/
"Table [A] shows that the addition of one voucher-accepting school anywhere in Milwaukee will improve student achievement on the Language Arts portion of either the WKCE or the Terra Nova by .055 NCE points. The addition of a voucherreceiving private school would increase a student’s standardized Math score by .047 NCE and Reading score by .058 NCE." -- http://www.uaedreform.org/SCDP/Milwaukee_Eval/Report_11.pdf
Bucephalus
12:27 pm on Monday, July 16, 2012
My apologies, I accidentally posted the same SunTimes link for the Michigan schools. Here is the link to the Michigan study that I was referring to.
http://www.mlive.com/education/index.ssf/2012/03/in_michigan_charters_results_n.html
Bucephalus
12:38 pm on Monday, July 16, 2012
First of all, I don't know what you are claiming if you are saying that saving "save the entire system money" and providing "a better quality education for all" do not in fact equate to being "better than public schools." If I misinterpreted you, I am sorry, but then what are you saying? You claim they save money and a provide better education compared to public schools. I interpreted that as being better than public schools. How is that interpretation wrong? What does a charter school have to do, in your definition, to be "better than public schools."
Now, Lennie, we both cited Michigan to support our claims. The link I gave showed that charter schools in Michigan did no better than public schools. They weren't worse, but they weren't better either. Charter schools in Michigan fell along the same averages that the public schools did.
Your link doesn't change that point. For starters the chart is misleading. It compares the top 25 Districts or top charter schools. A public school district that has one amazing high school and one average high school will not be in the top 25 whereas those academies on the list only need to be exceptional themselves. It is a lot easier to have one exceptional school than an entire exceptional school district.
Even then, 16 of the top 25 are public school districts while three of the charters are self-managed by the public school districts they are supposedly superior than.
Bucephalus
12:58 pm on Monday, July 16, 2012
Next, your New Orleans story doesn't dispute what I said. I claimed, as all the links I provided said, that charter schools are a mixed bag. Some are better, others are not. On the whole the charter system doesn't "provide a better quality education for all," it provides a roughly equal education for all.
Indeed that's what your New Orleans story showed. Before Katrina, scores were rising. After Katrina, scores rose faster. Before Katrina, the overwhelming number of schools were "academically" unacceptable. After Katrina, that decreased by was still 42%.
Furthermore, the article actually says two very specific things, firstly, that "it’s difficult to pinpoint the cause of such gains." That was from one of the people at Tulane who helped prepare the report on New Orleans schools. Additionally, they received substantially more money. "An influx of federal funds, as well as private donations, has enabled schools to offer extended days or school years, invest in technology, and boost teacher salaries." That's an interesting point to raise when claiming that charters will result in lower spending.
But again, the story here doesn't dispute the claim that some charters are better than the average public school and some charters are not better than the average public school. It does, however, specifically warn against trying to pin those gains in New Orleans on any one factor.
Bucephalus
1:12 pm on Monday, July 16, 2012
Turning to Milwaukee, there is again a disconnect between what you seem to believe the articles say and what they actually do say. The first article's byline even says "Public, private school progress about same overall." You even quoted one section that said "math achievement remained the same."
More to the point, it doesn't contradict anything I said because none of those articles deal with charter schools. They are all about private schools, which are entirely separate entities from charter schools. Charters are public schools in that they accept all who apply with a lottery to determine if there is an excess of applications. Private schools take whoever they want. A voucher lets you afford the tuition of a private school, it doesn't force that private school to accept a specific student.
Furthermore, the supposed Arkansas study includes this quote: "the students in the voucher program performed at higher levels in the upper grades in reading and science but at lower levels in math at all grade levels examined and in reading and science in fourth grade."
That website also links to several other articles and studies which do not support the idea that charters are a magically ticket to academic success. For example, here's a quote from the website you linked: "Overall the test scores of students who use vouchers are largely indistinguishable from students who stay behind in public schools."
D'skidoc
8:19 pm on Sunday, July 15, 2012
By the way, do you like your clean Lake Michigan water? Do you like your police and fire and paramedic services? Do you like roads free of potholes? Do you want a warning when there's a tornado. All of that is paid for by local taxes and when there isn't so much corruption (like in Springfield) government actually can do some good stuff. See the Hoover Dam sometime. Government at work.
Deadcatbounce
9:44 pm on Sunday, July 15, 2012
Strawman alert
Nightcrawler
2:43 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
You seriously think there's no corruption in Lake County? Wowwwwwwww. Talk about one-sighted vision. See my post below, because most of things things you speak of are a bunch of union members who are in bed with the politicians locally and keep raising your taxes to give more funding to these things....they then find creative ways to funnel this cash to these people, which I won't sit and explain here.
The trouble is, that corruption DOES exist here, and it's getting worse.
RonnieTheLimoDriver
7:29 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
You should get out more. I've traveled to many other parts of the country that have good schools, clean water, and reliable emergency services. They also have better maintained roads and bridges. Guess what? There taxes are lower. Here in IL we have 4 problems that are out of control. 1)Waste 2)Corruption 3)Too many taxing bodies (most in the country), 4)Higher labor costs do to union control.
cmeller
8:40 pm on Sunday, July 15, 2012
I live in Libertyville and between our great schools, amazing lake county forest preserve, and progressive village government I feel we get a great value for our property taxes. Now what happens to my federal income taxes I have no idea but I can't complain about my property taxes!
Nightcrawler
2:33 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
Chances are you are making a lot more than the average Lake County resident, number one. And secondly, I know a slew of military veterans who served for decades, yet are insulted with retirement pensions of about $1,000-$1,200 a month. So there are a large group of 50-64 year-olds who have to also still work a second job after they retire, usually at some place that gives them a terrible wage because other places that pay well refuse to hire them because they are now old. The problem is way, way more widespread than those who have a ton of money in places like Libertyville or Green Oaks or Vernon Hills, among other places, are willing to admit. And that's because it doesn't affect them directly. At least not yet....
Nightcrawler
2:37 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
So if someone is living in, say, a $125,000 property near Grayslake, as one person I know is, and getting $1,100 a month in military retirement and has to pay a $4,000 property tax this year...what does that mean? Well, it means unless they have an extra job those property taxes are taking a THIRD of their income in one swoop. No offense, but that is ridiculous. $4,000 to even someone who owns their property is a lot of money in this economy for many people. And if it doesn't affect you directly, the tendency from board members and politicians who are better of is a "we don't care" attitude.
cmeller
9:46 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
If someone's only income is $1,100 a month they most likely can't afford the house reguardless of property tax amount. Clark - I don't understand your point: you complain that military pensions are too low but public service pensions are too large??
Nightcrawler
12:48 pm on Monday, July 16, 2012
That's one of my many points about the pensions cmeller. The military people usually served far longer and in way more dangerous circumstances than any public official. Yet they are insulted with terrible pensions while being double-insulted by funding all these people's huge rising pensions with their property taxes.
Try spending a day with some of these veterans that are retired yet not old enough to cllect social security one day, for just one day, and see the difficulties many of them face. There are TONS of them in Lake County.
Nightcrawler
2:30 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
Here's an idea: Start making people who have 4 or 5 kids, or however many pay a greater share. If they want to keep burdening our system and costing us our tax dollars, start passing legislation that says you will also incur a greater property tax burden because of it. Tired of seeing families with 7 or 8 kids walking around while mom or dad is on a cellphone and half of them are screaming or fighting. Just an honest observation and thought.
Deadcatbounce
9:24 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
Wow Clark, where are these famlies with 7 or 8 kids. Certainly not on the North Shore. Every family I know has at most "3". In fact, it getting to the point that this country's total fertility rate is at replcement level. That's too bad for the pensions and social security these kids will have to fund for us old geezers.
Nightcrawler
12:45 pm on Monday, July 16, 2012
Apparently Deadcatbounce is in denial and has never visited the greater Round Lake area, or walked into the health care clinic on Clarendon Drive and seen what I am referring to.
Bucephalus
1:15 pm on Monday, July 16, 2012
Ah yes, one person who believes he has seen every family in Round Lake can now make vast pronouncements about the birth rate in the entire state. After all, Round Lake is exactly the same as Highland Park which is the same as Macomb which is the same as Marion.
What other grand observations should we take from Round Lake?
Nightcrawler
2:33 pm on Monday, July 16, 2012
I don't think Bucephalus bothers to think before posting. Your Round Lake/Highland Park comparison makes zero sense whatsoever, and we are all now dumber for having read your post. Seriously, go walk into the Lake County clinic at the location I gave you sometime, walk around, and tell me what you see. Until you do, you have zero frame of reference toward my comment whatsoever.
Nightcrawler
2:35 pm on Monday, July 16, 2012
So keep defending the people who continue to burden the system Deadcatbounce. You have zero clue what you stand for, and it shows.
Nightcrawler
2:40 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
And lastly, enough is enough with the pensions. Just because you are a public servant doesn't mean you should get a ridicuslouly large retirement pension compared to other people. Those were almost the only thing that went up on my taxes this year. Everyone else has to do with less, so should those people. It's the same reason people in Wisconsin elected Scott Walker...because they were tired of public employee unions basically stealing taxpayer money and bankrupting entire states.
The Q
7:21 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
5.5% income Tax, 10% Sales Tax, 2% Real Estate Taxes........adn the state is dead broke. These are some of the highest in the nation.
Once again its not a taxing problem, its a spending problem.
Me
8:29 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
@Jose - If you want to be an effective troll, you will need to be less obvious. I suggest that you make up a new screen name and then start writing in a more subtle tone. As it stands, you aren't fooling anyone.
Burt
10:15 am on Monday, July 16, 2012
The bottom line is that all forms of revenue are down for local, state and Federal after the crash. New programs were started, more VPs, higher pay raises;, people spent all their money and the rest was taken by the markets and banks.
The Chicago city colleges want new buildings to improve education but swear they will not raise taxes they will just borrow the money from private sources. Spending is a problem for sure. They will raise taxes at all levels until we all leave. No one wants to make a sacrifice , especially the politicians. The only solution is to bring back jobs and the government needs to support American industry. Illinois supports several million illegals and immigrants. They just keep pouring in with no stop in sight.
Karen Krug
12:00 pm on Monday, July 16, 2012
IL has more levels of government (7000+) than any other State in the USA. Our property taxes pay the salaries, benefits & pensions for each of those public employees. Fiscal mismanagement, back door deals, rampant nepotism, overlapping service areas and unnecessary jobs all contribute to the problems facing Illinois. Once a year, for a short 30 day period, property owners can provide evidence to contest their property tax assessment. Winning an assessment appeal can shave significant $$$ off your property tax bill. Township filing requirements and deadlines are available through your County Assessor.
Lennie Jarratt
12:12 pm on Monday, July 16, 2012
This overwhelming number of taxing bodies is what Bruno Behrend of For the Good Of Illinois calls a "legalized money laundering scheme."
Nightcrawler
12:46 pm on Monday, July 16, 2012
Winning such appeals is sometimes very costly for people to do.
Lennie Jarratt
12:00 am on Wednesday, July 18, 2012
There are some the you only pay if they win. An example is http://TaxObjection.com
Donny
3:03 pm on Monday, July 16, 2012
Make no mistake. Property owners in Illinois are basically renting their homes from the state.
Karen Krug
1:22 pm on Tuesday, July 17, 2012
@Clark W. Griswold, it might cost a bit of $ to hire a property tax consultant to contest your assessment - if you don't, you are paying more than your fair share of property taxes to the State of IL. Most folks obtain a 2-3 yr benefit from a winning appeal. My clients say it's money well spent.
Deadcatbounce
10:26 pm on Tuesday, July 17, 2012
It's not that hard to do it yourself and not have to split he savings with a specialist.
Lennie Jarratt
12:00 am on Wednesday, July 18, 2012
There are some the you only pay if they win. An example is http://TaxObjection.com
Karen Krug
12:22 pm on Wednesday, July 18, 2012
For homeowners I charge a $55 analysis fee & nothing is further is due - unless we WIN the appeal. If we win, my fee is one-third of the first year tax savings. Some of my clients have saved over $2000/yr on their 2012 taxes. You can view testimonials at htttp://www.k2consultingil.com.
Me
12:50 pm on Wednesday, July 18, 2012
Hey Karen, if you want to promote your business go ahead and buy an ad.
Charley Krebs
9:38 am on Monday, July 23, 2012
I must thank all of you for your comments, particularly those with informed opinions and those with all those links that support your argument. I had decided not to have that little sign read 'your school district thanks you' so as to avoid touching that nerve, but its pretty much inherent to the topic, the tax-draw of the schools, something I recall my older neighbors railing against in a near-west suburb even in the 1960s. This thread debating all sides of any property tax has provided a pretty well-rounded (ahem) assessment. As for the Atlas Mugged title, honestly it is there for the word-play only, not any deep Rand-ian meaning or endorsement thereof. Thank you for almost 100 comments prompted by my cartoon. I appreciate everyone who takes time to comment.
Concerned Citizen
1:47 pm on Tuesday, August 14, 2012
The burden on all property tax payers can be lessened if the automatic 6% raise for the last 4 years of teacher employment was removed. This 25% income spike then calculates into the retirement formula so if a teacher retires at 55 and lives until 85 its a 30 year boot on the throat of area taxpayers. Add the fact that some D211 high school Drivers Ed and PE teachers salaries are making $160k (9 mo) How this can be justified?
Lennie Jarratt
2:08 pm on Tuesday, August 14, 2012
The artificial pension increases brought on by the salary spiking is responsible for over $1.2 Billion per year and rising dramatically.
Concerned Citizen
2:08 pm on Tuesday, August 14, 2012
Here's another way to look at school overspending:
Collected revenue via property taxes is about $15K per D211 student.
20 average students per class room x $15k = $300,000 collected per classroom.
Pay the teacher $100k. Pay a backup teacher/administrator $50k. Where does the extra $150,000 go?
Now multiply by 600 classrooms in D211 .... $90 million, year after year
Now lets collect some revenue for the grade school and do the same exercise.
Charley Krebs
9:51 am on Sunday, August 19, 2012
Thanks again to everyone taking time to comment on this topic and related issues as instigated by my cartoon! Whew! We all can catch our breath now while I to return to drawing about weather and baseball!