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12.01.2004
FRED HILL SAYS HE OPPOSES PROPERTY TAX APPRAISAL CAPS

Local Ways and Means Chair could hinder Perry's agenda By Harvey Kronberg – www.quorumreport.com
Rep. Fred Hill (R-Richardson) says opposition is building to Gov. Rick Perry's proposal for appraisal caps, and he includes himself among the opposition.
Hill, who chairs the Local Government Ways and Means committee, was Perry's point man for the appraisal cap issue last session, trying to be the go-between the Governor and the local jurisdictions that were up in arms over the proposal. After some serious discussion with all involved, Hill says he can no longer support appraisal caps.
"Local taxing entities need to be able to do their jobs. It's bad public policy for the state to micromanage local government," says Hill, a one-time member of the Richardson school board. "Where the pressure needs to be applied is locally, with people coming to the Commissioners' Court and City Council to let them know how they feel about these things. That's where people need to be applying the pressure."
Counties, in particular, were strongly opposed to the appraisal caps because of the artificial constraints it would put on county budgets. Those constraints, Hill says, force the jurisdiction to use property taxes to pay for mandated core services such as law enforcement and indigent health care and turn to fees to pay for peripheral services such as libraries and parks. That does nothing but put the cost on local government, Hill says.
"At some point, we have got to remember these are elected officials," Hill said. "We give them the responsibility to do their job then we try to micromanage them by setting an artificially low appraisal cap. All it does is force cities and counties to look for another source of revenue."
While filing bills for appraisal caps was popular during the last regular session, Hill says he sees a growing opposition to appraisal caps in both the House and the Senate. The more lawmakers understand about appraisal caps, the less they support them, he said.
In the meantime, Perry's office insists the governor is still committed to raising and passing the appraisal cap issue in the upcoming session.
"The Governor remains a strong supporter of capping appraisals and believes that appraisal caps will certainly go a long way toward ending appraisal creep in the state of Texas," Spokesman Robert Black said this afternoon.
Appraisal caps were a popular rallying point last session. Houston radio station owner Dan Patrick, in particular, packed hundreds on buses to come down to the Capitol and protest their steep increases in local property taxes. Many were retirees living on a fixed income who told lawmakers they could no longer afford to pay their property tax bills.
Hill says he does have sympathy for those homeowners. The demographics in Hill's own district in Richardson lean heavily toward older residents. Hill estimates 76 percent of his constituents no longer have children in school, which makes it harder for them to justify paying growing tax bills each year.
Hill says the proposed overhaul of the school finance system - which could produce a 50-cent cut in local property taxes - to be the first, and best, step in addressing higher property taxes. Given that school district property taxes are 60 percent of property taxes on most homes, that should put a significant dent in most tax bills, Hill said.

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