Transcript
Page 1: STRUCTURING HEALTHY COMMUNITIES

STRUCTURING HEALTHY COMMUNITIES

TAX REVENUE GENERATION AND

FISCAL HEALTH

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Presentation to the Governmental Research AssociationAugust, 2007

LeeAnne ClaybergerKerry Moyer

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STUDY OBJECTIVESSTUDY OBJECTIVES

• Detail the relative fiscal health of Pennsylvania’s municipalities

• Identify formidable threats to revenue generation (for instance, existing state legislation)

• Determine public attitudes toward local government and fiscal health

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THE STUDYTHE STUDY

• Includes 2,551 municipalities

• Compares fiscal health with tax effort and tax capacity

• Looks at changes from 1970 to 2003

• Uses maps to tell the story

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Fiscal Health MeasuresFiscal Health Measures

• EFFORT (two components)

Total Non-Real Estate Resident Tax Revenue

Aggregate Household Income

Total Real Estate Revenue STEB Market Value (Market Based Millage)

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Fiscal Health MeasuresFiscal Health Measures

• CAPACITY

5% of STEB Market Value + Aggregate Household Income

Number of Households

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SUMMARY OF STUDY SUMMARY OF STUDY FINDINGSFINDINGS

                            

                                                                   

                                     

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Five Stages of Five Stages of Municipal Fiscal HealthMunicipal Fiscal Health

• Prosperity with low taxes• Increasing demand for services and gradually

rising tax rates and service fees• Taxes increase; reductions in non-core services• Tax revenues decrease; reductions in core

services• Loss of tax base, population, and increasing

fiscal distress

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Current set of tools is Current set of tools is insufficient to reverse insufficient to reverse the current momentumthe current momentum

• Act 511 of 1965-menu of taxes, rates, caps

• Act 111 of 1968-strikes and binding arbitration

• Act 195 of 1970-right to organize/negotiate

• Act 205 of 1984-funding employee retirement obligations

• Act 47 of 1987-declaration of fiscal distress

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Keep local municipal Keep local municipal identity but administer identity but administer regionallyregionally

• Fundamental mismatch between fluid economy and structured municipal boundaries

• Pennsylvanians like their local governments to remain local

• Research does not show a public outcry for consolidations and mergers of municipalities

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MUNICIPAL FISCAL MUNICIPAL FISCAL HEALTH STATEWIDEHEALTH STATEWIDE

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Five Stages of Fiscal Five Stages of Fiscal Health in 2003Health in 2003

Progression

Cities Boroughs 1st Class Township

s

2nd Class Township

s

Stage 1 0 0 27 399

Stage 2 15 99 26 259

Stage 3 1 213 1 512

Stage 4 1 366 29 256

Stage 5 39 228 8 29

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Extremes on the Healthy/ Extremes on the Healthy/ Distressed Spectrum; Distressed Spectrum; Comparison with State Comparison with State AverageAverage

CharacteristicTop 10% Distresse

d

Top 10% Healthy

Above average income 4 of 254 245 of 254

Above average BA degrees

26 of 254 207 of 254

Above average poverty 202 of 254

9 of 254

Above average 65 year olds

192 of 254

75 of 254

Above average pop density

225 of 254

96 of 254

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CORRIDORSCORRIDORS

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Example of a Example of a CorridorCorridor

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Corridor Example, Corridor Example, ContinuedContinued

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Geographic CorridorsGeographic Corridors

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Pennsylvania’s Pennsylvania’s BoroughsBoroughs

• Most severe negative change seen for boroughs in Adams, Allegheny, Beaver, Berks, Cambria, Chester, Dauphin, Delaware, Erie, Lawrence, Lehigh, Perry, Somerset and Westmoreland Counties

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Pennsylvania’s First Pennsylvania’s First Class TownshipsClass Townships

• 70 of 91 lost ground since 1970

• One township moved from below to above average

• 25 moved from above to below average

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Pennsylvania’s Second Pennsylvania’s Second Class TownshipsClass Townships

• Group shows relative fiscal health with 948 (about 65%) above the state average

• Since 1970 more townships became healthier (57%) than less healthy (43%)

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The Nature of Clusters The Nature of Clusters and Subclustersand Subclusters

• Boroughs cluster within fiscally distressed regions, but not within fiscally healthy regions

• Many counties have subclusters with varied fiscal health

• Clusters may present better ways to functionally consolidate services than groupings of adjacent communities

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REALITY VS. TAX REALITY VS. TAX POLICYPOLICY

Since 1970:• Significant population shifts (sprawl or

suburbanization)• Growth in households, not population• Continued reliance on property taxes

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Demographic Changes Demographic Changes from 1970 to 2003from 1970 to 2003*Inflation Adjusted Dollars*Inflation Adjusted DollarsAverages per householdAverages per household

Index 1970* 2003 Difference

%

Population 11,800,766

12,365,455

564,689 5%

Households

3,692,191 4,761,900 1,067,739 29%

Income $46,632 $52,706 $6,074 13%

MarketValue

$61,263 $100,343 $39,080 64%

Real Est Tax

$458 $325 ($133) (29%)

NonRealEstTax

$450 $487 $37 8%

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Compounding Factors, Compounding Factors, 20032003*Not including Philadelphia*Not including PhiladelphiaAverage per householdAverage per household

Cities* Boroughs

1st Class 2nd Class

Income $38,130

$46,298 $67,669 $60,112

STEB $54,334

$74,132 $132,398

$133,242

Rl Est Tax $535 $283 $421 $156

NonRlEstTx

$266 $209 $230 $250

Totals $801 $492 $651 $406

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Problems identifiedProblems identified

• Overall, municipalities are increasingly fiscally distressed

• There is a growing use of earned income taxes and fees, but many communities still rely heavily on property taxes

• Revenue caps remain largely unchanged from the 1950s

• There is a general lack of flexibility in current legislation

• Communities need sufficient discretion in deciding how to tax themselves

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PUBLIC PUBLIC UNDERSTANDING OF UNDERSTANDING OF FISCAL HEALTH AND FISCAL HEALTH AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTSLOCAL GOVERNMENTS

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Representation and Representation and ResponsivenessResponsiveness

• Citizens equate local government to the local officials who run them

• Support of local government often stems from a fear of losing representation and local funds for local projects

• Local officials are “people like us”

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Limited Knowledge of Limited Knowledge of Local GovernmentLocal Government

• Despite strong sentiment, citizens do not know a great deal about local governments, nor do they spend much time thinking about them

• Most citizens are not concerned about fiscal distress as this “happens in larger cities”

• Citizens in larger cities tended to underestimate their fiscal distress

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Bigger is Not Bigger is Not Necessarily BetterNecessarily Better

• Local governments represent community norms in a manner that the state cannot

• Even if wasteful and expensive, those issues are on a smaller scale for local government

• Most citizens see local government as the primary form of government; state exists to serve local governments

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State Government is State Government is Distant and Distant and UnresponsiveUnresponsive

“…these people (local government officials) are all visible to us and I think that there’s probably a sense that the farther government gets away from the people, the less responsive they are going to be.”

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Some Support for Some Support for Functional Functional ConsolidationConsolidation

There was general support for functional consolidation when:Local governments get their fair shareServices are improvedMoney is savedDirected toward health care and pension

sharing, joint administration efforts, and regional police forces

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RECOMMENDATION #1RECOMMENDATION #1

Allow communities to decide how and how much to tax locally minimum restrictionsmaximum constituent

input

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RECOMMENDATION #2 RECOMMENDATION #2 Modernize and enhance Modernize and enhance existing tax revenue existing tax revenue optionsoptionsfor municipalitiesfor municipalities

• Occurs on the state level• Avoids “one-time fixes”• Evaluate outdated legislation and

change or replace as necessary• Remove restrictions in lieu of local

options

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RECOMMENDATION #3 RECOMMENDATION #3 Place wide menu of Place wide menu of revenue generating revenue generating tools in communities tools in communities to avoid future fiscal to avoid future fiscal distressdistress

• Again, a subtle difference – “communities”, not municipalities

• Includes sources of revenue in addition to taxes (fees, licensing, debt management)

• Include counties, school districts, and local authorities

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RECOMMENDATION #4 RECOMMENDATION #4 Promote shared Promote shared expertise for complex expertise for complex issues/servicesissues/services

• Volunteers especially need assistance• Provide incentives, if needed• Many municipalities cannot, on their

own, afford professional or technical assistance

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RECOMMENDATION #5RECOMMENDATION #5Conduct further studyConduct further study

Define and standardize measures of fiscal health

Forecast future municipal fiscal healthAnalyze the expenditure and services side

of the fiscal equationCreate a baseline databasePay particular attention to the costs of

retirement systems, health care and tax collection (Part 2 will begin early fall)


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