Chicago Sun-Times

RAHM WANTS TO GIVE GRANNY A BREAK

Rahm eyes discount for seniors, more meters to ease latest tax hit

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN Email: fspielman@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ fspielman City Hall Reporter

Senior citizens would be in line for a 50 percent discount — and more homes without water meters could get them — to soften the blow of Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s plan to slap a 30 percent tax on water and sewer bills to save the largest of Chicago’s four city employee pension funds.

Last year, a first- ever garbage collection fee of $ 9.50 a month emerged as the biggest point of contention in Emanuel’s tax- laden 2016 budget — even more so than a $ 588 million property tax increase for police and fire pensions and school constructi­on.

To ease the burden on those living on fixed incomes, Emanuel agreed to give senior citizens a 50 percent discount.

Now the mayor is planning to offer seniors a 50 percent discount to ease the burden of the 30 percent tax he wants to add to the “unified utility bill” that includes water, sewer and garbage fees, City Hall sources said Monday.

Already, 66,000 seniors who have a water meter and receive a separate sewer bill are eligible for a sewer exemption.

Under the mayor’s plan, those same seniors would be exempt from paying the 30 percent tax on the sewer portion of their bill. Sewer fees currently amount to 100 percent of water fees, or $ 3.81 for every 1,000 gallons.

Seniors living in condos, assisted living or apartment buildings where they do not receive a sewer bill are already eligible for a $ 50 sewer rebate.

To round up the 26 votes he needs to approve his plan to save the Municipal Employees Pension Fund, sources say Emanuel is also looking at beefing up the $ 5 million pool earmarked to install water meters in Chicago households — roughly half of which still don’t have them. Since the new utility tax will be based on water usage, installati­on of meters in homes without them would promote water conservati­on and, if it works, ultimately reduce the tax burden.

“No one wants to raise revenue, but the alternativ­e is unacceptab­le. The mayor has been clear that he’s opposed to raising property taxes again and he’s opposed to cutting basic services like graffiti removal, garbage collection and tree- trimming,” Molly Poppe, a spokespers­on for the city’s Office of Budget and Management, said in an email.

“Unfortunat­ely, there may have been more options if this had been dealt with years ago and now, there are very few viable paths to shore up our retiree pension.”

Earlier this month, Emanuel put in place the final piece of the pension puzzle he was elected to solve, but his regressive approach will impose another heavy burden on Chicago homeowners reeling from rising property taxes compounded by reassessme­nt.

To generate $ 239 million over five years to save the Municipal Employees Pension Fund, Emanuel wants to slap a new and escalating “utility tax” on water and sewer bills.

The plan is to start with a roughly 7 percent tax, double it in year two, impose a 21 percent tax in year three and end at 30 percent in years four and five.

After that, the tax would rise annually to meet the “actuariall­y required contributi­on” to achieve a 90 percent funding ratio by 2057 for a Municipal Employees pension with $ 18.6 billion in unfunded liabilitie­s that is due to run out of money in 2025.

The average Chicago household currently pays $ 686.04 a year for water and sewer services that use 7,500 gallons of water.

Emanuel is pressuring the City Council to approve the new tax at its meeting Sept. 14. It is expected to cost the average homeowner $ 4.43 more monthly, or $ 53.16 a year, in 2017. In the fourth year, the added annual burden will be $ 225.96.

The City Council’s 11- member Progressiv­e Caucus demanded Monday that Emanuel provide assumed investment returns and “actuarial” proof that the 30 percent utility tax will generate enough money to put the city’s largest pension fund on the road to financial health.

Budget Director Alex Holt has said the administra­tion “does not yet have actuarial studies” to support the mayor’s claim, and she’s not certain when those studies will be available.

“As everyday Chicagoans have faced drastic property tax increases, we as elected representa­tives need to ensure that the proposed fee will, in fact, cover the payment schedule that has been laid out before we can even consider voting on this,” Progressiv­e Caucus Chairman Scott Waguespack ( 32nd) said in a news release.

The Progressiv­e Caucus, comprising Emanuel’s most outspoken critics, has asked the City Council’s financial analyst to conduct an independen­t study of the mayor’s tax plan.

“We are troubled by the Emanuel administra­tion’s request that we simply take their word for it that their accounting is accurate, when other analysts and experts have raised doubts,” Ald. Susan Sadlowski Garza ( 10th) added. “This matter is too important to ram through without proper analysis.”

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 ?? | SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Mayor Rahm Emanuel wants to push to install more water meters, which would help residents conserve more and pay less in taxes.
| SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO Mayor Rahm Emanuel wants to push to install more water meters, which would help residents conserve more and pay less in taxes.
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Rahm Emanuel

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