Chicago Sun-Times

If you’re selling a mansion, you should be taxed more to generate funds for affordable housing

- BY DANIEL KAY HERTZ AND MARISA NOVARA Daniel Kay Hertz is the Research Director at the Center for Tax Budget Accountabi­lity and Marisa Novara is Vice President of Metropolit­an Planning Council.

Last week, Mayor Rahm Emanuel shot down several proposals for creating a graduated real estate transfer tax, claiming it would treat “homeowners as an ATM machine.”

Here’s how such a tax would work and why the mayor got it wrong.

First, consider today’s reality: Chicago has a real estate transfer tax of $5.25 per $500 of property value. This tax is not graduated, meaning someone who buys or sells a home for $150,000 pays the same rate as someone who buys or sells a home for $1.5 million. The current tax generates $160 million annually, a third of which goes to the Chicago Transit Authority.

Next, consider the vision: In the Metropolit­an Planning Council’s “road map to a more equitable future,” a document released last spring, the MPC and the Center for Tax and Budget Accountabi­lity recommend a graduated real estate transfer tax to generate desperatel­y needed funds for affordable housing. Because the tax is pegged to property values, only the highest-value transactio­ns would cost more. In most cases, the buyer and the seller would pay less than they do now.

What’s actually needed: Most Chicagoans may be surprised to learn just how little of the city’s budget is allocated for affordable housing. Take a guess: 10 percent? 5? 1? Try just about three-tenths of 1 percent in 2017, or $24.5 million out of $8.3 billion.

Tax increment financing revenue — local funds that get spent outside the normal budget process — contribute­d another $16.9 million in 2017 toward affordable housing. But even that represente­d less than three percent of the $660 million raised by TIF districts.

Rather than spend its own money on affordable housing, Chicago has depended overwhelmi­ngly on resources passed down by the state and federal government­s through programs such as public housing and the Low Income Housing Tax Credit. In 2017, Chicago spent 36 times more of its own money on policing than on affordable housing, and three times more on legal settlement­s.

While all cities are struggling with a decline in federal support for affordable housing, there’s more Chicago can and must do to support this need locally.

Finally, here’s what is possible: The Chicago Coalition for the Homeless and other groups have proposed a plan to generate $150 million a year for affordable housing and services for some 80,000 homeless people. The plan calls for increasing the city’s real estate transfer tax on high-value property. An ordinance seeking to put this proposal on the Feb. 26 election ballot, as a referendum question, has been presented by Ald. Walter Burnett.

This is one of many versions of a proposed progressiv­e real estate transfer tax that could get us over the finish line.

Chicago suffers from a shortfall of 120,000 affordable housing units. That alone is reason enough to consider a progressiv­e real estate transfer tax, just as there is in San Francisco, Baltimore and New York City. Such a tax was approved in Evanston on Tuesday.

A graduated real estate transfer tax to cover some of Chicago’s most pressing affordable housing needs would not be breaking new ground. Chicago would simply be catching up — both to other cities and to our own profound shortfalls.

MOST CHICAGOANS MAY BE SURPRISED TO LEARN JUST HOW LITTLE OF THE CITY’S BUDGET IS ALLOCATED FOR AFFORDABLE HOUSING. TAKE A GUESS: 10 PERCENT? 5? 1? TRY JUST ABOUT THREE-TENTHS OF 1 PERCENT IN 2017, OR $24.5 MILLION OUT OF $8.3 BILLION.

 ?? KEVIN TANAKA/FOR THE SUN-TIMES ?? A homeless community under Michigan Avenue in Chicago last February.
KEVIN TANAKA/FOR THE SUN-TIMES A homeless community under Michigan Avenue in Chicago last February.

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