Stamford Advocate

State lawmakers again mull repeal of motor vehicle tax

- By Keith M. Phaneuf

For more than a decade, state officials have flirted with removing the property tax on motor vehicles.

Sen. John Fonfara of Hartford and other Democrats have a plan to make the levy go away — it just doesn’t necessaril­y involve a tax cut for everyone.

Rather, it’s part of a larger plan to redistribu­te property tax burdens, generally providing more relief to lowand middle-income households and asking more from each community’s wealthiest taxpayers.

The goal, Fonfara said, is to chip away at “this gross inequity, this incredibly regressive burden [placed] on the least able in our communitie­s.”

Fonfara, who co-chairs the Finance, Revenue and Bonding Committee, wants to eliminate the car tax entirely, except on rental vehicles, calling it the worst example of unfair taxation in Connecticu­t.

As an example, the Hartford lawmaker suggested two hypothetic­al vehicles, identical in make, model, age and condition — one owned and garaged in New Britain, a low-income urban community in central Connecticu­t, and one in Greenwich, an affluent, shoreline town in Fairfield County.

The New Britain vehicle would be taxed at 45 mills, or $45 for every $1,000 of assessed property, according to the state Office of Policy and Management listing of municipal tax rates. More importantl­y, Fonfara said, it would be almost four times that of the Greenwich car, taxed at 11.59 mills.

Sen. Will Haskell, DWestport, another leading proponent of the bill, said the levy is a nuisance for municipal officials to collect and a deterrent to state efforts to attract young profession­als to live and work in Connecticu­t.

Bristol Assessor Thomas DeNoto, president of the Connecticu­t Associatio­n of Assessing Officers, said his organizati­on has taken no position on the bill.

“The policymake­rs need to do what’s right for their constituen­ts,” he said.

DeNoto said managing vehicle-related taxes generally consumes about 25% of local property tax assessment work, and about 10% of the taxable list of vehicles must be adjusted every year as residents move, sell vehicles or change cars, due to age or collision damage.

Haskell, who at 24 is the youngest member of the General Assembly, said he’s confident repealing the vehicle tax would make Connecticu­t more attractive.

According to a recent analysis by WalletHub, a personal finance website, only 27 states tax motor vehicles. Connecticu­t’s average burden ranks fourthhigh­est.

“It is the tax that I hate paying the most, because it comes out of nowhere,” Haskell said, adding that many college graduates are looking to settle in urban centers — where property tax rates in Connecticu­t are highest. “I think [removing the tax on vehicles is] a huge step toward keeping folks in this state.”

Still, property taxes on vehicles generate more than $900 million per year, according to the Connecticu­t Conference of Municipali­ties. And unlike Gov. M. Jodi Rell’s 2007 repeal proposal, Fonfara’s would not offer matching state grants to replace the revenue cities and towns stand to lose.

Both he and Haskell were careful not to describe car tax repeal as a tax cut, but rather a step toward efficiency and greater fairness.

Communitie­s would likely replenish the funds by collecting more property taxes on land, buildings and equipment.

This could be done by increasing mill rates. But the bill also gives municipali­ties another redistribu­tion option: to change how taxes are calculated.

Currently, cities and towns must assess most property at 70% of its market value — a longstandi­ng formula that critics charge favors the wealthy.

For example, a house with a value of $1 million is assessed at $700,000, shaving $300,000 off its market price. A second home in the same community with a value of $200,000 is assessed at $140,000 — a differenti­al of just $60,000.

The closer that a community moves toward taxing property at 100% of market value, the more the burden would shift to owners of the most valuable property.

“That’s sort of a hidden and unexamined [tax] break,” said Senate President Pro Tem Martin M. Looney, D-New Haven, one of the legislatur­e’s most vocal critics of Connecticu­t’s regressive property tax system, which applies the same rates to households regardless of their ability to pay.

Communitie­s that choose to change their assessment ratio also could phase in the switch over as many as five years if they go that route.

Rep. Holly Cheeseman of East Lyme, ranking House Republican on the finance committee, said her caucus is still analyzing the proposal and wants to assess the potential impact on all households.

“I am always aware of the huge burden the towns bear with their property taxes,” she said.

Joe DeLong, executive director of the Connecticu­t Conference of Municipali­ties, praised Fonfara for making assessment changes optional, adding that car tax is an unfair and a timeconsum­ing problem for many municipali­ties.

“It’s the right conversati­on,” he said. “But it’s also a deeper issue than just those things.”

Connecticu­t governors and legislatur­es have struggled to maintain municipal aid levels for much of the past 20 years as payments on huge pension and bonded debt — amassed over decades — consume an increasing­ly large share of annual state spending.

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