Dank: School Lobbyists Lying About Property Taxes

House Media Division

Claims by school lobbyists that a freeze on property taxes paid by senior citizens would cut school funding are simply false, the legislator who sponsored the measure said today.

“We ought to expect more from those who speak for our schools than outright falsehoods,” said state Rep. David Dank (R-Oklahoma City), whose House Joint Resolution 1001 would have allowed the people to vote to freeze property taxes owed by seniors at current levels for as long as they own their homes.

“The head of the state school board association actually alleged on Tuesday that this would cut school funding,” Dank said. “That is simply a lie. This measure would not cut one penny from any school or county budget anywhere in the state. All it would do would be to give Oklahoma’s 600,000 seniors assurance that their property taxes would not increase while they struggle to remain solvent and in their homes.”

            HJR1001 was amended in the Senate committee to simply raise the current income level that already qualifies some seniors for a property tax freeze. That action came after school lobbyists claimed that the full freeze for all seniors would cut their budgets, even though it was evident that no actual reductions were involved.

            “This is in no way, shape or form a tax cut,” Dank said of the measure. “It is bogus to claim that it is. The people who claim to speak for schools ought to have more regard for the truth.”

            Dank said the property tax freeze for seniors was promoted by pleas from many seniors who are hard-pressed to live on fixed incomes with steadily rising utility, fuel and prescription bills, while also facing annual property tax increases. In some cases, he said, seniors facing medical costs or the need to place a spouse in a nursing home may be forced to sell their homes because of larger yearly property tax bills.

            “You could give the school bureaucrats all the money in the world and they’d still want more,” he said. “We have a grossly inefficient public school system with far too many small districts. We have also seen superintendents get big pay raises even in the worst of the recession and now we are hearing them complain about a tax cut that isn’t a tax cut at all.”

            Dank said he was especially concerned by statements by the head of the Oklahoma State School Boards Association, who was quoted as saying that the measure as originally written would cause an “erosion of the tax base” and result in “another reduction in funding for schools.”

            “Aren’t the schools he claims to represent teaching basic arithmetic?” Dank asked. “One hundred percent is still 100 percent, even when it does not become 105 percent. This resolution was written specifically to hold schools and counties harmless. They would still receive the same amount each year in ad valorem revenues, plus any increases from higher valuations of property that are owned by those under 65.”

             Dank said Oklahoma can remain an attractive location for retirees by being fair to seniors, or it can drive them out with excessive taxes.

“Every senior who is forced out of his or her home by more and more bills from the taxman represents a dead loss to Oklahoma,” he said. “Doesn’t it make more sense to help them remain independent and in their homes as productive seniors than to drive them into nursing homes or assisted living centers because they can no longer afford the tax bill?”

            Dank praised state Sens. Steve Russell and Greg Treat for their defense of the measure in the Finance Committee, and urged senators to reconsider restoring the full senior freeze before they vote on it on the floor.

            “Someone needs to tell the tax hogs that enough is enough, and that you cannot hound people literally into the grave without a reaction,” Dank said.


Print pagePDF pageEmail page
  1. Steve Dickson, 22 March, 2012

    I applaud Representative Dank for his efforts to hold the line on taxes, and eliminate them as well (GREAT job exposing the tax credits issue too). Take it one step farther:

    Freeze property taxes for everyone at the rate they are at when the property is purchased.

    Helping seniors is a laudable goal, but it is not equal treatment under the law to apply benefits to one group over another. I’m not complaining on this, and see it as a good step in the right direction.

  2. dick Grace, 22 March, 2012

    Freeze the taxes and force the overpaid administrative staff to learn discipline. Maybe we need an initative petition to accomplish this.

  3. Bob Hope, 22 March, 2012

    Oklahoma property taxes are 48th lowest among the states, only Mississippi and Arkansas are lower. I checked on the Oklahoma County website and found that Dank and Treat’s property taxes WENT DOWN to reflect changes in the market. So there isn’t any automatic increase every year, and since Dank and Treat are paying property taxes to support schools, then the school board leader is right, changes in real estate values are already eroding the amount of property taxes going to schools. Dank is also wrong to say this is a freeze on “property taxes” it’s not. It’s a freeze on assessment used to calculate property taxes using a millage rate that can be increased by a 60% vote of the people. When that happens, despite a freeze on assessment, the millage rate used to calculate property taxes would increase and that would increase property taxes. It’s sad that legislators appear so ill-informed about this important issue.

  4. Forrest Country, 22 March, 2012

    What is really needed is a leadership at state and local levels which demand/enforce three things: (1) vision – acceptable to patrons and employers, (2) legimate budget, and (3) strict adherrence to items 1 and 2.

    This is, pretty much, the solution for entities!
    No vision ==> no direction nor solutions
    No discipline ==> no direction and multiplying problems

  5. David Brooke, 22 March, 2012

    Privatize all public education. Let free markets figure it out. What parent would not take it upon themselves to make sure their child was not educated. Even Jim Thorpe’s dad did that. It is on tv right now. Think of all the money we would save! Besides public education has become indoctrinazation to dumb down the masses. Once people have to put up money to pay for education, their attitude will change.

  6. Mark, 24 March, 2012

    The liberal social communist are scared to death of the free market that would be a real threat to their sacred cows to include public socialist education.

    It’s totally outrageous that over 50% of “ALL” State taxes collected go to the Oklahoma public socialist educational system.

    If you take all the income going into the socialist education system and divide it by the number of children attending the government indoctrination camps (public schools), the taxpayers are paying over $10,000 per year per student.

    The worse part is I don’t have any children and I’m still paying for the socialist public education system.

    … and don’t even get me started on property taxes that allow the peasants pay an annual lease (tax) to stay on their land. Don’t pay the lease (tax) and lose your land. Who’s the real king around here?… Government or the People?

  7. chiropractor perth, 25 April, 2012

    Your means of explaining the whole thing in this piece of writing is genuinely fastidious, every one is capable of without difficulty knowing it, thanks a lot.

*

Copyright © The McCarville Report