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Economy
Tax rate to increase 21 percent
2009-08-23
The last time Hopkinton homes were assessed, droves of upset residents questioned the accuracy of much-higher appraisals and the tax spike that followed.

Three years later, property values have plunged. The town's overall value is down 17 percent. But taxes are not.

As assessors wrap up a town-wide revaluation, they say Hopkinton's tax rate will have to jump more than 21 percent over last year's to compensate for the lessened property values.

That change will be reflected in tax bills due this December. With the rate increase, "you're going to end up paying what you did last year," said Selectman George Langwasser. "Chances are your taxes are going to increase, not decrease."

Why an increase, especially since voters passed a flat budget during March's town meeting? Factors besides the reassessment could play into this winter's bills, including a teachers contract expected to come before voters during a special October meeting and costs that the state passed down to towns, such as administering a swine flu vaccine, said Selectman Scott Flood.

The town is also weighing a plan to put $433,000 toward a conservation easement for a struggling dairy farm in Contoocook, a proposal the selectmen may bring before voters this fall at a cost of $53,000 this year.

But "irrespective of anything going on in town," Flood said, December tax bills always top what residents pay in June. "You have to pay for inflation from the prior year, plus the things voted on in March town meeting," he said. "If the budget's kept flat from '08 to '09 . . . there's still going to be an increase."
Posted by:Fred

#6  "What do you suppose the level of financial -- or even arithmetic -- training this Concord Monitor reporter has received?"

Same as all the other "journalists," tw - none.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2009-08-23 22:41  

#5  tax rate will have to jump more than 21 percent over last year's to compensate for the lessened property values.

So the end point is that the dollar amount of taxes the residents pay will be the same, right? Possibly catastrophic for those who've lost jobs, but a wash for those still working, it seems to me. What do you suppose the level of financial -- or even arithmetic -- training this Concord Monitor reporter has received?
Posted by: trailing wife   2009-08-23 22:32  

#4  ION BHARAT RAKSHAK > BUFFET: WE COULD BE CRUSHED BY A MOUNTAIN OF DEBT; + REP. BACHUS: US SOCIAL SECURITY FACES DEFAULT IN TWO YEARS.
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2009-08-23 20:19  

#3  Watch those property prices plunge further.

Property prices are imputed yield * availability of credit.

Imputed Yield is the basically the local wage minus cost of owning.

So wages are falling and so is credit availability.

The flip side of house price drops is that house affordability tends to rise. High house prices are only good for those who tax.
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2009-08-23 17:22  

#2  Apparently cutting spending in times of "economic crisis"* is off the table?

*Preznit Obama's words
Posted by: Frank G   2009-08-23 09:08  

#1  Remember tax serf you exist to serve the state.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2009-08-23 08:19  

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