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    Can Texas eliminate property taxes?

    By Ryan Chandler,

    2024-09-04

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3gYKCE_0vKri10900

    AUSTIN (Nexstar) — The short answer: no. The longer answer: definitely no, at least not anytime in the foreseeable future, and not without sacrificing vital state services like healthcare and education at all levels.

    State senators tasked with steering the state’s massive budget gathered at the Capitol on Wednesday to do the math.

    They found that eliminating property taxes would cost the state more than $81 billion per year. The state raises about $47.5 billion per year in discretionary spending. That means the legislature would have to either cut nearly twice that much from the budget or make it up through other taxes — like nearly tripling the sales tax to 22%. Senators signaled both options are nonstarters.

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    “That’s foster care, Child Protective Services, Medicaid, Department of Family Services, and a lot of this federally mandated, of course, costs that we have to do,” Senate Finance Chair Joan Huffman, R-Houston, said. “All the money put on higher education, all the money in public education, all the money for Medicaid, all the money for mental health, human trafficking, all the things that the state has made priorities we would not have the funding for. Is that correct?”

    Conservative policy analysts and advocates argued to the Senate Finance Committee that property taxes are “immoral,” akin to “renting” your land from the state. While some senators agree the burden is far too high for many homeowners, they admonished people for proposing cuts without offering ways to raise the money for basic services elsewhere.

    “People like to have clean water. They’re funny that way,” State Sen. Charles Perry, R-Lubbock, said.

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    Earlier this year, Gov. Greg Abbott doubled down on his ambitious goal to zero out the largest chunk of your property tax bill.

    “I am insisting that we come back once again and ensure that we will continue to cut those property taxes until we get rid of the school property tax right here in the state of Texas,” he told the Texas Public Policy Foundation in March.

    Last year, Abbott signed a monumental property tax relief bill to increase the homestead exemption and provide municipalities billions to “compress” their tax rate. Abbott argues that the measure puts school districts on a “pathway to ending those property taxes.”

    So, can the legislature cut them even further?

    According to Sen. Huffman, “That’s the $80 billion question.”

    This coverage is ongoing and will be updated as the hearing develops. Full coverage this evening on KXAN News .

    Copyright 2024 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

    For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to ConchoValleyHomepage.com.

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    Comments / 2
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    Audon Gutierrez
    09-05
    A decrease is good for property owners and much appreciated by all to include renters. Rents should go down also. Got to have money for the other services we all love too. So money has to come from other pockets. Other states do it Texas can too.
    Sergio Cantu
    09-05
    Well wasn’t Texas lottery supposed to ease if not eliminate school tax. Where’s all that money????
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