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    Fairfax County wants a new tax to pay for Chairman Jeff McKay’s $145,000 annual part-time salary and car

    By Stephanie Lundquist-Arora,

    2024-09-05

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1wL12R_0vLQAQaP00

    Fairfax County, Virginia’s Democrats and Republicans do not agree on much, but they are joining hands across the political chasm to oppose the meals tax .

    Fairfax County’s referenda to implement a meals tax, a fee imposed on the purchase of all prepared, ready-to-eat food and beverages, have failed on the ballots in 1992 (58% opposing) and 2016 (56% opposing). Beginning in 2020, the Virginia General Assembly, in all of its wisdom, allowed localities to pass such a tax without putting a referendum on the ballot directly to the voters.

    So, in May 2024, the Fairfax Board of Supervisors voted 9-1 to circumvent the public and vote on a meals tax between 1% and 6%. Residents expect the plan to be presented at the Budget Committee meeting on Sept. 17 and voted on at a subsequent board meeting this year.

    Not only is this initiative anti-democratic, given voters’ previous rejection of it, but the meals tax is also regressive. For a group of politicians that speak incessantly about equity, they do not seem to care that this would create a substantial burden for all residents and particularly for lower-income households.

    Additionally, the meals tax will likely put many restaurants out of business. In case the draconian pandemic policies were not enough to end Fairfax families’ dreams of running their own businesses, the local government will continue the mission of forcing permanent closures with the burden of the meals tax.

    Waria Salhi, a partner with Mezeh Mediterranean Grill, said , “I think it’s crazy at this time when inflation is already high, and people are barely making ends meet, and now you hit them with this tax?”

    About 100 local restaurant owners join Salhi in his view and have created a group called Stop the Food Tax .

    This burdensome tax is in addition to the Board of Supervisors’s decision to increase the average homeowner’s taxes this year by 6%. According to a press release from Supervisor Pat Herrity, who is the only board member to vote against considering the meals tax, these recent burdens fall on top of a 56% homeowner’s tax increase over the last 10 years.

    And can we honestly say that our local government services have improved with the skyrocketing tax burden? Absolutely not.

    Fairfax County’s public schools, which account for more than half of the tax burden, have declined significantly. Test scores have plummeted, chronic absenteeism and dropout rates are astronomically high, and six high schools are on the verge of losing accreditation .

    Meanwhile, violent crime in Fairfax County increased 8.7% in 2023, the seventh most significant increase in the country.

    Both the decline in school performance and the increase in violent crime coincide with the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors’s " Trust Policy ," passed in January 2021, to make Fairfax County a sanctuary for illegal immigrants.

    While our property taxes are covering the costs of the county’s sanctuary policy and Fairfax families are struggling with inflation, Jeff McKay, chairman of the Board of Supervisors, has voted to increase the salaries for himself and his other part-time elected colleagues substantially. In 2024, McKay’s salary increased by 45%, to $145,000. At the same time, the other members of the board voted to increase their part-time annual salaries from $95,000 to $130,000. Fairfax County’s taxpayers are also paying for McKay’s car, gas, tolls, and oil changes.

    If it seems like children have taken over the local budget, that’s because they have. Who else but a child would think it’s OK to drown residents in tax burdens and give yourself a 45% raise and a free car?

    Many Fairfax voters are rightfully shocked about the county’s proposed meals tax, but we should have been appalled a long time ago.

    CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

    Stephanie Lundquist-Arora is a contributor for the Washington Examiner, a mother in Fairfax County, Virginia, an author, and the Fairfax chapter leader of the Independent Women’s Network.

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    Comments / 46
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    Karl Klonowski
    30d ago
    Thanks and praise to the author for such a detailed article. Keep exposing Ffx government and its continuing abuse of the taxpayers. A couple questions and comments: Since Jeff McKay and the Supervisors are part timers, what are their other jobs and earnings? How can citizens force referendums on issues such as tax increases and sanctuary policy? Need to restore fairness and democracy to taxpayers. What can be done to ensure only legal citizens can vote? P.S. The 56% increase in real estate taxes over ten years is low. Mine and those of many neighbors have risen by about 100%.
    SteveBinVA
    30d ago
    FFX Co. is so bloated and corrupt. And the people keep voting in the same corrupt politicians. PWC is no different, the cancer spread. VA ended the year with a huge surplus, but it’s still not enough. They shouldn’t be looking to raise any tax and they should abolish the personal property tax immediately. It’s time to cut the bloated government, hold prosecutors accountable for not doing their job and support our law enforcement and our immigration laws.
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