Thursday, October 6, 2022

Using Home Rule to Keep the Poor Poor

In the early aught years the City of Freeport was considering ways to pay for storm sewer repairs.  The city council authorized a study to determine an equitable way to divvy up the cost of the public infrastructure.

Here is an excerpt of city council meeting minutes from 2003 discussing this study:


Purportedly the study was done in order to "determine a fair and just method" to pay for the work.

What happened to this study?  It was basically thrown out as a "fair and just method" was of no interest to the Freeport City Council.  This would be way too much like property taxes wherein those with the most would pay the most.  But why worry about equity when you're home rule and can basically create any tax on a whim of the city council?

As far as I can tell, please correct me if I'm wrong, 2003 was the last time the Freeport Council held a public discussion on distributing the cost of public infrastructure equitably.  Despite adding more and more blanket fees to our water bills, equity among ratepayers has never been a priority with any city council of the past nineteen years.  Again, if there is something in city council meeting minutes to prove me wrong, please point it out, I enjoy being wrong if public enlightenment is the end result.

So what started out as a $2.00 "storm water fee" in the early part of this century we now have blanket fees totaling $43 on every residential water meter regardless of of any other factor, other than water and sewer service.  No consideration is given for parcel size, impermeable areas or other important factors.  If you pay for water water service (not even own a car or property) you must pay these fees to keep this most important public utility hooked up.



In my personal situation, like many other Freeporters, I have an undersized lot, it's only 68 feet by 68 feet.  I have a one stall garage and I share a driveway.  Why Freeport City Council should I pay the same in these fees as people whose garages won't even fit on my little lot?  Clearly it requires more water and sewer service infrastructure, road infrastructure; as well as the larger the lot and building the more storm water run off produced.  Equitable?  Anyone?

Had these fees been placed on property taxes over the past two decades I would of paid far, far less, this a provable fact.  As a matter of fact if property taxes were used instead of this $43 per water meter the vast majority of Freeport homeowners would pay much less than the $516 annually these fees generate per residential water meter.  Also, property taxes on a home address are deductible from federal income tax if you itemize and Illinois property tax payers always get an income tax credit.  The fees we're paying in the present are gone forever with no future tax credits.  If I'm telling fibs the city manager, mayor or any city council member should be able to easily prove me wrong with a few simple mathematical calculations. 

Also, the smaller the parcels the less infrastructure and maintenance required.  In Feeport's older, established neighborhoods the lots and houses are more compact, meaning less infrastructure and maintenance is needed per water meter.  If an overlay map was done showing where the majority of the money from these fees originates, I'm guessing it would show these fees are basically borne by Freeport's poorest families,  as that's where water meters are more concentrated.  Again, if I'm wrong, do the overlay map and prove it.  Nothing should be as transparent as to how our public utilities are being financed and exactly who among us is financing them.

And then we have the single mother I know that rents half a duplex where each unit has it's own water meter.  As a waitress she struggles to make ends meet,  yet she pays the same fees as someone that lives in a mansion on more than an acre out on Barberry Circle.  Will Mayor Miller or someone on the Freeport City Council look my friend in the eye and tell her how equitable the City's tax structure is with home rule?

Another issue with above, the City is collecting double fees from one parcel, with only one parcel worth of infrastructure requirements, from two separate renters of this duplex.  Again, people that are using far less benefits of infrastructure and maintenance are paying beyond their fair share.  It's simply the law of physics.

And why, pray tell,  should temporary tenants be forced to pay for the long term infrastructure needs?  Doesn't this only serve to benefit the property owner, i.e. landlord?  Poor people are getting their water shut off and having to pay big fees to get it turned back on not because they can't afford the water bill but they can't afford to pay off all the home rule bonds tied to these fees.  Pathetic leadership in my opinion.

This is one of the largest reasons home home rule needs to go.  There has been absolutely no effort made by former or current mayors, city managers or city council members to wield the home rule power equitably among citizens.

They brag about using home rule to keep property taxes low, yet they never say who are the beneficiaries of this policy.  Clearly it is Freeport's wealthy elite, the landlords and campaign contributors because it sure as hell is not the residents of Freeport.

As always, yours in honesty, John Samuel Cook 2022

Will grant all the  space needed for any rebuttals.  tutty.baker@gmail.com 

5 comments:

  1. As always. Well said!

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  2. Home Rule must go. Giving any government an open checkbook never turns out good for the citizens.

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  3. So you want citizens with their two stall garages, who already pay more in property tax than you, to pay more in property tax, and you pay less, for the better of their city, but said payment has nothing to do with said properties. Novel idea.

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    1. The vast majority of Freeport homeowners would pay less if these fees were put on property taxes. What about that don't you understand?

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  4. There is a town hall meeting scheduled for Monday, October 24th and I expect the mayor and other elected officials to be there. If there is a possibility of a quorum present, should this not be disclosed and in the spirit of transparency, shouldn’t minutes of the town hall be recorded and also have the town hall televised to communicate the unbiased information?

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