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Proposed tt post mar 18 2016
links to reference:
Info culled from Blade stories:
- Increasing the "temporary" income tax from 0.75 percent to 1.00 percent would generate an additional $18.6 million a year.
- For 2016, Mayor Hicks-Hudson promised to devote $16.6 million of that $18.6 million to residential street repair.
- For the following years, no guarantee exists that the city would devote nearly 90% of the revenue generated by the tax increase to street repair.
- Since the tax increase vote failed, Toledo has zero dollars for street repairs in 2016.
- The mayor said Toledo has more than $750 million in street repairs.
- If the tax increase had passed, and if $16.6 million were devoted to street repairs in 2016, that means approximately 2.2 percent of the roads would have been repaired. It depends upon what type of road is fixed.
- For each lane mile of a residential street it costs roughly $275,000 to resurface and $750,000 to reconstruct.
- For each lane mile of a major street it costs roughly $320,000 to resurface and $1 million to reconstruct.
- Let's say that the state/feds matched Toledo's $16.6 million, providing Toledo with $33 million. Then about 4.5 percent of the needed street repairs would have been funded this year.
- Doug Stephens, the city’s commissioner of engineering services, said Toledo would need $1.1 billion over the next 20 years to fix all of its streets, which comes to $55.5 million annually. Toledo typically spends less than $20 million a year to maintain its streets. About two-fifths of that amount is state or federal money. The city is on a every-50-year replacement cycle when it should be on a 20-year cycle.
Obviously, this road problem did not begin in January 2014. It's not due to a couple bad recent winters.
It appears that this massive neglect, probably due to financial malfeasance, has been in the works for many years, spread across multiple mayoral administrations and city council configurations.
Every current and former living elected Toledo government official should be charged with some kind of a crime, or they should be forced to explain why they failed to satisfy one of the basic functions of local government.
But then again, the small percentage of Toledoans who vote have placed these blight-contributors in positions to do harm.
Toledo has $750 million worth of street repairs, and the new tax increase would have covered 2 percent of that for 2016. We definitely do not need new taxes.
The need to reorganize city government is an understatement.
Blade stories referenced:
http://www.toledoblade.com/local/2015/11/30/Toledo-could-turn-to-tax-hike-request-for-road-repairs.html
http://www.toledoblade.com/image/2015/11/30/800x_b1_cCM_z/Streets30.jpg
http://m.toledoblade.com/Politics/2015/12/08/Mayor-seeks-income-tax-hike-for-roads.html
http://m.toledoblade.com/Politics/2015/12/08/Mayor-Benefits-of-increasing-tax-outweigh-costs.html
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