Community commentary -- Richard Luehrs
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Contrary to popular belief, property taxes only pay for a small
portion of the outstanding services we take for granted in Newport Beach.
In fact, the property taxes we pay each year generate about 17 cents
of every dollar of taxes paid in the city. This year those taxes will
total about $26 million.
But the annual budget for the Newport Beach Police Department is $25
million alone and the operating budget for the entire city is $125
million.
Yes, your math is correct; your property taxes barely cover the annual
budget of the Police Department. Who sees that the rest of our quality of
life is funded? For the most part, it’s the business community.
Businesses in the city are the ones that pay the bills through sales,
business license and transient occupancy taxes and their fair share of
property taxes.
In Newport Beach, we are very fortunate. We have a low crime rate,
top-of-the line fire and lifeguard departments, free refuse collection,
efficient public works, one of the country’s finest library systems and a
host of other amenities, adding up to a terrific quality of life that is
due in part to a very successful business climate.
Business drives this community’s economic well-being while we go about
our daily tasks with little concern about how the city pays for the many
services we have come to expect and enjoy. As the cost of providing these
services continues to increase, unless we as local residents wish to have
our taxes increased or see services reduced, Newport Beach needs business
for the continued success of our pristine community.
Every philanthropic endeavor ever proposed in the city has been
supported by business. From the Performing Arts Center and Balboa Theater
Foundation to the Central Library and Environmental Nature Center,
business has provided the lion’s share of the financial wherewithal to
develop and maintain these important community-enrichment facilities that
so greatly add to our quality of life.
Now business is not all about taxes. Its members also represent an
important leadership role on matters relating to the successful
progression of our community.
From school fund-raisers to aid to the less fortunate, you will find
members of the business community actively participating on boards of
directors and small committees in a host of philanthropic endeavors.
Recently, the governor returned a 1993 tax increase to California
taxpayers. In 1993, the sales tax rate was raised by one-quarter cent to
balance the budget in a slumping economy. Now, thanks to a very robust
economy and business climate, the governor has ended the quarter-cent tax
hike.
This is one of its first tax breaks California has enjoyed in years,
and who do we have to thank for this break? The business community and
employers who assume risk, take on increased payroll and provide the
financial resources to improve our quality of life.
We have the business community to thank for the little extra off our
dinner bill or the slight reduction on that new outfit we just bought at
our favorite department store. A quarter-cent tax rate may not seem like
a big deal, but if you multiply the millions of people in California on a
daily basis, it becomes a substantial tax break.
The Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce urges people in Newport
Beach to take a moment to understand the fact that if it were not for
business we would not be able to live, work and play in such a wonderful
place.
Don’t forget, we pay the same property taxes as any other city in the
county, but thanks to the business community we get to live in a
beautiful, clean and safe community.
With all of the slow-growth talk going on, it is sometimes easy to
overlook who is actually paying the bills. At times it seems that many
people in the community do not understand that their lives would be
dramatically different if it were not for the business community leading
the way.
* RICHARD LUEHRS is president and chief executive of the Newport
Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce.
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