Property taxes should enter recall debate Warren...
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Property taxes should enter recall debate
Warren Buffett certainly did not do Arnold Schwarzenegger a favor
by endorsing him and thus bringing up the most powerful third rail in
California politics. No one can mention Proposition 13 as an issue
and live. Buffett did, however, point out the obvious: California’s
property tax has no relationship to reality. Two neighbors can live
side by side in homes with an equal market value with one paying
$2,500 a year in property tax and the other paying $25,000 a year.
That might make a lot of sense to one of the neighbors, but not much
sense to the other.
A solution would be to let property taxes be based on the market
value and increase as market value increases, but the increases would
not be collected until the house sells. That way an older couple
could live out their years in the family home without fear of being
forced to sell to pay the property tax and a younger couple could buy
a house they could afford today and know they will be able to afford
it tomorrow. Homes might not increase in value as fast as they do
today, and the kids might not inherit as much as they would
otherwise, but it that so bad?
Of course no discussion of property taxes can be made without
looking at all of our taxes. Maybe we would not need one of the
nations highest income tax and sales tax if property taxes were based
on reality. Maybe Buffett will have done us all a favor if the
subject of Proposition 13 could at least get mentioned as a part of
our massive fiscal state problems.
JOHN PATRICK ORMSBEE
Corona del Mar
Time to give up the El Toro ghost
Donald Nyre just won’t let go of El Toro. He continues to find
every reason to have an International airport at El Toro and you
folks keep printing his nonsense.
According to the reports, Southwest was three miles out before
deciding to turn around and no matter if we had 10,000 foot runways
it would not have changed this situation. A more concerning situation
is if the plane had taken off in to the wind and mountain terrain of
El Toro. Could that have possibly created an even bigger problem?
According to the counties now defunct plan, the plane would have
lifted off the runway and headed to Loma Ridge -- a very scary
situation in this case.
Nyre, a member of the Newport Beach-based Airport Working Group,
continues to dream of what was a flawed planning process to dump an
international-sized airport at El Toro -- with 824 operations per
day, running 24-hours a day, seven days a week.
The voters of Orange County spoke loudly after the last
environmental report was released from the county and in that vote
the county changed the zoning of El Toro so it can no longer be used
for aviation.
I guess it will take the final sale by the Navy this coming year
to convince Nyre, the Daily Pilot and all the other pro airport
groups of Newport Beach that they need to start thinking beyond El
Toro or, the Department of Transportation just might decide that it
would be cheaper to increase the use of John Wayne Airport, if Orange
County is really in such dire need the so called increase in
passengers and cargo.
DAVE KIRKEY
Coto de Caza
Castaways Park looks more like kindling
I would like to ask anyone who is interested, to take a stroll
around the upper level of Castaways Park. This weed patch can only be
enjoyed by an environmental extremist. If these conditions were to
exist in or around someone’s home they would be cited by the Fire
Department for a weed abatement problem. Come to think of it, why
hasn’t the Fire Department required the Parks Department to remove
this fire hazard?
JAMES PECK
Newport Beach
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