A House panel will bring the property tax rate down from an initial 7 cent increase down to 4 cents for residential homeowners. The proposal pushes commercial rates up 8 cents.

The House Ways and Means Committee took a straw poll on the proposal on Tuesday, and lawmakers supported it in a 7-4 vote. Rep. Adam Greshin, I-Warren, voted against the proposal because he said the 8 cent increase is a roughly 5 percent jump in the tax for non-residential taxpayers and it โ€œstrains the notion of fairness.โ€

Though legislators on the panel are still working through a number of details in the committee bill, they agreed to a 98 cent tax on the base rate for homeowners and a $1.52 rate for commercial payers. The base education amount, which is used in the formula for calculating the actual rate property taxpayers are assessed, will go up to $9,382.

Taxpayers who earn less than $47,000 a year will see no change in their income sensitized rebate under the plan. Middle class taxpayers who earn between $47,000 and $90,000 and get a partial subsidy will see a slight adjustment in rebates, according to Rep. Janet Ancel, chair of the committee. The slope has been extended and now includes people who own houses valued at $250,000. (Previously, the cutoff was $200,000.)

The panel lowered the limit on the total amount in income sensitivity rebate money that can be distributed to an individual household from $8,000 to $6,000.

In addition, the base income rate will go from 1.84 percent to 1.9 percent. Raising that rate, Ancel says, will address growing inequity in the Education Fund.

โ€œThis bill reduces the impact, and more fairly distributes the impact as compared to the recommendation from the administration,โ€ Ancel said.

The tax reduction comes from changes to the formula numbers and $6 million in surplus funds.

School budgets came down from the anticipated high of 3.8 percent to 3 percent, Ancel said, and gave the committee more leeway (roughly $8 million) to reduce the rates.

Nevertheless, spending went up 3 percent, she said, โ€œand that 3 percent is going to show up in the rates, but we need to recognize the fact that they went up less than anticipated. Thatโ€™s the work of school boards.โ€

Gov. Peter Shumlin and the Vermont Department of Taxes recommended a residential tax increase of 7 cents next year unless school boards could significantly reduce spending.

The statewide property tax is going up 5 cents this year.

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