New Jersey's towns badly hit by superstorm
Sandy may raise property taxes to finance their rebuilding efforts,
Governor Chris Christie said on Wednesday.
A 2
percent state cap on annual increases can be ignored by local
governments if there is a natural disaster, he said in an interview with
CBS radio.
If towns "need to spend some money to get themselves going," a property tax is possible, Christie said.
Christie has campaigned for months on a "Jersey Comeback,"
a plan that includes tax cuts to boost the state's shaky economy.
Earlier this week, he said he would wait to see what Sandy's impact on
local finances would be before deciding whether to press ahead with more
tax cut requests, local media reported.
Areas
badly ravaged by the storm, which tore through the U.S. Northeast at the
end of October, will need repairs in housing, businesses and critical
infrastructure systems like transportation.
The
federal government and insurers are expected to pay for many recovery
costs, but the reimbursement process can be long.
Local governments, whose funds are stressed by immediate damage repair
costs, are also losing sales taxes and other revenues.
New Jersey, the seventh-largest state economy, has not yet provided
estimates on economic damage by the storm, but Christie said he hoped to
have a figure by the end of the week.
Neighboring
New York State plans to ask the federal government for $30 billion in
disaster aid to help with the recovery for New York City, Long Island
and other devastated areas.
In February, Christie
proposed a 10 percent across-the-board income-tax cut. The Democrat-led
Legislature cut a deal with Christie for a plan to provide property-tax
credits on residents' income tax returns for those earning less than
$400,000 a year.
But state lawmakers, concerned
about lagging revenues, didn't include the proposed cuts in the $31.7
billion budget for fiscal year 2013, which the governor signed in July.
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