New Jersey Property-Tax Bills Increases slowed to 1.7% still set a Record
By Elise Young Mar 13, 2014 8:15 PM ET
The average property-tax bill in New Jersey, which already has the highest in the U.S., rose 1.7 percent last year, Governor Chris Christie said.
More than 80 towns, school boards and other local governments saw their taxes drop, while about 160 had increases of less than 1 percent, according to an e-mail from the governor’s office.
New Jersey’s property taxes, which are collected by local governments, increased about 7 percent annually in 2004, 2005 and 2006 before the rate began to slow. Christie, a second-term Republican, has controlled the growth after enacting a 2 percent annual cap. Still, the tax climbed to a record of more than $8,000 per household, from the previous high of $7,885 in 2012, according to calculations by Bloomberg.
“This is the lowest rate of growth in 24 years in this state,” Christie said yesterday at a town-hall meeting in Mount Laurel.
He called on the Democratic-controlled legislature to renew the state’s interest-arbitration cap, which expires on March 31, as a way to contain future growth. It limits the fees for arbitrators, attorneys and others involved in negotiating public-worker contracts.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-03-13/new-jersey-property-taxes-increased-by-average-1-7-last-year.html
This is what happens when you elect Democrats beholden to the unions.
The state of NJ should tax the pensions that public employees earned from municipal and state jobs when they bail out of NJ and move to NC.
Earn it here. The state should tax it. IN FULL in perpetuity.
Why should a person pay tax on his pension when he lives out of state and cannot receive the benefits that they are paying for. The state of NJ already taxes pension of those who live here, the state already charges a 1% exit tax on the gross sale of a house if you do not stay in the state.
At least NJ is #1 in something