HomeNewsMarlton NewsSun Editorial: A ‘donation’ instead of property taxes?

Sun Editorial: A ‘donation’ instead of property taxes?

The new federal tax plan did a number on high-tax states, which, of course, includes New Jersey. Trying to find a work-around is natural.

By Alan Bauer
The Sun

State lawmakers might do away with property taxes, or most property taxes. How exciting is that?

If the story stopped there, it would be parade-worthy. But, of course, there’s a catch.

The new federal tax plan did a number on high-tax states, which, of course, includes New Jersey. The measure capped the amount of state and local taxes residents can deduct on their federal returns at $10,000. There are approximately a whole bunch of homeowners in New Jersey who pay a lot more than that in property taxes every year.

But the state has a solution. Or maybe a solution. It depends on what the IRS thinks.

A bill, S-1893, would allow tax entities such as school districts, municipalities, etc. to set up charitable trusts. Instead of paying taxes, homeowners would make “donations” to these trusts and get a whopping tax credit in return. The Senate approved the measure last week. The Assembly is up next. Gov. Murphy likes the idea.

A few things:

First, just calling property taxes “donations” feels weird, doesn’t it?

Second, these “donations” wouldn’t be optional, which again is kind of weird since most people make donations out of the kindness of their heart, not government mandate.

Third, we have no idea if the IRS will sign off on this, since, with traditional tax-exempt donations, you don’t get something of value in return, or, if you do, it affects the amount of the donation you can write off.

But we give lawmakers credit for creativity. The new federal tax law hit a lot of homeowners (and probably most of our lawmakers) really hard. Trying to find a work-around is a natural response.

So we wish them well in their end-run attempt around tax laws. After all, what other solutions are there? It’s not like they’re actually going to fix the state’s overly reliant on property taxes system, right?

RELATED ARTICLES

Related articles

4

Marlton Calendar
October 2, 2024

8

‘Beyond boundaries’
September 30, 2024

11

Celebrate squash day
September 26, 2024

12

Marlton Calendar
September 24, 2024

19

‘Big shoes to fill’
September 17, 2024

22

Marlton Calendar
September 17, 2024

30

‘We will never forget’
September 13, 2024

33

34

Marlton Calendar
September 10, 2024

38

Making music
September 6, 2024

40

Marlton Calendar
September 3, 2024

current issue

latest news

Newsletter

How to reach us