Monday, November 02, 2009

It's called Pick and Choose....





Quincy's property tax rate is among the lowest of 15 Illinois cities of comparable size, according to a survey compiled from data collected by the state comptroller's office.

The survey compares Quincy with 14 other cities in the areas of tax rates, tax levies, public safety expenditures and general revenue, based on comprehensive annual financial reports for the year 2008.

A copy of the survey, provided by city officials, shows Quincy's property tax rate of 0.98803 in the 2008 tax year was significantly below the 15-city average of 1.717.

More propaganda provided by the City Hall Gazette....

Only Algonquin, with an estimated 2008 population of 30,482 compared to Quincy's 39,983, had a lower tax rate, 0.48.

Kankakee (population 26,608) had the highest tax rate at 4.0 while North Chicago (35,918) was second with 2.491 and Galesburg (31,738) third with 2.3607.

"I think it's interesting to see the comparisons when it comes to the revenue stream," Mayor John Spring said. "One of the reasons Quincy is so attractive to people, and affordable to people, is we don't have near the multitude of additional taxes in our community to produce revenue for city services."

Wonder where the ex-mayor will be when the bills from the Hydo project will roll in ???

....and did the "revenue stream" include seat belt tickets, speeding and DUI fines??

Quincy is the only city among the 15 that doesn't charge a telecommunications tax on telephone or Internet services. All of the other communities charge a tax ranging from 2 to 6 percent.

Hint #1 for further revenue stream....

In addition, 10 of the 15 communities charge a gas utilities tax, nine charge an electric utilities tax, seven charge a food and beverage tax, five charge a water utilities tax and two charge a liquor tax.

Hints #2,3,4 & 5

Quincy charges none of these taxes.

Not yet......

"We take pride in providing great city services* without additional burden on the taxpayers by some of these additional taxes," Spring said.

* see # of city employees down further....

Gary Sparks, the city's director of administrative services, said the survey shows Quincy's equalized assessed valuation (EAV) of $517 million "is very compatible with other communities our size."

The EAV combines with the city's tax rate to help determine the local tax extension, which is smaller than many other cites of comparable size. The survey shows Quincy's total extension of $5.1 million was well below the 15-city average of $7.3 million.

Sparks noted that the city's total General Fund expenditures of $17.2 million in 2008 also was well below the 15-city average of $23.7 million. Only four communities spent less from their General Funds.

In the area of public safety expenditures, Quincy's total of $12.8 million came in below the 15-city average of $13.1 million. While eight cities spent more on public safety, Quincy was at or near the top in the number of firefighters and police officers.

Quincy's total of 66 firefighters exceeded the 15-city average of 46.6, and its 72 police officers exceeded the average of 60. But Sparks said the average may be misleading because of the way some communities reported figures.

OK...this is misleading but the previous is not???

Three of the largest communities listed in the survey -- Champaign, Galesburg and Pekin -- were all shown to have zero firefighters and zero police officers. Algonquin, meanwhile, was shown to have zero firefighters but 51 police officers, while Rantoul was shown to have zero firefighters and 31 police officers.

Sparks doesn't know why there are disparities in the statistics. He said some communities may contract for emergency services and report their numbers differently. He said some cities, such as Quincy, may have more firefighters because the community's geographic size may call for having more outlying fire stations to improve response times, but the survey didn't provide any data on geographic size.

The survey indicated Quincy had 369 full-time employees in 2008, which is well above the 15-city average of 265. Sparks couldn't say why Quincy's number was so high. "It may depend on how they submitted the information," he said.

HELLO !!! CAN YOU SAY NEPOTISM ????

Sparks said the employee count for Quincy is skewed somewhat. Sparks said Quincy's full-time employment number is actually 346 now, which is down several positions from where it would have been last year.

Maybe family members with the same last name should all be counted as one?

Quincy Comptroller Ann Scott said the city doesn't typically count the 21 employees at the Quincy/Adams County 911 center as city employees because those workers are employed by both the city and the county. But on this particular report, she said, "they probably were" counted.

...and that makes a BIG difference of 104 MORE than average ???

Sparks noted that some communities in the survey have an unusually high number of part-time employees. The 15-city average for part-timer positions was 145 -- more than double Quincy's total of 61.

Part timers don't get full ride from city coffers....Here aldermen's families get the full ride !!!

Normal, a community of 52,495 residents, was listed as having 364 full-time employees and 627 part-time employees. Galesburg, with a population of 31,738, was listed as having 264 full-time employees and 425 part-timers.





  • Nothing says "Good News" like handing the media a fluff piece.


  • Nothing says "Good News" like the writer not asking questions.






Propaganda is communication aimed at influencing the attitude of a community toward some cause or position. As opposed to impartially providing information, propaganda in its most basic sense, presents information primarily to influence an audience. Propaganda often presents facts selectively (thus lying by omission) to encourage a particular synthesis, or uses loaded messages to produce an emotional rather than rational response to the information presented. The desired result is a change of the attitude toward the subject in the target audience to further a political agenda.







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10 comments:

Anonymous said...

Comparing Quincy to other cities in Illinois may be like comparing pergatory to hell. Yeah, I'd rather be in pergatory than hell but I won't be satisfied with either.

It is just the looters telling us not to complain about having our pocket picked because they can and will make it much worse for us.

Anonymous said...

The statistic of median household income shows Quincy well below the average. Gas prices here are above the national average. Where are we at with the state average? Where are we at with cost of living average? A lot of questions.

I forgot we live in the land where "life is good". A positive attitude is what we should survive on. Everybody should just be smiling.

On another subject our elect state officials are proud of campaign reform. I would be ashamed at wasting taxpayer money for their results. Limit contributions for the entire campaign not just primary. A $1.1 million campaign for a state senate job is uncomprehensible.

Anonymous said...

I'm confused here, and not just being sarcastic. Would somebody please explain.

I've spoken with a number of people in the last few years who either grew up in Quincy, or attended Quincy College in the 60's. They were looking at returning to Quincy for retirement, but property taxes were a concern or even a deal breaker for them.

So which is it? Please tell me.

Anonymous said...

I'm not pissing down your back, it's rainin.

UMRBlog said...

Algonquin has no firefighters in its employ.

Just Like Lima and Tioga have formed a fire district (a separate governmental entity), Algonquin and Lake-in-the-Hills are served by a separate entity called, appropriately enough, the Algonquin-Lake-in-the-Hills Fire District. This entity employes 55-60 firefighters at any given time and has mutual aid understandings with Cary and East Dundee. I think this fire district also sells services (very common for suburbs) to Carpentersville.

Anyhow, they really do have no firefighters. Tough trick for standalone communities downstate.

Anonymous said...

It doesn't help when we pay our part time attorneys' health ins., so when a real legal problem arises the mayor can run to chicago to blow $400k. Paying hush money to Beebe so he doesn't tell everyone how he was boinking the Reis chick is money well spent. Give Umr a raise.

Anonymous said...

bingo!

Anonymous said...

Amazing how it did not hit the newspaper like the other blow up did.

Anonymous said...

I'm hearing there's a sex tape.

Anonymous said...

video or audio ??

 
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