The residents gathered more than 5,400 signatures on petitions to persuade the Wilmette Park District to place a $ 25 million
tax referendum question on the March 19 ballot to buy the land.
Not exact matches
Advertisements by the pro-HST side, for example, offer up accountants testifying to the job - creating benefits of the harmonized federal - provincial levy over the alternative specified in the
referendum question, a reintroduction of the 7 % provincial sales
tax — hardly the sort of stirring campaign rhetoric likely to rally a silent majority to its side.
Questions about the
referendum from concerned residents have ranged from «will there be a dog park,» to taxpayers skeptically asking how the estimated
tax increase could be so small for such a large
referendum amount.
Chiszar said voters who supported the
tax increase
referendum question that allowed the Park District to buy the area's last working farm wanted the land developed as a whole «unique piece of property.»
Cary Park Director Steve Cherveny said the
referendum question will ask taxpayers to support a «25 - cent increase in the corporate fund,» which translates into an increase of $ 116 in property
taxes for the owner of a $ 150,000 house.
If the
referendum question is approved next month, a
tax rate of 19.5 cents would be levied to develop the city's about 100 acres of park land.
Nonetheless, some experts caution that asking voters to consider two
referendum questions on the November ballot might not produce the desired outcomes for either organization, in particular, if those casting ballots fear that supporting both measures would mean higher
taxes.
The
referendum question to form a Park District lost by 28 votes, while the proposition to raise
taxes to support the district lost 1,852 - 1,423.
Challengers in the election that saw the defeat of two incumbents and a
tax increase request
referendum to build a recreation center
questioned the profitability and management of the golf course.
You said, referring to the earlier votes, that, «The Cary district put two
referendum questions to the voters in November — an $ 8.1 million bond issue to buy 80 acres of land and build a swim center and ballfields, and a
tax - rate increase to operate the facilities.»
In Michigan, where legislative action on school reform has been put on hold until
questions of funding equity have been settled, voters will face two ballot
referenda — each with a different sales -
tax equation — that could add new funds to the education coffers.