In both parishes, a new 2 percent
tax would be levied on hotel rooms and camping sites, with proceeds going to
the Shreveport-Bossier Convention
and Tourist Bureau’s Sports Commission to attract sports events, the Independence Bowl Foundation for it
to beef up payouts for the bowl game and to get Division I schools to play
neutral site games at Independence Stadium, and essentially to subsidize Shreveport Regional Airport so that it
can pay carriers to provide added service. It is estimated it would bring in
over $2 million a year.
As usual, supporters argue this
only can bring benefits to the area because “others” will be paying the extra
fee, not area residents. And, just as typically, this ignores that the added
cost to lodging will discourage. So maybe bribing events, teams, and airlines
might get more of them to come to the area – only then to jack up lodging costs
for teams, fans, and other area visitors that drives up their lodging costs, which
serves as a disincentive to want to come. There’s no evidence to suggest that
the cost of lost jobs and negative spillover effects on local businesses by an
artificial increase in lodging prices will be less than any presumed gains from
increased visitation on the tax coffers of local governments.
Further, there’s little real need
to take from Peter to pay Paul for these entities. The Bureau sits on a nice
chunk of change already (almost
half of its entire net worth is in unrestricted cash as of last year), the
Foundation continues to struggle with making the enterprise self-sufficient (in
part because of the difficulty in marketing an area without a Division I team
with indifferent game time weather and from a relatively small metropolitan
area with plenty of competition from other entertainment venues) even with a $300,000 gift
from state taxpayers this year, and the Airport continues to be a
high-priced venue compared to its peer group (it had the highest
price of any airport its size and above in 2009, and even now among those
with originating passengers between 100,000 and 200,000 annually, as of 2013 it
ranks 16th
highest of the 56), so its priority should be internal changes to lower
costs to airlines. Making these enterprises more competitive rather than asking
government to collude in collecting a handout will provide more in the way of
economic benefits.
Bossier voters additionally might
pile more taxes onto themselves. The Bossier
Parish Council on Aging seeks approval of a 1 mill property tax levy, worth
almost $1 million a year, to fund its activities, which would represent
nearly 88 percent of its entire revenues from last year. The stated idea is
that local Bossier governments could discontinue about $281,000 of
subsidization in exchange, in order to “stabilize”
funding.
But this would increase the
amount of revenue coming into the nonprofit organization at least a predicted
$679,000 above last year. And there’s no guarantee – with history suggesting otherwise
– that the local governments would not spend what they are saving on something
else, so taxpayers will see none of it. In other words, this isn’t a swap of
tax dollars coming to the group indirectly now redirected to its receiving them
directly; it’s a wholesale soaking of homeowners, renters, businesses, and customers
if passed for a special interest written in stone through 2024.
If the public wants to pony up
more of what they earn to one outfit, far better than locking in a much greater
obligation for the next ten years would be to handle it as it is now, through
the annual appropriation process that grants needed flexibility for
policy-makers deciding on behalf of their constituents. Both this tax increase
on Bossierites and the occupancy fee increase deserve defeat on Nov. 4.
No comments:
Post a Comment