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Alan Larman
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Alan Larman
@PensFan786
Proud Father, Loving Husband
Florida, USA Katılım Eylül 2023
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Alan Larman retweetledi
Alan Larman retweetledi

🚨JUST IN: The Florida House just voted 80 to 30 to eliminate property taxes for homeowners.
This is one of the boldest tax moves any state has ever attempted.
The Florida House Speaker called it "the most aggressive property tax legislation ever passed by a legislative chamber in the history of the United States."
That's not a small claim.
Most Florida homeowners have been getting crushed as home values across the state have exploded over the last five years.
A house worth $250,000 in 2019 is assessed at $450,000 today in many counties.
The tax bill followed that number straight up.
For retirees and long term homeowners on fixed incomes, that increase hasn't been gradual, it’s been brutal.
Here's what the proposal actually does:
It gradually increases the homestead exemption by $100,000 annually for ten years, reaching complete elimination of non school property taxes by 2037.
Law enforcement and public safety budgets are constitutionally protected, so they can't be touched.
For a homeowner with a $400,000 property, that's potentially $4,000 to $6,000 back in their pocket every single year.
For retirees who did everything right and are now watching inflation and rising taxes eat through their fixed income, that number is SIGNIFICANT.
Governor DeSantis has been pushing this hard, calling property taxes "an oppressive and ineffective form of taxation," arguing that as long as they exist, homeowners are effectively paying rent to the government in perpetuity.
But there's a twist most people aren't talking about at all.
Economists project that eliminating property taxes could actually INCREASE home values by making ownership significantly cheaper to hold long term, which sounds great until you realize that higher home values mean even less affordability for first time buyers who are already completely locked out of this market.
Existing homeowners win.
First time buyers might get squeezed even harder.
This still needs Senate approval, which hasn't moved yet, then it needs to survive the full legislative session.
It also needs 60% voter support in a statewide referendum to pass as a constitutional amendment.
That's an incredibly high bar and a lot of places for this to stall, get watered down, or die entirely.
Florida just lit the match, and wether it starts a revolution or burns the house down is still very much to be determined.

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