Finch: Blockheads Got It Wrong, Bridgeport Not Highest Taxed

Mayor Bill Finch submitted this commentary to the Connecticut Post challenging H&R Block’s assertions that Bridgeport is the highest-taxed city in the country.

Much has been made in the pages of this newspaper, and by some city residents, of the H&R Block trend story targeting the “10 Most Taxed Cities in America.” It’s the unfortunate fact of the digital world we live in that these “misleading” trend stories catch the eye of the reader and the pundit without any proper research or follow-up.

Simply put, the story that H&R Block featured on its blog, and which was picked up by many news outlets, is misleading and inaccurate in its portrayal of Bridgeport as the most highly taxed city in the United States.

I don’t dispute that our residents pay a lot of taxes–the state of Connecticut bases its revenues on an overreliance on property taxes, making it one of the more highly taxed states in the U.S. For cities like Bridgeport, which is one of the smallest municipalities in the country and the hub of nonprofit services such as hospitals, colleges, courts and jails, it means that we depend on state reimbursements to make up for lost revenues.

That said, to list Bridgeport as the most highly taxed city in the United States is simply misleading.

The H&R Block story is based on a study prepared by a staffer who works for the District of Columbia to show how Washington, D.C.’s effective tax rate measures up favorably against other cities. However, this study relies on flawed information:

H&R Block’s False Claims: Average Bridgeport homeowner’s tax bill is $10,000

Fact: Average Bridgeport homeowner’s tax bill is $6,430

H&R Block’s False Claims: This study is based on a hypothetical family of three making $50,000 owning a home valued at $369,609

Fact: This study rests on an income-to-home value that one would be hard-pressed to find in the city of Bridgeport. Median income of a Bridgeport resident is $38,000. The average home is valued at $170,000.

This study takes into account more than property and motor vehicle taxes. It also includes gasoline, sales taxes, motor vehicle registration fees and state income tax–items over which the city has no direct control.

H&R Block is not even close to accurate in any of its research or assumptions. Bridgeport is not even the most taxed city in our state. Hartford, East Hartford, New Haven, Waterbury and Manchester all have higher mill rates than Bridgeport. According to the Connecticut Economic Resource Center (CERC), Bridgeport’s per-capita tax is 27 percent less than the state average.

It’s apparent that the story merely serves as a foil to publicize the company’s tax preparation services, as if having your taxes done by H&R Block will somehow help lower your tax burden.

We know our residents are of modest means and work hard to afford what they have here in the city of Bridgeport. During my tenure, we have worked very diligently to reduce our expenditures and control all the costs we are able to, especially during this very challenging budget cycle.

We have made great progress in the city during the past five years–restoring credibility and financial stability to city government and expanding economic development. We now face formidable challenges posed by a potential loss of $11 million in state revenue.

Rather than focusing on the flawed national “trend” stories that are misleading in order to gain attention, I urge my fellow residents to unite in contacting their state legislators to demand they find a better way to cut the state’s budget, not add another more unrealistic burden to our taxpayers. It’s my hope that H&R Block, and the Connecticut Post and other media outlets, will still stop using this misleading information, as attractive or sensational as it may be, to further its own goals at the expense of the cities it misrepresents.

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9 comments

  1. We already went down this road. HRB presented an analysis that included Bridgeport amongst other communities. On a stand-alone basis Bridgeport does not meet the criteria of being the highest-taxed community in the country. That doesn’t mean I give the ignorant prick a break. We are still spending far too much for what our community can reasonably support. We have to take a very close look at the plans for education spending on structures as well as how much money we spend on non-classroom educational services. Smells funny.

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  2. Have you ever noticed for Finch it’s always someone else’s fault? H&R Block, the state, our little, bitty city–whatever–always someone else’s fault. He needs to get a grip, stop blaming everyone else and do his job.

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  3. Bill Finch,
    I do my own research. I have presented it. You say you disagree with it, but the CHARTER VIOLATIONS continue monthly. The City Clerk office did not have the February monthly financial report, due March 22, as of Noon Friday April 26, 2013. It has been that way all this year. It is not the fault of the State of CT. There may be a problem in the Finance Office. Check it out, please. You are not living up to the Charter.

    The September, 2012 report, delivered to the City Council and public on December 6, 2012 reported a net surplus of Line Item 51000 that shows Full Time Compensation. What do you call that windfall? The Finance Department has stopped providing “narrative” variance reports that made financial information more understandable to the City Council members. They have not discussed the “windfall” yet according to B&A minutes, but I suggest the surplus acknowledged the large number of vacant positions you proposed and Council approved in recent years, certainly for 2012 and 2013. I called them “ghost positions.” You disagree with me. What do you call them? Phony budget proposals?

    Lastly, you have been running City deficits because of too much spending, even with necessary State and Federal revenues. What about providing a FINAL 12th month report for June 2012? Finance gave us a draft that showed a surplus. The CAFR indicated a deficit. Does the taxpayer deserve a report showing where every last dollar of City taxpayer money was spent? Is that reasonable? Is it something you can accomplish for us? Time will tell.

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  4. Paging Mary-Jane Foster. Not too long ago during the mayoral primary, Bill Finch spent a small fortune telling people what a bad investment and organization the Bridgeport Bluefish was.

    The Bluefish continues to struggle and has tried just about everything to fill all seats. They can’t fill the seats no matter how many free Bluefish tickets the mayor gives away. What the mayor is accusing H&R Block of doing is exactly what he did with the Bluefish.

    Perhaps, one day H&R Block will sing a different tune like Bill Finch did just yesterday.

    A “big baseball fan” who enjoys the game more at Harbor Yard than “anywhere else in baseball,” Bridgeport Mayor Bill Finch agreed that the stadium offers more than home runs and hot dogs.

    “They bring people into the city who spend money here,” he said. “In a city our size … we want to squeeze every bit of value out of every inch of land.”

    To Finch, Harbor Yard does more for Bridgeport than bring in spillover customers. It puts the kind of face on the city that some out-of-towners might not ordinarily see.

    “For them to come here and have the great American pastime so inexpensively and such a high-quality product, it’s a very good way for us to beat back our misperceptions,” he said.

    And Finch hopes that notion might help the city score a few votes in the state Office of Tourism’s contest asking residents to name their favorite place in Connecticut.

    “Having your own professional baseball team, professional hockey team, your own airport … just go on and on down the list,” he said. “There’s no city of 150,000 anywhere that I’m aware of that has all of the attributes that Bridgeport has and one of the crown jewels, I think, is the Bridgeport Bluefish.”

    Read more: www .ctpost.com/news/article/Bridgeport-Loyal-fans-return-to-Harbor-Yard-for-4467884.php

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  5. Remember the saying, “let sleeping dogs lie,” it means they shouldn’t disturb a situation as it would result in trouble or complications. Well Bill Finch has decided to disturb this situation and open the door for more complaints. As Jimfox points out Bridgeport home value index was $210,000 it’s now at $136,000. Finch is now saying Bridgeport is a very poor city that does have a tax problem and he has done nothing about it except to hire more people from out of town. Now why would someone want to start a business and buy a home in Bridgeport with this type of leadership? “Let sleeping dogs lie,” NO, not this guy, he is going to show how smart he is.

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  6. *** Man up homes, it may not be the highest taxed in America but it’s “high” enough! Hub of non-profit services, like we’re the only city in CT with non-profits? Great progress in this city in the last five years, restoring credibility and financial stability by expanding economic development, etc.? Contact our State Legislators for help and a better way? Please let’s be real and call a spade a spade on how the city continues to overborrow to pay its debts and responsibilities. Makes future dream contract deals with the unions which will be unpayable when the time comes which also leads the city to be slow in funding hazard duty pensions as well. Overpaid political jobs and benefits without city council input; assumed proposed city budgets with State and Federal dependance and unrealistic incoming revenue that leads to budget flat-lining for education, libraries and city social services. *** WELCOME TO ZOMBIELAND ***

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  7. Mayor Finch,
    News flash, we may not be the highest taxed city in America but we are clearly top 10 and your Administration has made it worse! Wait until we get the results of the new assessments. The effective tax rate will go up dramatically and that will clearly demonstrate your policies have failed. And you want another tax increase?! Get real or get gone.

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