PARAMUS, N.J. (AP) - It sounds like another New Jersey joke. Except it's not funny if
you actually live here.
For the privilege of living in perhaps the nation's
most-maligned state, New Jerseyans pay the highest property taxes
in America.
That overriding issue — not President Barack Obama, health
care or the economy — could cost Democratic Gov. Jon Corzine
his job on Election Day.
The former Wall Street whiz, who has failed to solve the Garden
State's tax woes amid a deep economic decline, is locked in a tight
race with Republican Chris Christie, a corruption-busting former
federal prosecutor whose main appeal appears to be that he isn't
Corzine.
A moderate independent in the race, Chris Daggett, a former
state and federal environmental official, has surprised the
political establishment by becoming a factor — and maybe a
spoiler — partly because of his plan to reduce property taxes
by 25 percent.
New Jersey's crushing tax burden is blamed largely on its
profusion of hundreds of cities, towns, townships, boroughs and
school districts, all with their own bureaucracies, overlapping
authority and duplicated services.
Last year, the average bill for a homeowner was more than $7,000
— about twice the national average and 71 percent more than a
decade earlier. It's a bill homeowners have to pay whether they get
a big raise, a pink slip or a fixed pension.
"It just keeps going up," lamented Tim Nowakowski, a 52-year-old
kitchen designer from Shamong who pays about $8,000 in property
taxes. "Nothing goes down."
Jerry Rickleman, 46, of Paramus, said his mother and
mother-in-law are both in their 80s and their property tax bills
make it difficult to make ends meet. "They're both drowning here,"
he said.
All 21 New Jersey counties are among the 100 in the country with
the highest average property tax bill. Property taxes account for
more than 40 cents of every dollar New Jersey's state and local
governments collect in taxes.
A Monmouth University/Gannett New Jersey Poll released Sunday
shows Corzine and Christie about even, with the governor getting 42
percent of support among likely voters surveyed while Christie
received 43 percent. In the last Monmouth/Gannett poll issued two
weeks ago, the two were tied at 39 percent. The telephone poll of
1,041, taken Oct. 28-20, had a sampling error of plus or minus 3
percentage points.
Corzine, a former Goldman Sachs CEO, has been criticized for
handling the state's economic mess by striking a deal not to lay
off state workers and for rolling back rebates on property taxes.
He's spent more than $20 million of his own money on his campaign,
most notably drawing attention for a commercial that appears to
poke fun at the weight of the corpulent Christie.
Confronted with a recession, Corzine fell short on his campaign
promise of four years ago to give homeowners major relief from
property taxes. He also boosted taxes on cigarettes and liquor,
along with the income tax for those making more than $400,000.
Corzine's opponents paint him as a governor in love with taxes
— or at least not tough enough to resist them.
All three men say they'd encourage more sharing of services or
even mergers for the state's confounding government system that
includes 566 municipalities and 603 school districts in a compact
state.
Corzine is halfway through a two-year process of eliminating 26
school districts that, curiously, don't run schools. And more towns
have merged services like municipal courts under his watch.
Christie says he would be even more forceful in encouraging
governments to share services.
The biggest share of property tax money goes to running the
public schools. For years, it was routine to freeze most aid to the
majority of districts when the state budget was tight. That left
property taxes alone to keep up with the rising costs of running
schools in a state where teachers earn an average of about $60,000,
fifth in the nation.
Corzine has imposed a 4 percent per year cap on property tax
increases. Both challengers say that should be even stricter.
Christie, who refers to the state's citizens as "overtaxed New
Jerseyans" at every turn, says he would restore rebates and cut
corporate and income taxes during his term — though likely
not next year. He says he would consider many of the same measures
as Corzine for balancing the budget, but would roll back the top
tax rate and would not increase any other taxes.
The heart of Daggett's campaign is his plan to impose sales
taxes on a broader range of services and cut property taxes by 25
percent. Daggett says that plan, combined with spending cuts and
federal help, would be the keys to balancing next year's
budget.
Daggett's candidacy has focused more attention on taxes in the
final weeks of a nasty race.
In one ad, Corzine accused Christie of getting special treatment
for traffic violations — Christie denies it — with the
narrator saying the challenger "threw his weight around." Seconds
later, there was unflattering footage of Christie getting out of an
SUV. Talk of the ad dominated the campaign for a time, seemingly
annoying all three candidates.
When Christie proposed allowing mandate-free health insurance
coverage for some residents, Corzine charged that would mean women
would lose coverage for mammograms. Indignant, Christie called the
attack personal and pointed out that a mammogram helped catch his
own mother's cancer early.
Political scientists in the state believe the scuffling over
these very New Jersey issues mean that a Corzine loss would reflect
anger at him, not Obama.
In campaign appearances the president has talked about how
Corzine has provided some tax relief, but not everyone buys it.
Pete Stempowski of Hillsdale, who owns an energy management
company, has watched his property tax bill rise from about $6,700
to about $8,900 in the past three years. And because he and his
wife make more than $75,000, they didn't get a rebate this
year.
Stempowski, 38, said the taxes are so troubling that he's
tempted to move to his wife's native Kentucky. There, he figures,
his son would still get a decent education, his garbage would still
be collected and he wouldn't wonder why his property tax bill is so
high.
"Where's it all going?" said Stempowski. "No one can answer
that."