The Adobe Flash Player is required to view this multimedia interactive. Get it here.
Home  >  News  >  Local News

Mayor against Waynesville income tax

Hot Topics

Council members in Waynesville, home of the annual Ohio Sauerkraut Festival, will vote in the next two weeks to institute an income tax.
Staff photo Council members in Waynesville, home of the annual Ohio Sauerkraut Festival, will vote in the next two weeks to institute an income tax.
By Justin McClelland, Staff Writer 5:00 PM Friday, November 20, 2009

Waynesville Council is pushing forward with plans for an income tax it says is necessary to save the village despite open hostility from residents.

At what was technically a meeting of the three-person finance committee, but attended by all members of council as well as more than 50 residents, the committee recommended Thursday, Nov. 19 that council install a 1 percent income tax for five years. The income tax would carry a full credit for residents who work in other municipalities and pay a local income tax there.

Even though a measure to get voters’ approval on an income tax in Waynesville was soundly defeated by 68 percent on Nov. 3, council can still vote in its own income tax of up to 1 percent.

The village is facing a deficit of more than $250,000, particularly in police and street maintenance and repair funds. The village has been under fiscal emergency since April 2008 and has had financial problems dating back to 2005, when virtually no bookkeeping was done for at least 18 months, according to Village Manager Bruce Snell.

Several council members have said that if they do not raise the money, they will have no choice but to dissolve Waynesville.

Council must present a recovery plan to the state’s recovery commission by Dec. 29. The plan must give a detailed strategy of either cutting costs or raising revenue to make up for the village’s $250,000 shortfall.

“The income tax would remove the burden from being fully on the property owners,” Snell said, before noting that he would have to pay the tax if imposed, as would all village employees.

“It’s obvious we didn’t want it,” said resident Ed Vaca. “Our elected representatives should consider our voting.”

Vaca did note that the residents had passed several property tax levies over the past two years including a library, school, and police levy.

“If you can justify why you need it, there’s a good chance it will pass,” Vaca said.

“Don’t be so damn afraid of an income tax,” said Ken Harris, who added he felt residents needed to read and fully understand the tax before rushing to judge it.

Of the seven person village council, only Mayor Earl Isaacs has spoken out strongly against the tax.

“I’m not shoving anything down the residents throat,” Isaacs said.

Isaacs said he believes the fiscal emergency means that the village should make deeper cuts, up to and including eliminating the role of the village manager and embracing the “strong mayor” method of government. Gary Pelkey, who will take a village council seat in January, made a similar suggestion during the open forum.

“Before we had a village manager, we had a government center that was perfect for this town and it was paid for,” Isaacs said in a written statement. “Every village manager we have had has done nothing but talk the council members into growing a government that we the citizens cannot (sic) afford, and use this town as a stepping stone to advance their career.”

Isaacs also suggested cutting pay for part time police officers and eliminating one full-time officer.

Isaacs downplayed concerns of the village being abolished.

“The village of Waynesville has been here for 200 years,” Isaacs said. “We’ll get through this.”

Council woman Sandy Stemple, who heads the finance council, said that 80 percent of the money raised through the income tax would go to paying down the village’s debt, while the other 20 percent would go towards its general fund, which pays for police and village salaries. If council does institute an income tax, voters could repeal it through a referendum vote.

Council will next consider the proposed income tax at its meeting Monday, Dec. 7 and vote on the matter Dec. 14.

Contact this reporter at (513) 696-4544 or jmcclelland@coxohio.com.

Yes someone told me that right here in the comments.

Look it up.

For all I remember it could have been you.
I already stated the statement I made about the Mayor being in Vietnam was never told to me, I did not read it, I formed it on my own.

I was wrong, I made an inaccurate assumption, I did not do this to hurt anyone it really matters little.

As I said we all grow up.
When and where the mayor served has nothing to do anything affecting my life/pocketbook right now.
Honesty
5:27 PM, 12/14/2009
Someone "told" you that Darla? Who? The same lackey that told you Boss Hogg is a Viet Nam vet?

You are so removed from reality, you can't even be ridiculed. You're sort of a tragic, helpless robot, being guided by liars and politicians.

No, Darla. People who live in other towns and work in Waynesville would leave their tax here. Just like villagers who work in Lebanon leave their local tax there.

Lebanon currently gets the tax both ways. Why pay higher prop taxes and fund other towns?
Property Owner
4:23 PM, 12/14/2009
I have read in print comments and in the articles that the Police Dept will be in the Black (OK) since the passage of the levey last year.

Why does council keep insisting that they need this tax to fund them?

This information is from the State Financial committee In fact it is listed from one in the comments.

The tax money that is currently paid to the surrounding cities , they will continue to recieve it, we can not revert the money back to waynesville, (someone told me that)




Honesty
1:04 PM, 12/14/2009
Whoops, I see the editors rejected the first word of my last sentence. It was a four letter word, but it begins with S.

I might be guilty of untruthfullness on my web page about spending on Mr. Snell's watch. But I wouldn't use profanity.
Boss Hogg
12:24 PM, 12/13/2009
Dear Citizens: I have heard from the people that I serve. You know, the residents of Centerville, Wilmington, Lebanon, Xenia and elsewhere.

They like their police, street and water services. They like Waynesville money to pay for these services.

They want to keep it that way. So do I.

Look, if the Village dissolves, you'll lose local police and other services. Deal with it. Or raise your prop taxes. I don't care.

People all around Waynesville are depending on you and me. **** it up.
Boss Hogg
12:07 PM, 12/13/2009
There are 156 additional comments
SHOW ALL
We welcome your comments. Please remember this is a public forum and behave appropriately. Your comments must conform to our visitor's agreement.

The form has errors highlighted in red, please review these entries and try again!



Comments are limited to 500 characters


500 character limit

Incorrect please try again


These words come from scanned books.
Entering them helps digitize old texts.


Breaking news by e-mail

Start your day with top headlines in your inbox and get breaking news e-mail alerts at any time by subscribing to our Headlines e-mail newsletter.

See Sample | Privacy Policy
View All

Top Jobs


About our ads

About our ads

Copyright © 2010 Cox Ohio Publishing, Dayton, Ohio, USA. All rights reserved.

By using this site, you accept the terms of our Visitors Agreement and Privacy Policy. About our ads. You may wish to note our other business policies.