Local State Representative Jason Murphey successfully won approval of
a
key reform property tax reform proposal that was requested by Logan
County
Commissioner Mark Sharpton. Sharpton's plan would provide
property tax relief
across the board for all Oklahoma homeowners.
"The people are sick and
tired of just seeing increases each and every
year," Sharpton said. "This
proposal would actually make it possible
for people's property taxes to
decline."
The proposal, approved by the House of Representatives as an
amendment
to SB 1956, would index each homeowner's homestead exemption to
the
rate of inflation.
"Inflation and the rate of property tax
assessments have gone up for
years, but the homestead exemption has stayed
the same. This is just
wrong," said Murphey.
Murphey said that the
success of the reform proposal was greatly
improved, thanks to the support of
the Chairman of the House Revenue
and Tax Committee, Randy Terrill. Terrill
helped Murphey find a
suitable place to attach the property tax relief
amendment in one of
Terrill's bills. "Rep. Terrill made this opportunity
happen," Murphey
said.
The proposal became the only across-the-board
property tax relief
proposal to remain alive this year after the House killed
SJR 59,
which would have lowered from 5% to 3% the ability of the
County
Assessor to increase property tax assessments.
Murphey said he
knew property tax reform would be hard to pass. He
avoided filing legislation
and waited instead for an amendment
opportunity. The effort paid off when
opposition members of the House
tried to kill the proposal on procedural
grounds. The opposition was
unable to use the rule that prevents already
introduced legislation
from being considered as an amendment.
Sharpton
said the issue had added significance to him after a
constituent and mother
met him at the gate to the county barn.
Sharpton said she was crying because
she received her increased
property tax bill and did not know how to pay it.
"We have to do
something," he explained. "The people cannot take much more of
this."
Murphey said he gets many calls on the issue of property taxes;
a
recent survey of his constituents showed that 94 percent
support
property tax reform. "Just yesterday one of my constituents emailed
me
with a chart of how much his property taxes will be increasing over
the
next ten years. For a 1600 sq ft house he will be paying more than
$2,000 per
year. It is clear that the people really do care about
these unfair increases
and it will affect how much money they place
into the economy," Murphey
said.
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State
Representative Jason W. Murphey