l****z 发帖数: 29846 | 1 NJ Town Suing Homeowners to Fix Own Sidewalks or Face Fines
Warner Todd Huston August 13, 2014
Can cities take our taxes, but pass laws that force local citizens to
individually pay for services anyway, thereby making tax dollars used solely
to pay city worker’s salaries? One city in New Jersey is trying this ploy,
anyway.
City authorities in Highland Park, New Jersey have stopped using tax dollars
to fix sidewalks and are attempting to force residents to pay their own
money to replace the deteriorating concrete slabs in front of their homes–
slabs put in by the city years ago and originally paid for with tax money.
Worse, now the city is taking residents to court who have refused to pay
their own cash to fix these sidewalks.
Two years ago the city of Highland Park passed an ordinance to save tax
dollars by requiring residents to pay their own money to fix the sidewalks.
After the ordinance was passed, city inspectors ranged out across the city
to inspect the sidewalks painting a white X on the ones the city intended to
force home and business owners to replace with their own money. Then, after
a few months time, the city began to send out letters to residents
demanding that the sidewalks be fixed at a cost of some $300 per slab.
The city claims it is a matter of “safety.” Residents say it is just a
shake down.
Now, two years later, many homeowners have refused to pay this new tax and
have not fixed the sidewalk slabs tagged by the city. So, the city is now
taking dozens of homeowners to municipal court to force them to abide by the
fiat “law.”
The city attorney has sent letters to 81 residents who have refused to pay
this new stealth tax telling them that they are being sued by the city.
Officials claim that a fine of $139 for a first “offense” will be levied
on top of the cost to replace the concrete slabs in question.
Some of the homeowners say that the sidewalks have been ruined by tree roots
from trees that are on city property and they don’t feel they should have
to pay to replace sidewalks ruined by roots coming from city-owned trees.
But whatever the cause of the deterioration, how is it proper that a city
can use tax dollars to make these walkways but then years later simply
decree that the sidewalk repairs are now the duty of individual homeowners
to make?
And if this policy stands, where does it end? Can a city say that residents
have to pay for sewers, police, other services? And if so, then what are
taxes for in the first place? Just a means to pay city workers… workers who
do… what, exactly? If city residents are supposed to pay for everything as
individuals instead of collective taxpayers, why do we need city workers?
Why not just have private services for everything and eliminate the
government and the taxes?
So, why pay taxes at all if none of that money is going to actually serve
the people?
Still, if this is the sort of corrupt program that we can expect of our
governments, then tax protests should become the norm, shouldn’t they? What
form that protest might take is hard to say, but how can citizens fight
back against this stuff? |
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