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IS IT TRUE MARCH 11, 2016

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IS IT TRUE State Rep Tom Washburn voted against state vouchers twice in less than one week?  …we wonder why he suddenly has changed his position on this issue?  …politicians wonder why people don’t trust them anymore?

IS IT TRUE 1st Ward  City Councilman Dan McGinn announced he strongly supports “The Land Bank”  proposal, which he claims would rid of 200 dilapidated properties in one year?  …the Mayor wants to give the not-or-profit Evansville Brownnfields Corp $1.7 million dollars to get the program started? …the Evansville Brownfields Corp holds their meetings in secret sessions and has declined to make their agendas and financial statements available to the public? …we wonder how in the world can any elected official can give the Evansville Brownfield Corp any of our hard earned tax dollars without requesting past audits concerning the financial activities of this tax supported not-for-profit entity?

IS IT TRUE at the end of the 2015 the TIF Redevelopment Bond account had only $8,113.89 in the account? …at the beginning of 2015 the account had $213,373.79?

IS IT TRUE at the beginning of 2015 the Food and Beverage tax account had $1,130,484.46 and at the end of the year it had $663,596.58?

IS IT TRUE on January 1, 2015 the OAK HILL Perpetual Care account had $182,877.63 and at the end of the year it had $661,969.10?  …its about time the city use some of this money to upright the many of hundreds of grave markers that have fallen on the ground over the years?

IS IT TRUE at the beginning of 2015 the Evansville Park 12 Sinking Funds had a whooping $1,563,352.58 in it?  …the account balance at the end of the year was a mere $115.17?

IS IT TRUE at the beginning of 2015 the IU Medical Center account had $14,518,572.15 and at the end to the year it had only $4,996,028.09?

IS IT TRUE that the total Bond Debt for the City of Evansville was $531,815,497.81?  …we hear that you will be amazed to hear how much this debt will increase this year?

IS IT TRUE that we are very disappointed to see that Wesselman Woods Nature Preserve is seeking permission to start charging admission?

IS IT TRUE we don’t understand why the Mayor considers a Humboldt Penguin display at Mesker Zoo to be a “quality of life” issue for the City? … we doubt that the quality of life for the penguins will be improved by being on display in the local zoo, and we don’t believe the life of the average resident will be better for it, either?

IS IT TRUE that we are surprised that the Mayor acknowledged the 2014 SBOA audit when addressing the Rotarian? … we are not surprised that he did put the best possible face on it by dismissing the importance of consistent shortfalls in account balances?

FOOTNOTES: Our next “IS IT TRUE” will be posted on this coming Monday ?

Please take time and read our newest feature article entitled “HOT JOBS” posted in this section are from Evansville proper.

If you would like to advertise in the CCO please contact us City-County Observer@live.com.

Todays “Readers Poll” question is: Do you feel that members of the Evansville City Council are just rubber stamps for the Mayor?

Copyright 2015 City County Observer. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed

 

IPHONE SECURITY

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Why Taxing The Wealthy Can Be Trouble For States

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Why Taxing the Wealthy Can Be Trouble for States
 By Sophie Quinton 

As the gap between the rich and the poor widens, states are finding that taxing the incomes of the rich means living with unstable budgets.

That’s because wealthy Americans are more likely to have investments in the stock market. When the market falls, so do their tax payments. Stock market turmoil can hurt state pension funds, too. But while it takes years for states to feel that impact, a dip in the markets — or a lackluster Wall Street bonus season — can create an immediate fiscal crisis.

Connecticut Gov. Dannel Malloy announced budget cuts in September as the sputtering stock market lowered revenue predictions. State analysts now predict a more than $200 million deficit, and the Democratic governor is preparing to announce layoffs and program cuts. Last week, he cut payments to hospitals by $140 million.

California is bracing for lower-than-expected revenue from capital gains this year, and economists have advised New York legislators to scale back their expectations for next year (New York’s fiscal year ends this month).

Some states are adapting by tweaking their rainy day funds. Fundamentally, though, they’re grappling with a larger economic problem.

Connecticut’s millionaires and billionaires file less than 1 percent of all residents’ tax returns but generate almost a third of the state’s personal income tax revenue, according to state records. In New York, the top 1 percent of taxpayers generate about 41 percent of income tax revenue.

During a news conference last month, Malloy said that he’s long felt “nervous” about Connecticut’s tax receipts. “If you look at how we tax and how our income comes in, we are quite dependent on highest-income earners, and in many cases with passive income, to pay the tax bill.”

Unpredictable Markets
State personal income tax revenue was three times more volatile during the 2000s than during the previous two decades, said Rick Mattoon, a senior economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. In a 2012 study, he found that the wild swings were driven by nonwage income, such as gains from the sale of stocks and real estate.

While nonwage income typically makes up a small share of state budgets, the share is large enough in some states that unexpected shortfalls — or surpluses — can create multimillion dollar spending problems.

States base their spending for each fiscal year on how much they expect to bring in that year from taxes and other sources. But because capital gains are swayed by the stock market, they’re very difficult to predict. That’s especially true this year: According to one analysis, the start of 2016 ranks as the third-most chaotic in the history of the Standard & Poor’s 500 index.

States can anticipate a couple of key events. Policy changes, for instance: many investors sold off assets in 2012 to avoid a looming federal tax increase. Or major public offerings: the year Facebook went public, California prepared for a capital gains bonanza as early investors and employees cashed in.

But exactly how much these kinds of events generate depends on the whims of the market.

Since 2010, Connecticut lawmakers have consistently overestimated or underestimated personal income tax proceeds — once by more than 11 percent — from payers with irregular incomes, a category that includes investors and some business owners, according to the Legislature’s nonpartisan Office of Fiscal Analysis.

Based on current receipts, that portion of income tax revenue is 4 percent below where it was last year, said Comptroller Kevin Lembo, “falling far short of the projections that were used to build the budget in the first place.”

By the end of the year, the fiscal office estimates that tax payments from irregular earners will be 9.3 percent lower than was budgeted for this fiscal year. Income taxes withheld from salaried workers, a much more stable source of funds, are expected to be down 1.6 percent.

Growing Dependence
When wealth shifts away from salaried workers and toward the top 1 percent, market fluctuations have a bigger impact on personal income tax revenue.

Connecticut has the widest gulf between high and low earners of any state, according to the Economic Policy Institute, a left-leaning think tank. Taxpayers in the top 1 percent of earners made about $2.7 million on average in 2012; the rest of the taxpayers averaged less than $53,000.

Connecticut’s wealth — and capital gains — are concentrated in Fairfield County, home to bedroom communities for Wall Street financiers and most of the state’s 13 billionaires.

Meanwhile, high-earning, salaried jobs in insurance and finance have dwindled and more workers are taking low-income jobs, Lembo said. His office’s March report on the state economy noted that Connecticut’s manufacturing sector, another middle-class mainstay, continues to shrink.

Tax policy has further exposed some states to stock market risk, said E.J. McMahon of the New York-based Empire Center, a right-leaning think tank. New York moved its tax burden up the income scale in the 1990s, when it cut taxes for the middle class; and lawmakers keep extending a 2009 tax increase on wealthy earners, he said.

States may be exposing themselves even further by failing to raise income taxes when the economy sours, and failing to lower them when the economy improves. Since the ’90s, states have left tax laws virtually unchanged despite economic swings, Mattoon found in his study.

What Can States Do?
States can make budgets more predictable by relying on more stable taxes, such as sales taxes. Seven states — Alaska, Florida, Nevada, South Dakota, Texas, Washington and Wyoming — refrain from taxing incomes at all. But by turning away from taxing the ultra-wealthy, states risk increasing the tax burdens on the middle class and the poor.

Personal income tax payments comprise about half of Connecticut’s general fund revenue, according to the fiscal office there. Since 1991, Connecticut has taxed progressively — meaning that taxpayers in higher tax brackets face higher rates.

Lembo said that progressive structure isn’t likely to change. Instead, last year’s budget requires the state to automatically deposit revenue that exceeds estimates into a rainy day fund, beginning in 2021. (The Pew Charitable Trusts, which also funds Stateline, lobbied for the legislation and has advised lawmakers in California and Minnesota on similar reforms.)

McMahon argues that, rather than adjusting their rainy day funds, states should set aside capital gains and other volatile revenue sources for specific, one-time projects. That way they wouldn’t rely on the money to fund ongoing services.

In any case, Connecticut’s rainy day fund reform isn’t helping the state now. And the drop in estimated payments from taxpayers with irregular incomes was so sudden this quarter that Republican lawmakers say something else must be going on.

State Rep. Vincent Candelora, a supporter of the rainy day fund legislation, said he’s heard that millionaires are moving out of Connecticut to avoid the state’s high taxes, including the recently raised estate tax. “Many of our residents have homes in other states, so they’ll change residency to avoid the tax,” he said.

The Hartford Courant speculated last week that a single man’s departure to Florida (net worth: $11.1 billion) worsened the state’s deficit.

Other states haven’t reported a recent drop as sharp as Connecticut’s. Payments from irregular earners, however, were also lower than expected for both California and Massachusetts in January.

New York will end its fiscal year with more income tax revenue from nonwage income than expected, according to Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s 2017 budget plan. But his budget director told lawmakers at a recent hearing that the state would likely feel the impact of the stock market’s gyrations next year — and that the market’s outlook wasn’t good.

“There is broad agreement that New York state faces substantial risk given the nature of its revenue base,” said budget director Robert Mujica.

Mujica warned of other forces that could weaken the economy, including the collapse of the energy sector and China’s economic slowdown. Right now, both those factors are driving uncertainty in the stock market. And that’s already enough to disrupt New York’s budget.

 

YESTERYEAR: The Grand Theater

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The Grand Theater

The Grand Theater, which stood at 215 Sycamore Street adjacent to the Vendome Hotel, originally opened as the Grand Opera House in 1889. Known for its lavish interior, the building reflected Evansville’s rising prosperity around the turn-of-the-century. Opera performances were eventually replaced by vaudeville acts, and in 1929, the first talking movie there was introduced. The theater is pictured here c. 1944, when the film Hollywood Canteen was released. The Grand closed in 1962 and was soon razed to make a parking lot for the hotel.

FOOTNOTES: We want to thank Patricia Sides, Archivist of Willard Library for contributing this picture that shall increase people’s awareness and appreciation of Evansville’s rich history. If you have any historical pictures of Vanderburgh County or Evansville please contact please contact Patricia Sides, Archivist Willard Library at 812) 425-4309, ext. 114 or e-mail her at www.willard.lib.in.us.

 

FOOTNOTES: Our next “will be posted on this coming Monday ?

Please take time and read our newest feature article entitled “HOT JOBS”. Jobs posted in this section are from Evansville proper.

If you would like to advertise in the CCO please contact us City-County Observer@live.com.

Todays “Readers Poll” question is: Do you feel that members of the Evansville City Council are just rubber stamps for the Mayor?

Copyright 2015 City County Observer. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed

Katterhenry finishes second as UE women wrap up Florida trip

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Aces take 7th at Butler Invitational

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – Kayla Katterhenry finished just one stroke shy of her second win in a row, tying for second as the University of Evansville women’s golf team took 7th at the Bulldog Florida Invitational at Windsor Parke.

Katterhenry fired off a 76 on Thursday as she finished the event just one behind Ball State’s Kelsey Sear, who was the medalist.  Katterhenry posted a 75 in the first round.

Tying for 26th was freshman Maria Pickens.  After her 78 on Wednesday, Pickens shot an 87 in the final round to tally a 165.

Maggie Camp was third on the squad.  Improving by seven shots in the final round, Camp recorded an 84 to finish with a 175.  She came home one ahead of Giulia Mallmann, who finished the event with a 176.  Madison Chaney carded an 88 on Thursday and finished with a 180.

Both of UE’s individuals finished the tournament with scores of 183.  Rachel Marchi posted a 92 in the first round and a 91 in the second while Carly Waggoner opened with a 91 and carded a 92 in the final round.

Evansville finished in seventh place in the tournament with a 666.  They were eight shots out of the top five.  Western Michigan and Ball State tied for the team win with scored of 631.

 

Up next for the Aces is a trip to Sevierville, Tenn., for the Tennessee Tech Invitational on March 21-22.

Rick Voyvodic wins Butler Invitational

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Aces finish in 2nd place as a team

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – University of Evansville senior Rick Voyvodic finished a dominant tournament atop the leaderboard as he shot a 1-under 71 to earn medalist at the Butler Invitational at Windsor Parke.

Voyvodic registered a 74 on Wednesday to lead by one before finishing his final round under par to defeat Butler’s Joey Arcuri by five shots.  Voyvodic’s final tally finished with a 145.

 

His performance helped the Purple Aces take second in the team tournament, just two behind Butler.  The Aces posted a 623 while the Bulldogs clinched the win with a 621.

Second for Evansville was Tyler Gray.  Rounds of 75 and 82 saw him tie for 10th place with a 157.  Behind him was Will Knights, who carded a 78 on Thursday to finish with a 162, tying for 17th.  Joseph Addante matched that total.  Addante improved by four shots in the final round as he notched a 79.  Wil Pahud made the largest jump on the squad.  Pahud followed up his first round of 85 with a 79 on Thursday, improving by six strokes.

Pacing UE’s three individuals was Jon Pick.  Pick tied for 10th place with a 157 after his round of 77.  Noah Reese posted scores of 82 and 81 as his 163 tied for 21st.  Austin Carmack tied for 26th with his final tally of 169.

Up next for the Aces is a trip to Sevierville, Tenn., for the Tennessee Tech Invitational on March 21-22.

 

IceMen Acquire Ellis from Stingrays at Deadline for Humphries

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Evansville and South Carolina swap defensemen before 3pm EST ECHL Trade Deadline.

The Evansville IceMen, proud ECHL affiliate of the NHL’s Ottawa Senators and the AHL’s Binghamton Senators, and Head Coach Al Sims announced Thursday the IceMen traded defenseman Spencer Humphries to the South Carolina Stingrays in exchange for defenseman Brendan Ellis. The trade comes ahead of Thursday’s 3pm EST ECHL Trade Deadline.

Humphries, 23, had two goals and 16 assists in 54 games for the IceMen. The Delta, BC native scored the game-winning goal February 21 in Evansville’s 2-1 win at Missouri. He was traded to Evansville last season from Greenville at the deadline and played the last 15 games of the 2014-15 season with the IceMen.

Ellis, 27, skated in 49 games for the Stingrays this season, where he recorded 25 points (6 goals, 19 assists) and a plus-3 rating. The Kelowna, BC native signed with South Carolina in March 2014 after completing his senior season at Merrimack College, where he totaled 58 points (7 goals, 51 assists) in 133 college games. Ellis has one career AHL game, which was with the Manchester Monarchs in late-March 2014.

The IceMen travel to Indy Friday for a 7:35pm EST meeting with the Fuel, before returning home Saturday to host the Fuel in the rematch at 7:15pm CST at the Ford Center. Evansville wraps up the weekend Sunday against Quad City at 5:15pm in Evansville.