bruto
Penultimate Amazing
Yes, there will always be exceptions, and while I can't speak for every municipality, in North Vancouver, the city is totally aware of the old lady who moved into row housing, and woke up one morning in a re-gentrified highrise neighbourhood. Specifically, Lower Lonsdale used to be fixedincomeville, but now it's yuppieville.
So firstly, people who actually live in their dwelling get a big chunk knocked off the top. Secondly, if they're a senior over 65 or disabled, they get more reduced.
I pay $900/yr property tax for a condo I rent out and don't occupy. The immediate neighbour (who is a friend - has a slightly nicer unit, but same square footage) pays $45/yr. Yes, if she lived in a really shabby place a few blocks over she'd pay $42/yr, but I wouldn't call that 'getting screwed' since it still covers her police, fire, roads, and garbage.
I learned that through Family Services, she received a provincial grant to pay for this as she can demonstrate hardship. They also paid for her share of annual duct cleaning.
ETA: sorry, I was rambling and didn't clarify my point, which was that there are ways to nudge property tax into a more progressive structure and avoid our most vulnerable members of society falling through the cracks
I agree that there are ways to make property taxation more progressive, but whether and how they are implemented certainly can vary. Most places I've lived have had some abatement for the poor and the elderly, but not everyone can qualify for that treatment. I'm not sure I would know how to make a better system, and maybe at its best it's the best we can do, but nevertheless, whatever measures are taken are patches to make an inherently regressive tax less so.
By Vermont standards, by the way, your property taxes are ridiculously low. I would never complain if I could live anywhere with an operative roof over my head for $45 a year in taxes, or $900 for that matter. In my town, the combined property and school tax rates would cost you about $45 a year for a home worth about $2500 total (we are assessed at a conservative estimate of true market value, so such a place, if such a place actually existed, might sell for $3500 on a really good day). Needless to say no such homestead exists here.
