By Aileen P. Refuerzo
BAGUIO
CITY – The city council will proceed with panned mass consultation on tax
increase soon to explain the proposal and get sentiment of sectors on proposed
adjustments in business and real property taxes.
This
after Councilors Betty Lourdes Tabanda and Richard Carino reiterated the body’s
action in October last year tasking the council committee on ways and means
cluster B under Vice Mayor Edison Bilog to schedule a general public hearing on
the issue instead of pocket consultations to save on time and resources.
The
consultation will be held either in the last part of March or early part of
April depending on the availability of the venue at the Baguio Convention
Center.
The
aldermen earlier opted for a common hearing to also ensure that complete facts
will be presented to the public to avoid confusion and misconceptions.
Mayor
Mauricio Domogan last year sought a speedy consultation for the city and the
people to “strike an agreement on what is reasonable to both the city and the
taxpayers.”
He
said the city is now obliged to implement the increase after years of stalling
to make the antiquated rates attuned with the times and with the requirements
of the law.
The
city is eyeing a 10 percent increase in business taxes under Tax Ordinance No.
2000-01 including city market rental and fees and garbage charges which were
last adjusted in 2001 or 13 years ago.
The
mayor said the rates are now outdated and must be revised to keep up with the
prevailing charges now being levied by nearby cities like Urdaneta and Dagupan
in Pangasinan and San Fernando City in La Union which impose business taxes
higher by as much as 500 percent than the city.
For
instance the city charges P15 for certifications and clearances while other
areas collect as much as P100. For stall rentals at the fish section, the
city charges P20 a month but other cities collect P78 a day.
The
city also needs to update its schedule of fair market values of real properties
which remained unchanged since 1996 making the city non-compliant with the New
Local Government Code or the Republic Act No. 7160 provision mandating local
government units to undertake a general revision of real property tax valuation
every three years.
It
was assured that a minimal assessment level will be recommended to temper the
expected huge increase in the market value as a result of the city’s passing up
on several revision terms since 1996.
At
present, the city’s assessment levels are pegged at 12 percent for residential
and 35 percent for commercial properties.
This,
as the proposed updated schedule of market values for real property taxation in
the city has passed review by the Bureau of Local Government Finance and has
been submitted to the city council for adoption and enactment into an
ordinance.
City
assessor Nilda Navarro, in an endorsement dated Feb. 13, reported to Mayor
Mauricio Domogan that the proposed updated schedule of fair and current market
values for land, buildings and machinery in the city for the period 2015-2017
was reviewed by the BLGF and was issued a certification that it complied with
the Local Assessment 1-04.
Domogan
endorsed the schedule to the city council last March 12.
Navarro
said that in the preparation of the schedule, her office considered the
taxation principles the provide that real properties will be appraised at their
current and fair market value, classified for assessment purposes on the basis
of their actual use, assessed on the basis of a uniform classification within
each local government unit; and that the appraisal, assessment, levy and
collection shall not be let to any private persons and the appraisal and
assessment shall be equitable.
She
said that as expected, there was a huge increase in the schedule of market
values as a result of the city’s failure to implement increases during several
revision terms since 1996.
But
she said they have suggested lower assessment levels for adoption by the city
council and staggered implementation of the increases to temper the effect of
the adjustments.
Domogan
has time and again pointed out the need for the city to update its schedule of
real property tax valuation to comply with the New Local Government Code or the
Republic Act No. 7160 provision which mandates local government units to
undertake a general revision of real property tax valuation every three years.
The last time the city implemented the revision was in 1996 and this was met by
protests from taxpayers prompting the city government to instead impose the
increase on a staggered basis spread out from 1997 to 1999.
In
2001, the city government adopted Tax Ordinance 2000-001 which imposed lower
assessment levels for real properties that tempered the increase and eventually
appeased the taxpayers.
Since
then, the city has not implemented another revision due to humanitarian
considerations.
As
a result of the city’s failure to comply with the revision every three years,
the city was named as among those non-complying LGUs by the Bureau of Internal
Revenue (BIR) while the city assessor’s office has been given a poor rating by
the BLGF.
“Since
real property tax is the most fixed source of the city’s revenue, it is
therefore strongly recommended that the proposed schedule of market values for
real property taxation be approved and enacted in an Ordinance for its
implementation by the city council,” Navarro said.
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