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ASSESSOR O'SHEA ANNOUNCES NEW TAX EXEMPTION
FOR VOLUNTEER FIREFIGHTERS AND AMBULANCE WORKERS; URGES LOCAL PASSAGE
Nassau County Assessor Charles O'Shea announced today that
Governor George Pataki and the State Legislature have authorized a special
property tax exemption for volunteer firefighters and volunteer ambulance
workers with at least five years of enrolled service. The new exemption
would offset county, city, town, village, and special district taxes
only, but not Nassau school taxes.
According to Assessor O'Shea, a qualifying applicant
must own a primary residence in the city, town or village he or she
is enrolled as a member of the serving volunteer fire department or
voluntary ambulance service. In order for the many thousands of volunteers
to take advantage of this newly adopted property tax break, Assessor
O'Shea indicated that each taxing jurisdiction must first "opt into" this
program.
Applications for this new exemption are currently being developed and
will be made available to qualifying residents in the near future.
"Our volunteer firefighters and ambulance workers put their lives on
the line to make our communities safe and to help their neighbors," Assessor
O'Shea stated. "I urge the County Legislature and other local governments
to act immediately on this issue and to formally adopt this new tax exemption."
State To Permit Tax Breaks For Emergency Volunteers
By Christine Buurma June 26, 2002
Volunteer firefighters like these can receive a 10% break in their property
taxes thank to Steve Levy's bill which passed in the State Assembly by a
vote of 142-1
As local ambulance and fire departments struggle to
recruit and retain volunteers in the face of rising housing costs and
a stagnant economy, the New York State Legislature passed a bill last
week that would authorize local governments to grant a 10% property tax
deduction to emergency volunteers. Homeowners must have at least five
years' experience as a
volunteer to be eligible for the tax break.
In the Assembly, where the measure was introduced by
Assemblyman Steve Levy (D-Sayville), the bill passed overwhelmingly by
a 142-1 margin. An assemblyman from upstate New York, Jacob Gunther (D-Sullivan),
cast the lone
dissenting vote.
Kate Abdoo, Gunther's legislative director, said the
assemblyman voted against the bill because it did not permit a tax deduction
for renters. Gunther wanted a "more equitable tax break," Abdoo said.
But Levy countered that a measure still could be proposed in the Assembly
to allow tax breaks for renters who are emergency volunteers.
Gunther also was concerned that the tax break would
be a financial strain on local governments, Abdoo said. "Once something
goes off the tax rolls, local municipalities have to make up for it," she
said.
But Levy said the bill would "create incentives
for volunteers to get involved and stay involved so we don't have to
go to a paid fire department or ambulance service." Paid emergency services "would
cost taxpayers a fortune," Levy said.
The assemblyman noted that although he allocated $200,000
as a county legislator a few years ago to finance an ad campaign for
emergency volunteer recruitment, fire and ambulance departments are still
struggling to recruit
and retain volunteers.
Exorbitant housing prices have "chased away many
young people who are potential new blood for fire and ambulance departments," Levy
said.
"When the economy goes bad, there is pressure
on emergency volunteers to get other jobs," he added. The recently-passed
bill is "one of the clearest
ways to enhance our ranks," he said.
Governor Pataki is expected to sign the bill, Levy said.
Senator Caesar Trunzo (R-Hauppauge) introduced the bill in the Senate.
"Especially after September 11, the whole world
saw the need to have well-trained fire and ambulance volunteers," said
Mark Antonucci, communications director for Trunzo. Antonucci said
Trunzo's office had also received many calls from local volunteer fire
and ambulance departments that were having difficulty recruiting volunteers.
"This is a great way to give a partial tax break
to people who put their lives on the line," Antonucci said.
County and local governments would have to pass their
own legislation to actually enact the tax break, although Levy noted
that the county Legislature passed a sense resolution last year indicating
that it would support a property tax break for emergency volunteers.
Cecilia Clausing, spokesperson for County Executive
Bob Gaffney, said Gaffney would "give [such a measure] every consideration.
The county executive values our fire and emergency service people." A
public hearing
would most likely need to be held before the Legislature could pass a bill
to implement a property tax break, Clausing said.
David Fischler, commissioner of the Suffolk County
Fire Rescue and Emergency Services Department, said a property tax break
would be a boon to local emergency volunteers.
"This is another component to give people an
incentive to volunteer and to maintain the volunteers that we have," Fischler
said. "With all the pressures on people for their time, this is one
way to recognize the time
that fire and EMS volunteers give to their communities." |