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PolitiFact: Transit tax foe barely true on benefit for Tampa, suburbs

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By Bill Varian, Times Staff Writer
Saturday, August 28, 2010

The statement

The sales tax increase, if approved, will cost taxpayers "up to $300 million per year, in perpetuity, to finance a rail system for the City of Tampa."

Sam Rashid, a conservative activist and transit tax opponent, in a July mailer to residents.

The ruling

On Nov. 2, voters will be asked to decide a number of ballot questions. One of the most important ones asks Hills­borough County voters if they support raising the sales tax by a penny to pay for a new commuter rail system, expanded bus service and road building.

If the primary election was any indication, the transit tax question will color the debate in other political contests. One recurring assertion from tax opponents was that the proposed increase will cost taxpayers $300 million a year.

It was often infused with the suggestion that all of that money will go toward rail and benefit only Tampa. We decided to test one such statement.

It came in the context of Hills­borough County Commissioner Mark Sharpe's re-election bid. Sharpe, a leading advocate of the referendum, faced a challenge in the Republican primary from former county party leader Josh Burgin, a tax opponent. Sharpe went on to win the primary.

Rashid put out a summer mailer that claimed Sharpe, a previously avowed opponent of new taxes, was seeking to "impose" a huge one.

"Up to $300 million per year, in perpetuity, to finance a rail system for the City of Tampa," Rashid wrote. Burgin used the $300 million figure repeatedly in his own campaign material.

We decided to look at whether $300 million, and the way Rashid couched its use, was accurate.

We started with the number itself, asking Rashid where he got it. He told PolitiFact Florida that it was based on his recollection of what existing Hillsborough County sales taxes have produced at their peak, and that he simply tacked on a bit more to account for anticipated growth and inflation.

The county has two sales taxes it assesses, both a half-cent charged on goods and some services. One pays for health care for the poor. The other funds such things as roads, jails and the construction of Raymond James Stadium.

County records show that revenue from the two sales taxes peaked in 2006 at $107.1 million each. Double that figure to get what a full penny tax would have raised: $214.2 million — quite a bit shy of $300 million.

Since then, sales tax revenue has dropped off considerably. Through the first 10 months of the current fiscal year, the tax was projected to bring in $64.8 million, making Rashid's figure looks like an even greater exaggeration.

Rashid gives himself some cover by using the qualifier "up to." And he says he was trying to project what the tax will cost annually over its lifetime, and his word choice in the mailer gives that sense.

So we asked Kevin Brickey, the economist for Hillsborough County government, when sales tax receipts might reasonably be expected to reach $300 million. Brickey noted such predictions can be debated during stable economic times. The current recession makes it more of a dicey proposition.

But Brickey prepared just such an analysis for the county's transit agency, Hillsborough Area Regional Transit, in July. HART would oversee the rail and bus system if the referendum is approved.

His analysis was based on a conservative annual growth rate assumption of 4 percent. It estimated that sales tax revenue from a full penny tax will not reach $300 million until fiscal year 2022 — more than a decade after the tax goes into effect.

Brickey performed a second analysis for PolitiFact using a 6 percent growth rate, still considered conservative, but one forecasters might typically use under normal circumstances. It shows the $300 million threshold getting crossed in fiscal year 2019.

Due to compounding, Brickey predicts that even under a growth scenario of approximately 4 percent, the sales tax would approach $600 million by its 30th year. So under reasonably conservative projections, Rashid's number is certainly in the ballpark, and arguably understates the long-term cost to taxpayers.

But there are problems with Rashid's assertion because he contends that all the money will go toward rail in Tampa. For one, 25 percent of sales tax revenue would be obligated toward road work.

That means that by the second year of the tax, when Brickey estimates it should bring in nearly $200 million, $50 million will go toward road projects that have nothing to do with rail. They are spread throughout the county and are concentrated outside of Tampa by design, particularly in early years.

Figuring out how much of the rest will go toward rail, as opposed to buses, presents a greater challenge. Estimates vary from year to year as construction of the rail system progresses and trains start rolling.

HART has prepared an analysis of where all the money will go over the next 30 years. But it combines sales tax revenue and money local officials hope to get from the state and federal government in matching dollars, plus property tax revenue, in one pot.

Based on those numbers, HART expects to spend about 52 percent of all of its future revenue on rail.

Working with Brickey and HART, the Hillsborough County Metropolitan Planning Organization has prepared a detailed analysis of how the sales tax would be spent through 2035. It shows that, of the 75 percent of the penny tax that would be spent on transit, 57 percent would go toward rail.

That represents 43 percent of all projected sales tax expenditures. Even adding in a significant "oops" factor, about half the money would go toward rail. The rest would go toward buses, roads and trails, much if not most of it outside Tampa city limits.

These numbers are subject to change. HART is still doing an analysis to determine if rail makes sense along the corridors it has identified for it. And it's still determining what specific paths the rail lines would take, which it won't finish until after the election. That all affects the bottom line.

Finally, while it is true that the first two legs of the train system would be within Tampa city limits, there are plans for later expansion outside the city, including a line to Brandon.

If Rashid had confined his statement to asserting that the proposed hike would cost taxpayers $300 million a year, we probably would have rated that mostly true, since it will be soon enough.

But he said that it was all going for trains in the city of Tampa.

It is true that this whole exercise was largely initiated by Tampa Mayor Pam Iorio, who made building a commuter rail system a top goal. But the discussion ended up in the hands of the County Commission, which ultimately put the question on the ballot.

After months of study initiated by commission Chairman Ken Hagan, a task force recommended that a significant portion of the money go to roads and buses. And that's the position the County Commission took in crafting the ballot laThe statement

The sales tax increase, if approved, will cost taxpayers "up to $300 million per year, in perpetuity, to finance a rail system for the City of Tampa."

Sam Rashid, a conservative activist and transit tax opponent, in a July mailer to residents.

The ruling

On Nov. 2, voters will be asked to decide a number of ballot questions. One of the most important ones asks Hills­borough County voters if they support raising the sales tax by a penny to pay for a new commuter rail system, expanded bus service and road building.

If the primary election was any indication, the transit tax question will color the debate in other political contests. One recurring assertion from tax opponents was that the proposed increase will cost taxpayers $300 million a year.

It was often infused with the suggestion that all of that money will go toward rail and benefit only Tampa. We decided to test one such statement.

It came in the context of Hills­borough County Commissioner Mark Sharpe's re-election bid. Sharpe, a leading advocate of the referendum, faced a challenge in the Republican primary from former county party leader Josh Burgin, a tax opponent. Sharpe went on to win the primary.

Rashid put out a summer mailer that claimed Sharpe, a previously avowed opponent of new taxes, was seeking to "impose" a huge one.

"Up to $300 million per year, in perpetuity, to finance a rail system for the City of Tampa," Rashid wrote. Burgin used the $300 million figure repeatedly in his own campaign material.

We decided to look at whether $300 million, and the way Rashid couched its use, was accurate.

We started with the number itself, asking Rashid where he got it. He told PolitiFact Florida that it was based on his recollection of what existing Hillsborough County sales taxes have produced at their peak, and that he simply tacked on a bit more to account for anticipated growth and inflation.

The county has two sales taxes it assesses, both a half-cent charged on goods and some services. One pays for health care for the poor. The other funds such things as roads, jails and the construction of Raymond James Stadium.

County records show that revenue from the two sales taxes peaked in 2006 at $107.1 million each. Double that figure to get what a full penny tax would have raised: $214.2 million — quite a bit shy of $300 million.

Since then, sales tax revenue has dropped off considerably. Through the first 10 months of the current fiscal year, the tax was projected to bring in $64.8 million, making Rashid's figure looks like an even greater exaggeration.

Rashid gives himself some cover by using the qualifier "up to." And he says he was trying to project what the tax will cost annually over its lifetime, and his word choice in the mailer gives that sense.

So we asked Kevin Brickey, the economist for Hillsborough County government, when sales tax receipts might reasonably be expected to reach $300 million. Brickey noted such predictions can be debated during stable economic times. The current recession makes it more of a dicey proposition.

But Brickey prepared just such an analysis for the county's transit agency, Hillsborough Area Regional Transit, in July. HART would oversee the rail and bus system if the referendum is approved.

His analysis was based on a conservative annual growth rate assumption of 4 percent. It estimated that sales tax revenue from a full penny tax will not reach $300 million until fiscal year 2022 — more than a decade after the tax goes into effect.

Brickey performed a second analysis for PolitiFact using a 6 percent growth rate, still considered conservative, but one forecasters might typically use under normal circumstances. It shows the $300 million threshold getting crossed in fiscal year 2019.

Due to compounding, Brickey predicts that even under a growth scenario of approximately 4 percent, the sales tax would approach $600 million by its 30th year. So under reasonably conservative projections, Rashid's number is certainly in the ballpark, and arguably understates the long-term cost to taxpayers.

But there are problems with Rashid's assertion because he contends that all the money will go toward rail in Tampa. For one, 25 percent of sales tax revenue would be obligated toward road work.

That means that by the second year of the tax, when Brickey estimates it should bring in nearly $200 million, $50 million will go toward road projects that have nothing to do with rail. They are spread throughout the county and are concentrated outside of Tampa by design, particularly in early years.

Figuring out how much of the rest will go toward rail, as opposed to buses, presents a greater challenge. Estimates vary from year to year as construction of the rail system progresses and trains start rolling.

HART has prepared an analysis of where all the money will go over the next 30 years. But it combines sales tax revenue and money local officials hope to get from the state and federal government in matching dollars, plus property tax revenue, in one pot.

Based on those numbers, HART expects to spend about 52 percent of all of its future revenue on rail.

Working with Brickey and HART, the Hillsborough County Metropolitan Planning Organization has prepared a detailed analysis of how the sales tax would be spent through 2035. It shows that, of the 75 percent of the penny tax that would be spent on transit, 57 percent would go toward rail.

That represents 43 percent of all projected sales tax expenditures. Even adding in a significant "oops" factor, about half the money would go toward rail. The rest would go toward buses, roads and trails, much if not most of it outside Tampa city limits.

These numbers are subject to change. HART is still doing an analysis to determine if rail makes sense along the corridors it has identified for it. And it's still determining what specific paths the rail lines would take, which it won't finish until after the election. That all affects the bottom line.

Finally, while it is true that the first two legs of the train system would be within Tampa city limits, there are plans for later expansion outside the city, including a line to Brandon.

If Rashid had confined his statement to asserting that the proposed hike would cost taxpayers $300 million a year, we probably would have rated that mostly true, since it will be soon enough.

But he said that it was all going for trains in the city of Tampa.

It is true that this whole exercise was largely initiated by Tampa Mayor Pam Iorio, who made building a commuter rail system a top goal. But the discussion ended up in the hands of the County Commission, which ultimately put the question on the ballot.

After months of study initiated by commission Chairman Ken Hagan, a task force recommended that a significant portion of the money go to roads and buses. And that's the position the County Commission took in crafting the ballot laThe statement

The sales tax increase, if approved, will cost taxpayers "up to $300 million per year, in perpetuity, to finance a rail system for the City of Tampa."

Sam Rashid, a conservative activist and transit tax opponent, in a July mailer to residents.

The ruling

On Nov. 2, voters will be asked to decide a number of ballot questions. One of the most important ones asks Hills­borough County voters if they support raising the sales tax by a penny to pay for a new commuter rail system, expanded bus service and road building.

If the primary election was any indication, the transit tax question will color the debate in other political contests. One recurring assertion from tax opponents was that the proposed increase will cost taxpayers $300 million a year.

It was often infused with the suggestion that all of that money will go toward rail and benefit only Tampa. We decided to test one such statement.

It came in the context of Hills­borough County Commissioner Mark Sharpe's re-election bid. Sharpe, a leading advocate of the referendum, faced a challenge in the Republican primary from former county party leader Josh Burgin, a tax opponent. Sharpe went on to win the primary.

Rashid put out a summer mailer that claimed Sharpe, a previously avowed opponent of new taxes, was seeking to "impose" a huge one.

"Up to $300 million per year, in perpetuity, to finance a rail system for the City of Tampa," Rashid wrote. Burgin used the $300 million figure repeatedly in his own campaign material.

We decided to look at whether $300 million, and the way Rashid couched its use, was accurate.

We started with the number itself, asking Rashid where he got it. He told PolitiFact Florida that it was based on his recollection of what existing Hillsborough County sales taxes have produced at their peak, and that he simply tacked on a bit more to account for anticipated growth and inflation.

The county has two sales taxes it assesses, both a half-cent charged on goods and some services. One pays for health care for the poor. The other funds such things as roads, jails and the construction of Raymond James Stadium.

County records show that revenue from the two sales taxes peaked in 2006 at $107.1 million each. Double that figure to get what a full penny tax would have raised: $214.2 million — quite a bit shy of $300 million.

Since then, sales tax revenue has dropped off considerably. Through the first 10 months of the current fiscal year, the tax was projected to bring in $64.8 million, making Rashid's figure looks like an even greater exaggeration.

Rashid gives himself some cover by using the qualifier "up to." And he says he was trying to project what the tax will cost annually over its lifetime, and his word choice in the mailer gives that sense.

So we asked Kevin Brickey, the economist for Hillsborough County government, when sales tax receipts might reasonably be expected to reach $300 million. Brickey noted such predictions can be debated during stable economic times. The current recession makes it more of a dicey proposition.

But Brickey prepared just such an analysis for the county's transit agency, Hillsborough Area Regional Transit, in July. HART would oversee the rail and bus system if the referendum is approved.

His analysis was based on a conservative annual growth rate assumption of 4 percent. It estimated that sales tax revenue from a full penny tax will not reach $300 million until fiscal year 2022 — more than a decade after the tax goes into effect.

Brickey performed a second analysis for PolitiFact using a 6 percent growth rate, still considered conservative, but one forecasters might typically use under normal circumstances. It shows the $300 million threshold getting crossed in fiscal year 2019.

Due to compounding, Brickey predicts that even under a growth scenario of approximately 4 percent, the sales tax would approach $600 million by its 30th year. So under reasonably conservative projections, Rashid's number is certainly in the ballpark, and arguably understates the long-term cost to taxpayers.

But there are problems with Rashid's assertion because he contends that all the money will go toward rail in Tampa. For one, 25 percent of sales tax revenue would be obligated toward road work.

That means that by the second year of the tax, when Brickey estimates it should bring in nearly $200 million, $50 million will go toward road projects that have nothing to do with rail. They are spread throughout the county and are concentrated outside of Tampa by design, particularly in early years.

Figuring out how much of the rest will go toward rail, as opposed to buses, presents a greater challenge. Estimates vary from year to year as construction of the rail system progresses and trains start rolling.

HART has prepared an analysis of where all the money will go over the next 30 years. But it combines sales tax revenue and money local officials hope to get from the state and federal government in matching dollars, plus property tax revenue, in one pot.

Based on those numbers, HART expects to spend about 52 percent of all of its future revenue on rail.

Working with Brickey and HART, the Hillsborough County Metropolitan Planning Organization has prepared a detailed analysis of how the sales tax would be spent through 2035. It shows that, of the 75 percent of the penny tax that would be spent on transit, 57 percent would go toward rail.

That represents 43 percent of all projected sales tax expenditures. Even adding in a significant "oops" factor, about half the money would go toward rail. The rest would go toward buses, roads and trails, much if not most of it outside Tampa city limits.

These numbers are subject to change. HART is still doing an analysis to determine if rail makes sense along the corridors it has identified for it. And it's still determining what specific paths the rail lines would take, which it won't finish until after the election. That all affects the bottom line.

Finally, while it is true that the first two legs of the train system would be within Tampa city limits, there are plans for later expansion outside the city, including a line to Brandon.

If Rashid had confined his statement to asserting that the proposed hike would cost taxpayers $300 million a year, we probably would have rated that mostly true, since it will be soon enough.

But he said that it was all going for trains in the city of Tampa.

It is true that this whole exercise was largely initiated by Tampa Mayor Pam Iorio, who made building a commuter rail system a top goal. But the discussion ended up in the hands of the County Commission, which ultimately put the question on the ballot.

After months of study initiated by commission Chairman Ken Hagan, a task force recommended that a significant portion of the money go to roads and buses. And that's the position the County Commission took in crafting the ballot language before voters

So while critics want to label the initiative a rail tax for the city of Tampa that will not benefit suburban residents, PolitiFact finds Rashid's attempt to frame the issue as BARELY TRUE.

BILL VARIAN, Times Staff Writer

To read other rulings go to PolitiFact.com/Florida.nguage before voters

So while critics want to label the initiative a rail tax for the city of Tampa that will not benefit suburban residents, PolitiFact finds Rashid's attempt to frame the issue as BARELY TRUE.

BILL VARIAN, Times Staff Writer

To read other rulings go to PolitiFact.com/Florida.nguage before voters

So while critics want to label the initiative a rail tax for the city of Tampa that will not benefit suburban residents, PolitiFact finds Rashid's attempt to frame the issue as BARELY TRUE.

BILL VARIAN, Times Staff Writer

To read other rulings go to PolitiFact.com/Florida.


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