newsok.com/shadid-proposes-sales-tax-cut-shift-in-focus-for-maps/article/5541705
Shadid proposes sales tax cut, shift in focus for MAPS
William Crum by William Crum Published: March 15, 2017 12:00 AM CDT
Oklahoma City Ward 2 Councilman Ed Shadid on Tuesday proposed a sales tax cut, along with bulking up police and fire services, while refocusing MAPS on restoring city services.
Shadid said a quarter-cent should be carved out of the 1-cent MAPS sales tax to "give a tax deduction to the people. They deserve it."
He advocated dedicating another quarter-cent to hire more police officers and firefighters.
City services have been degraded as Oklahoma City has endured an 18-month economic slump and sales tax shortfalls have led to budget cuts, Shadid said.
"We all agree that we need a couple hundred more police officers," he said at Tuesday's city council meeting. "We're never going to get them at this rate."
Mayor Mick Cornett said he wants to wait on the "conversation" on the future of MAPS until after the April 4 election, when a new council member will be selected from Ward 4.
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"I have some ideas on that," Cornett said.
Shadid's proposal includes renewing the MAPS 3 sales tax at half the current 1-cent rate, with a term of two to four years and focus on day-to-day services — "police, potholes and parks."
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Public employee unions, including police and fire, have reviewed the idea, as have advocates for transit and MAPS 4 Neighborhoods, Shadid said.
"At a minimum, everybody's very open to the idea and eager to continue the conversation," he said.
"I think that it has the potential to create the kind of coalitions that previous MAPS have brought together."
Voters would have the final say on whether to extend or renew MAPS should the city council put a proposal on the ballot.
Presently, the MAPS sales tax is to expire Dec. 31 when collections for MAPS 3 end.
A departure
Shadid's idea is a departure from previous Metropolitan Area Projects, or MAPS, programs.
First approved by voters in the 1990s and renewed several times since, the 1-cent sales tax has been reserved for capital projects.
Those have included the Bricktown ballpark and canal, public school renovations, and the upcoming MAPS 3 convention center.
While MAPS projects open debt-free, they in some cases add ongoing costs for operations and maintenance that must be absorbed by the city's general fund.
Shadid often expresses concern about how the city will manage expenses for the MAPS 3 convention center, streetcar and park without diminishing other services.
The city negotiates private-public partnerships to manage some MAPS projects, such as the MAPS 3 whitewater park and the MAPS 3 senior health and wellness centers.
Tax comparison
The city manager has ordered spending reductions in the past year, with non-public safety departments ordered to plan for an additional 4 percent reduction for fiscal 2018.
"We're getting past where efficiencies can make up the difference," Shadid said.
He said his research showed Oklahoma City's sales tax is low compared to other cities.
Leaving aside the 1-cent MAPS sales tax, Oklahoma City collects 2.875 percent.
Two cents goes to the general fund and three-quarters of a cent to public safety. The zoo gets the rest.
By comparison, Shadid said, Norman collects 4 cents. Lawton and Enid collect more than 4 cents, while Tulsa collects just over 3.5 cents.
Shadid said there had been no increase in the general fund's share of the sales tax since 1976. An "artificially low" rate has impeded the city's ability to provide services, he said.
State law limits cities to sales tax for financing services such as police and fire protection.
'A win-win'
While the rate has been steady, sales tax revenue has grown over the years — though it has contracted during the current economic downturn.
The 1-cent MAPS 3 sales tax brings in around $100 million per year.
Redistributing it as Shadid proposes would return about $25 million to taxpayers and reserve $25 million for police and fire.
With renewal of MAPS, $50 million would be directed to day-to-day services.
Increasing the Public Works Department's budget would enable the city, for example, to do more street resurfacing projects, in more neighborhoods spread across the city, Shadid said.
"That's a win-win," he said.
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