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Property taxes typically go to towns and counties for public services, like fire departments, libraries, ambulances and roads. They’re just one of those things homeowners have to pay — or at least that is how it has always been.
To understand where this started, we have to rewind to the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. Like many places, home values skyrocketed in Wyoming’s little mountain towns.
“People were coming in from out of state, and they were paying cash offers, they were paying over asking price, and so that just made the market go up,” said Hank Hoversland, executive director of the Wyoming Taxpayers Association.
With home values up, property taxes followed. Hoversland said that meant longtime Wyoming homeowners were suddenly paying a lot more. State lawmakers responded by lowering residential property taxes last year by 25%. It saved a Wyoming homeowner a few hundred bucks, but cost towns and counties tens of millions in revenue.
“There really isn't a plan to make up these revenues. And so it's going to come on the backs of spending cuts,” Hoversland said.
Like the library in the small town of Lander, Wyoming, where Anita Marple is the director. On the day I speak with her, she is wearing a Dr. Seuss T-Shirt that says, “Oh the places you’ll go when you … read.”
“Sometimes I just wear this shirt to remind me of, OK, here's our mission,” Marple said.
Lately, Marple is spending much of her time going over a difficult budget. Because these days, the library’s doors are locked and the lights are out more often.
“You're here on a Monday morning and we're closed until 1 p.m.,” she said. |