Now remember, Prissy Queen Lessa is on the city council AND she is employed by the taxpayer funded Proctors AND that Joey the tax deadbeat camera man at the taxpayer funded TV station at Proctors. Queen Leesa must be running to his rescue.
And Queenie is running to rescue of tax deadbeats Frankie and Mary Mary (the couple who STOLD homeowners tax money via their LIES on STAR; the Metroplex favored architect and the head honcho real estate agent in the taxpayer funded city real estate business AND member of the board of assessment who makes decisions on peoples assessments).
And Queenie is running to the rescue of the tax deadbeats Marcella and his sons. -- both the business' old locations on Crane St AND the many properties that son Jimmy owns (in poor shape while he lives in a posh house in Nisky)
And Queenie is running to the rescue of the tax deadbeat Joey former councilman Allen living off his lavish state pension and taxpayer funded Cadillac health insurance plan.
Can we work together for the improvement of the city by all of us doing some searching for politically connected deadbeats who will benefit from Queen Leesa's proposal?
Quoted Text
Schenectady officials eye break on back taxes
Late payers currently charged 21 percent Wednesday, September 3, 2014 By Kathleen Moore (Contact) Gazette Reporter
SCHENECTADY — Saying the interest rate on late property taxes is so high that residents can’t catch up, the Schenectady City Council is considering giving them a break.
Those who are late currently pay 21 percent interest, but cities like Albany and Saratoga Springs charge just 15 percent, Councilwoman Leesa Perazzo said.
“There’s a tremendous difference in what our neighbors are doing,” she said, suggesting a rate similiar to those.
She originally asked for a two-tiered system, in which owner-occupants would have a much lower interest rate than the rest of city property owners, but Deputy Corporation Counsel Carl Falotico said the city would need special permission from the state for such a change.
No other municipality in the state has a two-tiered interest rate, he said, adding that Amsterdam got temporary permission for a rate that distinguished between vacant and developed properties in the 1990s. That permission expired in 2000, he said.
But reducing the rate, even to 15 percent, may not resolve the council’s concern: Some homeowners hit a financial crisis and never catch up. The council has received many letters, emails and personal requests over the years from residents who described yearlong crises, such as a disabling heart attack, a layoff or the death of a spouse. By the time the owner recovered financially, the tax bill for that lost year had often doubled.
Perazzo cited one woman who now pays $9,000 every year on a $5,000 bill because she cannot catch up from the year she missed. The year after that, she paid off the old bill, including the interest, but she could not also afford to pay the current year’s taxes, so at the end of the year, she was still a year behind. Several years later, she is still in the same situation.
“They can’t catch up,” Perazzo said. “This woman has lived in her home 43 years. She’s been paying faithfully. … I think it’s time to take some action, especially for the people who have been willing to pay double their taxes.”
Councilman Vince Riggi strongly supported her.
“We’re all hearing from good homeowners who had a hard time for a year or two,” he said. “I think we have to do something. If people can’t pay it, we foreclose on the house. And who will replace them? And if we don’t replace them, what’s going to happen to that home?”
Since the two-tiered system seems unlikely, Perazzo proposed offering a payment plan. The council has the authority to waive interest and penalties on property taxes, and could do so in cases that met certain conditions.
“It would have to hinge on people making payments in good faith,” Perazzo said, adding that it would be only for owner-occupants.
She suggested the plan be offered only to those who had missed two years of taxes or less, had paid their taxes regularly before and after the crisis and agreed to pay off the debt in a specific period of time. If they missed even one payment, she said, the plan would be canceled.
The goal would be for residents to pay off the debt while simultaneously paying their current taxes, Perazzo said.
Council members supported the idea but did not immediately decide how much interest would be waived for those offered the payment plan.
Falotico said he will present options at the next committee meeting on Sept. 15.
“I can look into the different ways, get creative,” he said.
It's not all that bad of an idea, but the "break" should NOT be given to ANYONE who has any exemptions (other than normal residential exemptions---STAR, Veteran, Aged), not given to any regular delinquents, not to any absentee landlords, to name a few. NO breaks to ANY property owner who has received Metroplex funds or other special grants! I know, wishful thinking; we all know they are trying to take care of their cronies.
Optimists close their eyes and pretend problems are non existent. Better to have open eyes, see the truths, acknowledge the negatives, and speak up for the people rather than the politicos and their rich cronies.