Rather than squander a surplus on some useless government boondoggle, the citizens of North Dakota have decided to try and give themselves a raise. North Dakota’s coffers are swelling with oil boom money and because of this new revenue stream the citizens have decided to take property taxes to the ballot box. The proposal to eliminate property taxes is called measure 2. When Measure 2 passes, and I hope it does, the citizens of North Dakota can enjoy among other things, property tax free homeownership.

photo by:Victor Habbick

North Dakota Voters To Decide On Eliminating Property Tax

From the Huffington Post

Homeowners in one state may be poised to hand themselves a major tax break.

North Dakota voters head to the polls Tuesday to decide whether to become the only state in the country to eliminate property taxes. Proponents of the plan argue that property taxes are inconsistent and fly in the face of the concept of property ownership, according to The New York Times. The advocates additionally note that North Dakota’s recent oil boom means that the state’s coffers are full and even overflowing, supposedly eliminating any need for a property tax.

And boy has the North Dakota economy been booming. The state pulled in more than $100 million in March 2011 from the oil industry alone. Largely a result of that sector, the state also now boasts the lowest unemployment rate in the nation. But competition among businesses for workers is so now fierce, the wages so high, that local governments have had trouble convincing residents to help repair roads, rather than join in the boom.

If the property tax proposal, known as Measure 2, passes, North Dakota would be the first state to eliminate a major tax since similarly oil-rich Alaska got rid of its income tax in 1980, tax, USA Today reports.

“I would like to be able to know that my home, no matter what happens to my income or my life, is not going to be taken away from me because I can’t pay a tax,” Susan Beehler, one of the activists advocating for the elimination of the tax, told the NYT.

Opposing the change is a group of strange bedfellows, which includes the Chamber of Commerce, unions and many lawmakers. They argue that foregoing the $800 million per year generated by the property tax could strain local government budgets.

If what’s happened in other states is any indication, pro-property tax advocates in North Dakota may have cause for concern. On Monday, Pennsylvania lawmakers tabled a bill that would eliminate a school district’s ability to levy property taxes, the Times Herald reports. Though the legislation didn’t pass, many of the lawmakers who voted to table it actually support the concept, they just believe the current bill is flawed.Top of Form

And there are already some places in the U.S. where homeowners can escape property taxes; Stafford, Texas eliminated its property tax in 1995, according to U.S. News and World report.