in Houston, Texas
AP: Gov. Rick Perry claiming homestead tax break on College Station property
Wed Aug 12 12:37:42 2009 CST
By Lee Ann O'Neal
Gov. Rick Perry, whose rental tab on an Austin home is running taxpayers $9K per month, has also been catching a break on property taxes on a home in College Station, the Associated Press reports.
Gov. Rick Perry lives, works and votes in Austin. But he also claims to be a resident of College Station, Texas, where he owns a house and gets a tax break designed for local homeowners, records obtained by The Associated Press show.

Perry's daughter lives in the College Station home, the AP reports, and her roommates pay rent to the family.

From the AP:
Homeowners are not supposed to claim a Texas homestead exemption on rental property. So Miner said the Perrys may have to lower the amount of the tax break they received to offset some of the rent paid by Sydney Perry's roommates.

He said Perry representatives got in touch with Brazos County appraisers after The AP made inquiries to determine whether rent payments would "affect the size of the homestead exemption."

Texas homeowners are entitled to a $15,000 homestead exemption on their primary residence for school property taxes. So the owner of a $100,000 house, for example, would pay school taxes on $85,000 instead of $100,000. In Perry's case, his house in College Station was valued at $243,900 in 2009, but he only owed school taxes on $228,900.

At that rate, Perry saved about $350 over the last two years on his school tax bill.
Comments
Maria KantoR
Saturday, 05/15/2010 - 22:06
Are we in MExico with this type of abusive politicos?? THis means that it is good when it rains on the taxpayers, but not on the politicos. Sounds great !! For them.
MICHAEL <<<<< >>>>>> IN TEXAS
Wednesday, 05/19/2010 - 18:27

The budget-trimming effort initiated by Gov. Rick Perry, Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst and House Speaker Joe Straus in January is widely seen as a harbinger of cuts to come.

They mandated that state agencies find trims totaling 5 percent of their current general revenue budgets, although some spending, such as direct school funding and the Children's Health Insurance Program, was exempt. In February, agencies proposed a total of $1.7 billion of potential cuts in response to the mandate. The legislative leaders combed through the proposals over the past four months to determine what should be spared the knife.

The $483 million in exemptions announced Tuesday include money for border security, job creation programs, state mental health hospitals and other items.

"These savings will protect taxpayers' hard-earned money while maintaining essential services vital to the people of Texas," Dewhurst said in a news release.

But the cuts represent only about 1.4 percent of the state's $87 billion general revenue budget, which is funded with tax dollars and over which the Legislature has control. Democrats are doubtful that legislators will be able to cut their way out of the budget hole without hurting Texans.

"Texas is a conservative state," said state Sen. Leticia Van de Putte, D-San Antonio . "If we really thought that all these programs were fluff to begin with, they would have been cut before." Van de Putte said it is unrealistic to expect the state to overcome this budget crisis without a combination of more cuts and more revenue.

About half of the total $1.2 billion in mandated reductions will be in education, despite the exemptions for school districts and financial aid. In total, $655 million was cleaved from the budgets of Texas colleges and universities and Texas Education Agency programs. Those reductions include layoffs, hiring freezes and program trims.

An education program of particular import to Dewhurst, however, got a partial reprieve from the cuts.

In 2007, Dewhurst championed a bill that created a steroid testing program for high school athletes at a cost of $6 million over two years. The program produced 11 positive tests from a pool of 29,000 student-athletes tested in that time. The Texas Education Agency included the $1 million cost of the steroid testing program among its $135.5 million in proposed cuts. But state leaders left $750,000 for that program as they chopped $126 million from other programs at the agency, including several initiatives aimed at helping low-performing high schools.

"The program is a deterrent to young people using illegal steroids, and it's important to maintain that deterrent," Dewhurst spokesman Rich Parsons said. Watson said that decision showed the folly of the process. "What are the value judgments that are being made to determine what gets cut and what doesn't?" Watson asked. "Do they think they have left a lot of waste after this set of cuts they've just made?"

The Department of Criminal Justice, which had initially been told to trim its spending by more than $294 million, escaped with only $55 million in cuts. The leadership exempted the agency's proposal to lay off 2,000 prison guards and nip successful parole and probation programs. Health and human service providers, such as doctors who see Medicaid patients, will be paid less by the state in order to save $64 million. Such a change, however, has a double-whammy effect because the state loses some federal funds in turn.

AND YET<< OUR GREAT GOVENROR>>>>> Still can not cut HIS OWN LIVING HIGH ON HOG LIFESTLYE>>>> MANISIONS PARTIES WHAT A MAN??

Tweets
James Keith | 2 min 20 sec
Leinart to Houston? This could be interesting!
Elise Hu | 3 min 36 sec
Booked. We'll be "in Bruges" for Thanksgiving. Word.
dwight silverman | 5 min 33 sec
Updating my WInXP VMs. i hate going into XP for anything these days - ugly, outdated, obsolete. Just die already.
KGBT Action 4 News | 5 min 57 sec
First bands of rain hitting Brownsville, Matamoros & SPI as TS Hermine approaches http://bit.ly/dqKJN2 #hurricane #rgv
KGBT Action 4 News | 7 min 44 sec
Tropical Storm Hermine Watches and Warnings http://bit.ly/9woZFH
Michael Q Sullivan | 12 min 6 sec
Heading up to McKinney w @PhilFountain for today's Texas Tea Party Alliance Rally.
© 2010 Texas Watchdog and Use Labs. All Rights Reserved. Terms of Use and Privacy Statement