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States Raise Fees, Fines To Salvage Budgets And Avoid Tax Increases

States Fines

First Posted: 07/24/11 11:58 AM ET Updated: 09/23/11 06:12 AM ET

NARRAGANSETT, R.I. (AP) -- Twenty dollars for a parking place wasn't going to ruin Ellen Majka's day at the beach. But she was still taken aback when she arrived at Rhode Island's popular Scarborough state beach and learned that parking fees had nearly doubled.

"It seems a little steep to me," said Majka, of Westfield, Mass. "Add in the price of gas and it starts to add up. But I didn't come two hours to turn back over $20."

As states and municipalities continue to grapple with the recession's fallout, few turned to big, noticeable tax hikes this year. Instead, they're slashing spending and turning to more modest, narrowly crafted increases in fees and fines -- nickel-and-diming their way to a balanced budget.

Louisiana and South Dakota raised state park fees, while California increased vehicle registration costs and Wisconsin started charging more to retake the state driving exam. Georgia raised fees on day care licenses, fireworks permits and traveling circuses. Oregon raised fees on medical marijuana, while Rhode Island imposed taxes on over-the-counter drugs, sightseeing tours and smartphone applications.

Fines are going up in many places too. Tennessee lawmakers increased traffic fines. Wyoming raised fines for trucks exceeding weight limits. New York city increased fines for taxi drivers caught talking on a cellphone while driving.

In Maryland, fee increases were common solutions this year as lawmakers struggled to balance the books without across-the-board tax increases.

Not even newborns went unaffected, as birth certificate fees doubled from $12. The fee for a vanity license plate doubled from $25. A surcharge on filing land records will double from $20.

Kim Malle, who lives on Maryland's Eastern Shore, isn't only unhappy about the recently approved fees; she's also concerned about rising tolls that are under consideration. The Grasonville resident may have to pay more to take the Bay Bridge across the Chesapeake Bay when the toll rises from $2.50 to $5 on Oct. 1 and up to $8 by 2013.

"I think this state has too many fees, definitely," Malle said after walking out of a Motor Vehicle Administration Office, where she was returning tags for a vehicle that she had sold. "I don't mind certain things, but I just think the state overdoes it."

Julio Reyes, who was at the same office to pay the certificate of title fee, said the recent jump from $50 to $100 to title a new car was too much, too fast.

"I think maybe $20 more; that's OK," Reyes said. "100 percent? Too much."

Fee increases can be an attractive alternative for lawmakers worried about losing political points or increasing hardships by raising income or sales taxes across the board.

Professional license fees are a cost of doing business. Recreational fees are paid only by users. Don't want to pay a tax on a new smartphone app? Don't download it.

"The folks who run government weren't born yesterday," said Larry Gerston, a political science professor at San Jose State University. "When they see a fee that has a built-in user base, in times of difficulty they'll do whatever they can to extract revenue from that base. Raising fees is often easier than raising taxes. They can avoid the controversy and the public backlash."

Or, as Maryland Democratic state Sen. Richard Madaleno of Montgomery puts it: "Politically, it does appear that fees are certainly something that are more feasible -- no pun intended."

But some lawmakers are tiring of the practice of using fees to avoid the dreaded T-word. Texas state Rep. Richard Pena Raymond proposed a bill this year that would require lawmakers to officially label any proposed fee increase a tax increase.

"They say, `Look, it's not a tax, it's a user fee,'" said Raymond, a Laredo Democrat. "I say that's bull. The public is cynical already. We have to be honest and call it what it is: a tax."

Only two states opted for across-the-board tax increases this year to resolve budget deficits, according to Susan Urahn, managing director of the Pew Center on the States.

Illinois lawmakers passed a 67 percent across-the-board income tax increase, while Connecticut legislators voted to raise the state's sales tax rate from 6 percent to 6.35 percent and impose it on new services including manicures, pet grooming and yoga classes.

For the majority of states, spending cuts and focused fine and fee increases were the preferred approach.

States aren't alone in raising fees. Colleges and universities have increased fees -- and tuition -- to make up for funding cuts. Cities, too, are getting into the game.

On Tybee Island, Ga., beach tourists are shelling out about $870,000 a year more for parking meters and tickets than they did just four years ago. After a series of increases to hourly rates and fines, parking now competes neck-and-neck with property taxes as the island city's top source of revenue. Meters and parking are projected to raise $2.15 million a year for the island city; property taxes revenues are projected to raise $2.16 million.

"It seems like everywhere they can find a place, they want to stick a meter. They're hungry for revenue," said Doug Hall, who's been told by city officials they're looking to convert eight free parking spots to metered spaces in front of the small shopping center he owns.

Providence, R.I., recently enacted a fee for disposing of a mattress. Philadelphia hiked parking meter fees as part of an aid package for schools, which were facing a shortfall created in part by cuts in state aid. Greensboro, N.C., doubled fines for parking in a fire lane from $25.

Lawmakers say the new fees and fines are just keeping up with the times. Rhode Island, a summer playground for many in the Northeast, last raised its beach fees in 2002. Smartphone applications didn't even exist when lawmakers imposed the sales tax on the purchase of software at a retail computer store.

Rhode Island lawmakers said they only endorsed fee increases after exhausting the list of state services or programs that could be cut. They say a bigger, across-the-board income or sales tax increase would have been a far greater burden on taxpayers: the fee and tax increases will only raise $20 million in new revenue for a state budget of $7.7 billion. Earlier in the year, lawmakers balked at an ambitious call by independent Gov. Lincoln Chafee to expand the sales tax to raise $165 million.

Critics of fee increases say lawmakers who favor them often believe taxpayers won't notice a small fee increase. Rhode Island state Rep. Robert Watson disputes that, saying consumers often will change their behavior to avoid higher fees.

"I think people make decisions based on being nickeled and dimed," said Watson, an East Greenwich Republican. "People will drive across town to save a dollar. I absolutely think people might decide to go to a certain beach because the fee is lower."

Some disgruntled fee-payers are considering even bigger moves.

Tom Tompkins was blunt when asked about the fee increases while walking out of a motor vehicle office in Annapolis, Md.

"I want to move to Delaware," said Tom Tompkins, 63, of Glen Burnie, Md. Tompkins, who is retired, cited an increase in Maryland's sales tax rate from 5 to 6 percent, approved in 2007. The lifelong Maryland resident said Delaware, which has no sales tax, looks more inviting all the time.

"It's more than annoying," Tompkins said of his state's new taxes and fees. "I mean, if you figure that you pay state income taxes and then you have all these fees and taxes on top of what you have left after you pay state and federal income tax, it's pretty substantial, and I'm very serious about relocating to a state that's more tax friendly."

Witte reported from Annapolis, Md. Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Jonathan Cooper in Salem, Ore.; Chet Brokaw in Pierre, S.D.; Julie Carr Smyth in Columbus, Ohio; Marc Levy in Harrisburg, Pa.; Melinda Deslatte in Baton Rouge, La.; and Russ Bynum in Savannah, Ga.

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08:34 PM on 07/26/2011
July 26, 2011
Dear Friend: Thank you for writing. President Obama has heard from many Americans about his budget for Fiscal Year 2012 and efforts to reduce our Nation's deficit, and we want to make sure you are aware of some relevant information about these important issues. The budget President Obama sent to Congress on February 14 is built around the idea that we have to live within our means so we can invest in our future. Only by making tough choices to both cut spending and deficits and invest in what we need to win the future can we out-educate, out-build, and out-innovate the rest of the world. The President is committed to working in a bipartisan way to solve the fiscal challenges before us while continuing to grow the economy and lay the foundation for America to win the future. RESOURCES:That you may find helpful: Watch OMB Director Jack Lew's overview of the budget, or download the entire budget document as a PDF or e-Book: www.WhiteHouse.gov/winning-the-future Visit website: www.Budget.gov Watch President Obama's speech unveiling his budget to win the future: www.WhiteHouse.gov/xfr speech on deficit reduction: www.WhiteHouse.gov/photos-and-video/video/2011/04/13/country-we-believe-improving-america-s-fiscal-future President Obama is grateful to hear from thousands of Americans each day, and we appreciate your taking the time to contact the White House. Sincerely, The White House
08:24 PM on 07/26/2011
Well, I actually received a response back from the White House after suggesting that everyone including senators, governors, congressman etc need a pay cut. Maybe We ALL need to write them, maybe they'll get the hint!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tbryant80
I am an Independent, not a troll for partisan poli
01:13 PM on 07/26/2011
The states have created their own messes by allowing all the "business friendly" nonsense. No jobs are being created, but revenues are decreasing. What a scam.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tbryant80
I am an Independent, not a troll for partisan poli
12:43 PM on 07/26/2011
Well, once we open a "shadow registry" of Motor Vehicles, like MERS does with Mortgages, the cops won't be able to write traffic tickets, since they won't know who the owner of the vehicle actually is. Just something to think about....
12:07 PM on 07/26/2011
This is great, all the poor people won't be taking up space that only the rich should be able to enjoy. I love trickle up poverty it helps keep the upper middle class and richer from having to deal with anyone that isn't as important as they are.
"I'm very serious about relocating to a state that's more tax friendly." Strange how many companies feel the same way and are taking the jobs to a more friendly enviroment.
justobserve
Not left nor right or center. Just a free thinker!
09:18 AM on 07/26/2011
How come the states have the right to double the fees or rates just like that while our income is not raised? Don't they hear the Republicans said: cut your spendings, balance your budget while charge less for the rich?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Steve Reaves
America has spoken. Love it or leave.
08:48 AM on 07/26/2011
I'd love to see a $1000.00 per mile over the speed limit fine and a $5000.00 fine for tailgating. ....and $1000.00 for failure to use a turn signal.
10:39 AM on 07/26/2011
....and 20 years in prison for texting while driving. 30 years for talking.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
muck-raker
give me liberty or give me death
05:58 AM on 07/26/2011
FINE all those who gamed the system for their own advantage:? our public have been fleeced of their Capital due to derivative­­­s did we reinstall the Glass Steagal act. Nah
After GS destroyed market values using Naked shorting did we change the law....Nah
These deeply stunted and maladjuste­­­d individual­­­s, from Treasury Secretary Geithner to Rubin to Summers to heads of Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, J.P. Morgan Chase and Bank of America, hold fate of nation in their hands. They have access to trillions of taxpayer dollars and are looting U.S. Treasury to sustain reckless speculatio­­­n.
The financial and corporate system alone validates them. This is why e-mails from the New York Fed to AIG, telling the bailed-out insurer not to make public the overpaying of Wall Street firms with taxpayer money, were sent when Geithner was in charge of government agency. These criminals sold public investment­­­s they knew to be trash. They used campaign contributi­­­ons and lobbyists to turn elected officials into stooges and gut oversight and regulation­­­. They took over retirement savings and pensions and wiped them out. they seized some $13 trillion in taxpayer money so they could lend it to us with interest. It is circular theft. This is why we will endure another catastroph­­­ic financial collapse. This is why firms like Goldman Sachs are more dangerous to the nation than al-Qaida.

balance : http://www­­­.truthdi­g­.­com/re­po­rt­/ite­m/w­all­_s­tree­t_wi­­ll_be­_bac­k­_for­_mo­re_­201­00­110/
Chris Hedges”
11:44 PM on 07/25/2011
Why so many complaints about the fee increases? Hey, if you voted "no new taxes," then, sucker, SUCK IT UP.
justobserve
Not left nor right or center. Just a free thinker!
09:20 AM on 07/26/2011
A very good belly laugh. Thanks!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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11:31 PM on 07/25/2011
What about raising revenue on gay marriage in NY? That was the biggest reason that gay marriage became law in NY, thanked to the two faced Republicans. They estimated 300 million dollars in 2 years from that! They already have revenues from casinos, lotteries....Revenues from prostitution is a matter of time, too. Enough is enough!
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ohslimgoody
Nothing new under the sun.
11:02 PM on 07/25/2011
This is happening everywhere I live on an Island village, the revnue that we once generated is no longer there they have not figured out that the people use to come to the island for the view and boating, we had some brain built condo's in front of the beautiful lake view wrong move. Those things not only sit empty now but they block the beautiful lake. Now they are bleeding us dry to make up for the things and money tourist brought to the island,$10 ticket now 60 dollars get real and we have alot of seniors on the island born and raised. Stop it already. O this is a island in Lake Erie, USA
10:42 PM on 07/25/2011
everything should be fairtax and make pot legal and tax the crap out of it,then there wouldn`t be any of this mess going on
10:05 PM on 07/25/2011
the price of everthing is going up, except our pay. so they raise the price we pay more an move down in finacial class, the middle class drop to the lower class and the lower class well were else can they go, but if your in that upper class bracket it dont hurt you..... maybe a flat tax would be sufficient.....
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rikster
buy the ticket-take the ride
09:38 PM on 07/25/2011
taxes come in many different forms.....
09:03 PM on 07/25/2011
To maxamize dwindling budgets, witrhout raising "taxes", all states should go to privitization of government workers. Works great were tried!
12:16 AM on 07/26/2011
Privatization is something that should have been done many years ago.

We have all seen the state road repair crews (???working???) actually one guy working and four guys propping up shovels and watching. This would not happen if the work was done by a private company and the taxpayer would get their moneys worth….

No union contracts and no prevailing wages to deal with....
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lensman3
11:19 AM on 07/26/2011
This is dumb idea. It will be more expensive in the end because a private firm will want their 15% profits and top of the same costs taxes are paying now.