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Cleveland City Council to Start Reviewing Income Tax hike Proposal

Cleveland Council President Kevin Kelley says a proposed income-tax hike will be considered this week.
KEVIN NIEDERMIER
/
WKSU
Cleveland Council President Kevin Kelley says a proposed income-tax hike will be considered this week.
Cleveland Council President Kevin Kelley says a proposed income-tax hike will be considered this week.
Credit KEVIN NIEDERMIER / WKSU
/
WKSU
Cleveland Council President Kevin Kelley says a proposed income-tax hike will be considered this week.

Cleveland City Council will begin hearings this week on a proposed income-tax increase to head off a projected budget deficit. Council will discuss the measure during meetings tomorrow, Wednesday and Thursday.Mayor Frank Jackson says if the income tax is not increased from 2 percent to 2.5 percent, mass layoffs and service cuts will be necessary next year.

What council is considering before deciding whether to hike the income tax

Cleveland officials blame the looming deficit on state funding cuts and smaller tax revenues. Council President Kevin Kelley says there is no question the city needs to find extra money to prevent the cuts. And council will begin reviewing the Jackson administration’s proposal on how the extra $83 million a year would be spent.

“What would a tax increase purchase in terms of services and personnel, whether it’s additional police officers, whether it’s additional snow plowing, street sweeping, garbage collection? Wherever it is, those are the questions we need to have answered.”

Council could vote later this month on whether or not to put the increase on the ballot. If approved, the next decision would be whether to put it before voters in November or next March. A Cleveland school levy renewal will be on November’s ballot.

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Kevin Niedermier
Kevin was raised in New Washington in rural North Central Ohio. He attended Bowling Green State University and Ashland College (now Ashland University) before beginning his career in commercial radio news.