Open Letter to City Council: Defer Meals Tax/Parking Fee Hikes

Mr. Mayor, Members of Council, and Members of Council-Elect:

With only two regular meetings left on the docket for this calendar year and pending parking fee and meals tax increases set to take effect on January 1, 2021, I ask you to reconsider the timing of those increases. Admittedly, the impact to the taxpayers’ pocketbooks from the meals tax hike is minimal, but in terms of the morale blow to restaurateurs already battered by the pandemic and likely in for still more battering as Trump Virus cases continue to rise globally, nationally, and locally, the prospect of the increase looms larger in their perceptions than the actuality. Similarly, the deferred parking rate increases could be a significant deterrent to patrons of downtown businesses generally, falling on customers who have been long accustomed to free night, weekend, and holiday parking in city garages and at meters. I would argue, as well, that the costs of enforcing the new parking levies could offset much of the anticipated revenue gain from their imposition. I would advise you to obtain an objective cost/benefit analysis before making this change. Again, in the context of the economic disruption this virus has wrought to date, imposing those fee increases now would be completely tone deaf. I urge you shelve them for reconsideration when we return to what we thought of as normalcy.

Please let me know if you need additional information.

Yours truly,
Mark Geduldig-Yatrofsky

1 thought on “Open Letter to City Council: Defer Meals Tax/Parking Fee Hikes

  1. I second this fact-based, on target, emotion. Thanks to the lack of pandemic planning at the highest levels in this country, businesses and individuals at the local level are picking up the shards of a shattered economy. Now is not the time to raise taxes on our local small businesses. Now is the time for the feds to do what should have been done back in May and support legislation to relieve economic pain as only the feds can do, which is possible if major corporations pay their fair share in the future instead of dumping that task onto small, local businesses across the country.

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