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CHICAGO (WBBM) - The Cook County
Board today is expected to debate whether it should
approve any increase in the local sales tax, or hike
other levies like the hotel tax. That has some business
leaders predicting dire consequences.
WBBM Political Editor Craig Dellimore reports.
Marc Gordon, president of the Illinois Hotel and
Lodging Association, says there are some 190,000 people
working in the hotel and hospitality industry in this
area.
Gordon says if Cook County raises its sales tax by
about one percent, it would make the local hotel sales
tax the highest of any of the cities it competes with,
like Las Vegas and Orlando. And that would put
Chicago—and its workers—at a
disadvantage. He says the sales tax in Las
Vegas is 9 percent and the one in Orlando is 11.5
percent. Chicago, he says, currently has a 15-point-4
percent sales tax, and it would go up.
But allies of County Board President Todd Stroger say
new revenue is needed or health services for many
low-income people and others will be in jeopardy.
Ralph Martire, director of the Center for Tax and
Budget accountability, says the problem is that no one
believes Cook County government has eliminated waste and
patronage employees, and it hasn’t—he says—and it’s
costing taxpayers millions.
On the other hand, says Martire, the county really
needs new revenue to maintain the health care system
relied upon by so many poor people and others.
He suggests the County Board write a sunset date into
any sales tax hike, so it would expire if real tax
reform—and real reform of a bloated system—aren’t
enacted. |