Leighton’s republican Guard (story just below)
==============================================
==============================================
==============================================
I read that the county is strongly considering an 8 per cent property tax increase. Such a tax would be devastating to many fixed income families.
To rub salt in
wounds, Leighton proposed a 3 per cent increase in Wilkes-Barre. Everyone one
receives it… including the chemically impaired. What you have in Wilkes-Barre
are salaries that are grotesque.
The Mayor could
best help the city if he just walked away from his position. The City
Administrator is inching close to $100,000 per year. For a city of $42,000. And of course G Dessoye gets paid about $110,000
so cops can work “around him.”
“REPUBLICAN GUARD” MANAGEMENT STYLE
Saddam Hussein had his Republican guard. They were a band of loyalists
who were loyal to Saddam because:
1)
They
feared losing their status
2)
They feared not getting paid.
In the same way
Leighton has his “Republican Guard.” These employees/cronies are:
1)
Afraid
of losing their position or contract
2)
Afraid
of not getting paid.
Look around you.
Who supports Leighton without somehow benefitting? Unfortunately for those who
are being squeezed out of their homes due to taxes, Leighton is tone deaf to
their plight and “numbed out” as to their needs.
Property owners plead for reprieve
Taxpayers appear before county judge for
chance to avoid today’s back-tax auction
http://www.timesleader.com/news/local-news/842469/Property-owners-plead-for-reprieve
September 18. 2013 11:14PM By Jennifer Learn-Andes - jandes@civitasmedia.com
September 18. 2013 11:14PM By Jennifer Learn-Andes - jandes@civitasmedia.com
Sharon Wildoner approached
Luzerne County Judge Michael T. Vough in her wheelchair Wednesday morning,
begging him to remove her two properties from the next day’s back-tax auction.
“Please don’t take my
property,” she pleaded.
“Ma’am, I’m not taking your
property. I’m following the law,” Vough said.
Vough spent three hours
Wednesday hearing 28 requests for properties to be pulled from the sale.
Several appeared in court with the aid of canes or walkers. Many
filed impassioned paperwork detailing medical conditions, relationship
struggles and financialdifficulties.
Attorney Sam Falcone, who
represents the county tax claim office operated by Northeast Revenue Service
LLC, presented arguments against granting many of the requests, including
instances in which property owners have defaulted on past agreements with the
office to repay their debt in installments.
Falcone said the problems
cited by many property owners are often heartbreaking, but many other property
owners wrestling with their own struggles are still managing to pay. Granting
unwarranted breaks would open the door for others to seek the same, he said.
“It’s a Pandora’s box,” he
said.
Tax auction rules
Properties must go to auction
if taxes are unpaid for two years. Property owners can get out of the sale by
filing for bankruptcy, obtaining court removal, entering into payment plans or
paying all taxes owed from 2011 and prior years.
Payment plan defaulters aren’t eligible to participate in another payment plan for three years, and the law
requires 25 percent down with the remainder paid off within a year for those
who enter such agreements.
Thirteen of the 28 property
owners seeking sale removal Wednesday had defaulted repayment plans, including
Wildoner.
Vough told Wildoner it’s unlikely her two properties in Hunlock
Township and Plymouth will sell in today’s sale because she has outstanding mortgages that become the responsibility of
bidders.
Properties that don’t sell in
the first-stage auction will advance to a free-and-clear sale next summer, when
all back taxes and liens are forgiven. Lenders usually pay the back taxes
before properties get to the final sale to protect their interest.
Delinquents denied
Nicholai Cinchock’s request
was among 10 denied by Vough Wednesday.
Cinchock’s court filing said
he was unemployed until June 2012, had medical issues and was the victim of a
hit-and-run driver.
“I’ve been gainfully employed
for the past 16 months, but catching up on bills was difficult,” wrote
Cinchock, who, like many, represented himself instead of retaining legal
counsel.
Falcone pointed out
Cinchock’s past repayment agreement default on his Hanover Township property,
and Vough asked Cinchock what he plans to do about the situation.
“I’d love to rectify it,”
Cinchock said.
Vough asked how much Cinchock
can pay, and he said nothing.
Among the other sale removal
denials:
• Fellipe Luciano, who owns a
property in Wilkes-Barre and also defaulted on a past repayment agreement. He
referred to medical problems in his filing and said he is seeking a second job.
• Maureen Storz, owner of a
Kingston property, who told the judge she lost her job. Her court filing also
detailed medical issues and said her car was totalled while parked in front of
her house in January 2012. However, she defaulted on a past payment plan and
told the judge she was unable to pay anything toward the debt at this moment.
• Barbara Bitzer, a
71-year-old widow who owns two properties in Wilkes-Barre and defaulted on a
repayment plan. Bitzer would have to come up with $6,000 owed through 2011 to
get out of the sale.
• Geraldine Jusinski, who
owns a property in Nanticoke and Hunlock Township and defaulted on a payment
plan. Her filing cited expensive medical treatments for a family member and
said a collection taken by some people to help the family won’t cover the
taxes.
“Please help me find
absolution,” her filing said.
Though there are no
guarantees, Vough said her mortgage may make her properties unattractive to
bidders in the first-stage auction.
• Hazleton resident James
Petrilli unsuccessfully tried to buy more time to pay taxes on his funeral
homes in Freeland and Hazleton.
Petrilli’s court filing, prepared by attorney Michael Senape, says
Petrilli has been unable to pay a combined $5,049 in 2011 taxes on both
properties because the reconstruction of Broad Street in Hazleton, which began
in 2011 and is still ongoing, has severely harmed his Hazleton funeral business
that provides the majority of his income.
The filing cites a decrease in funeral services from nine in 2011
to five in 2012 and one in 2013.
Vough said Petrilli is
eligible for a payment plan and advised him to come up with the 25 percent
downpayment.
Petrilli said he doesn’t have
the money.
“I always paid on time. This
is devastating to me,” Petrilli said. “Please just give me some time.”
Vough said many property
owners are in the same boat, and he prides himself on treating everyone
equally.
“Most people in this economy have problems, but my job is to follow
the law,” the judge said.
Properties postponed
Vough postponed 16 of the
auction listings until Nov. 14 because the property owners are trying to sell
their properties, are eligible for repayment installment plans or have other
pending issues.
Linda Evans, who owns two
properties in Kingston, agreed to get on a payment plan before Nov. 14. Her
filing said she is a single mother of a child with special needs and had to
replace her furnace.
Michael Yankovich, who recently returned to work after an injury,
said he will get on a payment plan or pay his taxes if the mortgage application
on his Dallas property is approved, but he plans to put his home on the market
if the loan falls through.
The sister of one deceased
property owner was in the process of obtaining her brother’s death certificate
from Mexico so she can proceed with estate filings to gain control of the
property. Another woman submitted evidence the government is processing her
request for veteran’s benefits, and a man said he is expecting a child-support
payment from his estranged wife. Another property was tied up in a subdivision
while one of the owners was hospitalized.
Vough made it clear to most
of these property owners they won’t receive a second chance if they haven’t
resolved their pending debt before the Nov. 14 sale.
Another property required no
action by Vough because the property owners brought their payment to the
courthouse Wednesday.
West Pittston property owners
David and Tracy Fritz were removed from the sale and received a nine-month
reprieve from auction listing because their Philadelphia Avenue property
sustained heavy damage from record flooding in 2011, and the couple had no
flood insurance.
Tracy Fritz said in her court
filing that she lost all belongings in the flood and is working at a business
also impacted by flooding. Her husband also was laid off after 25 years at his
company, she wrote.
Vough advised Fritz to appeal
her assessment and said her sale removal was warranted because the flood was a
natural disaster out of her control.
No comments:
Post a Comment