To hear them tell it, DFLers at the State Capitol rode to the rescue of Minnesota homeowners last year, ensuring tax relief after a decade of punishing increases in onerous property taxes, especially in outstate areas.
Talk of tax cuts is all the rage this year in St. Paul. So it might be instructive to ponder recently released information suggesting that the property tax rescue may not have been altogether successful — or even necessary.
Property taxes in Minnesota, to put it simply, are complicated. About three people could fully explain why your property taxes are what they are, but you still wouldn't understand it.
The DFL's theory is simple, though. Republicans, they say, crimped state aid to cities, counties, school districts and other local entities over the past decade, and this forced local officials to hike property taxes painfully. Reopening the state aid spigot would, DFLers promised last year, allow the locals to reduce the burden.
Hundreds of millions of dollars in various aids duly gushed forth from the 2013 Legislature (including a welcome boost in direct refunds to taxpayers). Local governments also got an exemption from sales taxes worth scores of millions more each year.
Trouble is, property taxes don't seem to be falling much. Last fall, preliminary estimates actually showed a slight overall increase in local levies. Many local officials, explaining that they'd been madly cutting budgets for years, readily found things to spend the new money on.
But after state officials made it clear they didn't appreciate being exposed as snake-oil peddlers, there were adjustments.
The final levy calculation, reported Friday, shows that total property taxes in the state, after refunds and credits, will decline by about one-tenth of 1 percent. Let the celebrations begin.