December 7, 2010 | 12:48 PM | By Anna
Tax Yoga, Help the Poor?
FILED UNDER: Government, City Council, Fenty, Marion Barry, Politics
No one enjoys higher or additional taxes, but judging from some of the pleas for support I’ve received from various groups that are worried about how budget cuts will affect the poorest, youngest, most vulnerable residents of our city, I wonder if taxing yoga and sweet-smelling dogs is preferable (or more ethical). Via the City Paper:
Ward 8 Councilmember Marion Barry wants to extend D.C.’s sales tax to include: pet grooming, health clubs, armored car services, private investigations and admission to live performances.
You’ll recall that similar measures were considered last budget go round, but the all-powerful Yoga lobby put a squash to them.
Anyway, Barry also wants to raise the tax rate on parking from 12 percent to 16 percent, and raise the minimum franchise tax from $100 to $1,000. All together, Barry says his proposed tax increases would raise $41.1 million and allow the council to restore cuts to social services proposed in Still Mayor Adrian Fenty‘s budget, specifically the cuts to welfare recipients that Barry initially proposed.
The “all-powerful” Yoga lobby? Sounds ominous.
About the author
DCentric was created to examine the ways race and class interact in Washington, D.C., a city with a vibrant mix of cultures and neighborhoods. Your guides to the changing district are reporters Anna John and Elahe Izadi. View all posts by Anna →
MORE POSTS ABOUT
- Government
- City Council
- Fenty
- Marion Barry
- Politics
-
Resentment And Race In Reducing Government
The black middle class has been hit particularly hard by the recession; many of the economic gains earned over 50 years disappeared between 2007 and 2009. The foreclosure crisis, lack of accumulated wealth and the role of a college education in … Read More
- Can Wireless Tablets Bridge The Digital and Education Divide?
- The Effect Of Youth Unemployment On Crime
-
Councilmember Michael A. Brown to Give Away 600 Backpacks in Southeast, Tonight
D.C. Councilmember Michael A. Brown will give away 600 backpacks filled with school supplies tonight, between 6-8 p.m. while supplies last. School starts Monday. The backpacks are strictly for District residents and will be distributed during the “Back to School … Read More
- Unwrapping the Controversy at Chipotle
- Fired Workers March on Columbia Heights Chipotle
-
"A New Era of Polarizing Racial Politics in the District"
Now reading: “Will white identity politics come to post-post-racial D.C.?“, by Adam Serwer at the City Paper. But just as the browning of America has awoken a novel white identity politics nationally, the demographic forces that framed D.C.’s last mayoral … Read More
- Fenty Lost Because of Style, not School Reform
- An Age Divide? Or a Racial one?
-
Art Driving Gentrification?
The District is funding a series of art events housed in vacant spaces in downtown Anacostia. The idea behind Lumen8Anacostia: to make use of under-used spaces, and also spark some much-needed economic growth in Anacostia. The Ward 8 neighborhood has … Read More
- Asian Shopkeepers And The Economics Of Improving Corner Stores
- Marion Barry: Breaking Down Race, Plexiglass And 'Dirty Shops'
-
Fired Chipotle Worker Miguel Bravo Speaks
Yesterday, I covered a local protest against Chipotle. Approximately 40 people marched down Irving Street NW to the fast food chain’s Columbia Heights location on 14th Street. Miguel Bravo, one of the fired workers, addressed the crowd. Check back for … Read More
- What can vouchers do for D.C.?
- "A New Era of Polarizing Racial Politics in the District"