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RESOLUTION NO. 8690 -13 BY' Anderson, Bullock, Juris, Madigan, <br />Nowlin, Powers, Smith. <br />A RESOLUTION to take effect immediately provided it receives the affirmative vote of <br />at least five members of Council, or otherwise to take effect and be in force at the earliest period <br />allowed by law, opposing the State of Ohio's attempt to impose a one - size - fits -all tax code on <br />Ohio cities as proposed in Sub. H.B. 5, which would render powerless the City of Lakewood's <br />right to govern its own finances. <br />WHEREAS, Ohio's municipalities worked in good faith with the bill sponsors and the <br />Municipal Tax Reform Coalition to craft a bill that would bring revenue - neutral tax uniformity <br />and ease compliance burdens for businesses in, and potentially locating in, Ohio; and <br />WHEREAS, the House Ways and Means Cormuittee chose to support a bill altered by the <br />Municipal Tax Reform Coalition that accepts previous municipal good -faith compromises and <br />demands still more, to the detriment of municipalities across the state; and <br />WHEREAS, Sub. H.B. 5 is being marketed as a tax uniformity bill for the benefit of all <br />residents and resident businesses, but is in reality a Trojan horse piece of legislation, sneaking <br />carve -out provisions into tax law that benefit special interest groups; and <br />WHEREAS, Sub. H.B. 5 is being marketed as a tax simplification bill, but will increase <br />the current 23 -page municipal tax portion of the Ohio Revised Code to 145 pages of complex tax <br />laws that will make the municipal tax system in Ohio more confusing while stripping municipali- <br />ties like Lakewood of vital revenue that is required to maintain current services; and <br />WHEREAS, the municipal income tax is a vital source of revenue that enables the City of <br />Lakewood to provide essential municipal and safety services, and promote a positive quality of <br />life on which residents and businesses rely; and <br />WHEREAS, any forced reduction in municipal tax revenue will have a negative impact <br />on residents and create an environment detrimental to retaining and attracting businesses in <br />Ohio; and <br />WHEREAS, only municipalities can oversee the prompt and proper auditing of local tax <br />returns to ensure all applicable deductions and declarations are reported, thus also ensuring that <br />all taxpayers pay their fair share without causing higher costs of compliance for all, and must be <br />able to do so without burdensome and costly restrictions included in Sub. H.B. 5— created with <br />the purpose of restricting municipalities from correcting and auditing returns or making assess- <br />ments; and <br />WHEREAS, only municipalities can and will aggressively pursue those noncompliant <br />and delinquent taxpayers who, by their omission or deliberate deceit, drive up the costs of com- <br />pliance to all; and <br />