The Adobe Flash Player is required to view this multimedia interactive. Get it here.
Home  >  News  >  Local News Group seeks incorporation

Group seeks incorporation for West Chester

Spokesman says tens of thousands of workers live outside and don’t pay for what they use within township.

Hot Topics

The Square @ Union Centre, businesses and part of the Lakota West High School campus are seen in West Chester Twp. on Monday, June 22, 2009.
Nick Daggy/Staff photographer The Square @ Union Centre, businesses and part of the Lakota West High School campus are seen in West Chester Twp. on Monday, June 22, 2009.

Related

    Would you support West Chester Twp. becoming a city?

By Dave Greber, Staff Writer Updated 10:40 AM Wednesday, June 24, 2009

A newly formed group of West Chester Twp. residents want to recoup the millions of dollars in taxes that leave the township every day at 5 p.m.

In order to keep that money locally, the Committee for West Chester says the township must incorporate.

As of this week, members of the committee have begun collecting the nearly 4,500 signatures — based on a percentage of the latest gubernatorial election — to potentially place the issue before voters in May 2010. Butler County commissioners would have to approve the ballot initiative within 90 days after they received the signatures.

For the committee — whose tag line is, “It’s time.” — the moment is right for “cityhood” because members say incorporation would lower taxes and improve government efficiency.

“West Chester residents currently foot the entire bill for township operating expenses through property taxes. We’re a host community,” said Bill Zerkle, the committee’s spokesman. “We support everybody, but nobody supports us.”

Zerkle said approximately 80 percent of the township’s roughly 54,000 workers live outside the township, but use the community’s services — such as roads — on a daily basis.

If a 1 percent income tax were levied as part of the incorporation — the limit by Ohio law without a separate ballot issue — that 80 percent could contribute nearly $17 million annually. The remaining 20 percent of people who live and work in the community would raise nearly $8 million.

Zerkle said the income tax could eliminate the need for police and fire levies, which raised just more than $20 million in property taxes in 2007.

The committee is an offshoot of a 2007 25-member study group that researched the possibilities for the township’s future, Zerkle said.

The thought of incorporation received mixed reviews from trustees, each of whom emphasized the importance of the issue being citizen-driven. Two of the trustees, Catherine Stoker and Lee Wong, are up for reelection in November.

“The population is too big to be run under the township government,” Wong said. “It is overdue for us to become a city. The residents who work here but live outside the city put a burden on our residents.”

While Stoker said a time may come when incorporation is necessary — such as an annexation attempt by a nearby city — now is not the time. She also said there would be too many unknowns — because of Ohio laws regarding incorporation — at the time of the ballot issue.

“You’re pretty much voting for a pig in a poke,” she said.

Trustee George Lang was direct about his opposition to incorporation. He said the move would make West Chester a less attractive place for businesses.

“If you want to kill economic development, you incorporate,” Lang said. “The only reason to incorporate is to raise more money, and we don’t need it.

“Never trust government with more money. We’ll spend it.”

More information

What: Committee for West Chester

Phone: Cityhood Information Hotline, (513) 777-7951

I will support the city measure ONLY if the income tax rduces my township property tax. I would expect that the police, fire, parks and library be funded from the income tax and those taxes removed from my property tax. When Lang was running for trustee, he told me that he did not believe that West Chester should offer tax abatements to attract businesses to move here. Yet the township keeps on giving sweet tax deals. The township gets an F grade for planning and overcrowding.
City Tax
8:24 PM, 6/24/2009
George Lang needs to go. What does he mean we "don't need more money"??? What an idiot!
Eileen Compton
4:34 PM, 6/24/2009
Your all welcome to leave such a terrible township and move to Hamilton. We have plenty of vacant housing. Here you can pay 2% income tax in addition to your property tax and get nothing in return.

"HAMILTON! - The city that offers nothing"
Jesse
4:07 PM, 6/24/2009
Why did AK Steel move here? Could it be no city tax? Any guarantee that levies will go away? Who will benefit from the extra money? With a levy we can decide how much we want to pay.. Townships are the best bank for the buck.

I could change my mind now if I could get one of those new city jobs with great benefits, medical and life long guaranteed pension. I am glad the recession is over, my neighbors found jobs and my 401K. has increased. 
Gary
10:44 AM, 6/24/2009
The reason why WC is so large right now is because it IS a TOWNSHIP. WC is doing great in with it's current structure. Why try to fix something that isn't broken??
JC
8:21 AM, 6/24/2009
There are 15 additional comments
SHOW ALL
We welcome your comments. Please remember this is a public forum and behave appropriately. Your comments must conform to our visitor's agreement.

The form has errors highlighted in red, please review these entries and try again!



Comments are limited to 500 characters


500 character limit

Incorrect please try again


These words come from scanned books.
Entering them helps digitize old texts.


Breaking news by e-mail

Start your day with top headlines in your inbox and get breaking news e-mail alerts at any time by subscribing to our Headlines e-mail newsletter.

See Sample | Privacy Policy
View All

Top Jobs


About our ads

About our ads

Copyright © Sat Nov 21 23:54:47 EST 2009 Hamilton Journal-News, Hamilton, Ohio, USA.All rights reserved.

By using this site, you accept the terms of our Visitors Agreement and Privacy Policy. About our ads. You may wish to note our other business policies.