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Scott Walker claims credit for $816 in property tax savings over "where things were headed"
In November 2013, Gov. Scott Walker earned the seventh of his eight Pants on Fire ratings by saying that because of actions taken during his first term, "the typical Wisconsin homeowner will save approximately $680" in property taxes over four years.
We judged the statement to be not only inaccurate but ridiculous because the $680 wasn’t actual money saved. Rather, the figure was strictly based on a hypothetical scenario, which the governor didn’t disclose in making the claim.
More than a year later, as his second term approached, Walker toured the state to tout his property tax relief measures. And he made a similar claim.
"The difference over the last four years between where things were headed and where we brought them to over the last four years "is a total of $816 in saved property tax money," Walker said on Dec. 17, 2014, according to a La Crosse TV station.
Though his wording may have been a bit hard to follow, the governor was claiming an even larger savings in property taxes. But he was more careful to say he was comparing his four years as governor to the previous four years.
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Let’s put that claim to the Truth-O-Meter.
Median property tax bills
Here are the annual property tax bills for a median-valued home, based on a statewide average tax rate, as estimated by the nonpartisan Legislative Fiscal Bureau.
We compared the change in the final four years of Democrat Jim Doyle’s term with the four years of Walker’s first term.
Year
Amount
2006
$2,733
2007
$2,836
2008
$2,856
2009
$2,919
2010
$2,963
Change during Doyle’s second term -- 2010 vs 2006
+$230
2011
$2,953
2012
$2,943
2013
$2,922
2014
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$2,822
Change during Walker’s first term -- 2014 vs 2010
-$141
So, the median property tax bill increased in each of the final four years that Doyle was governor, and has decreased in each of the four years under Walker.
But the total four-year savings under Walker is $141 -- not $816.
To reach that figure, Walker again uses a hypothetical.
Walker argues that had the median property tax bill continued to increase each year at the same pace it did under Doyle -- it would have been $69 larger in Walker’s first year, $140 larger in the second, $222 larger in the third and $385 in the fourth -- a total of $816 more, when the four years are combined.
As a math problem, that works.
But as we pointed out in rating Walker’s earlier property tax claim, he assumes that another governor, faced with the same state budget deficit he inherited, would have continued to allow local governments to raise property taxes at that 8 percent clip over an additional four years.
Maybe that would have happened. And maybe not.
Our rating
Walker said: "The difference over the (previous) four years between where things were headed and where we brought them to over the last four years is a total of $816 in saved property tax money."
But he is comparing real results -- property tax decreases during his four years as governor -- to hypothetical results -- how much higher property taxes would have been had they increased like they did during the previous four years under the previous governor.
The property taxes on a median-value property "were headed" toward being $816 higher over four years -- if the pace of increases had continued. But that’s a big if. And the actual four-year savings under Walker is only $141.
For a statement that contains an element of truth but ignores critical facts that would give a different impression, our rating is Mostly False.
To comment on this item, go to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel’s web page.
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More on Scott Walker
For profiles and stories on Scott Walker and 2016 presidential politics, go to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel's Scott Walker page.
Our Sources
WXOW-TV, "Gov. Walker visits La Crosse to talk property tax relief," Dec. 17, 2014
Email exchange, Gov. Scott Walker press secretary Laurel Patrick, Dec. 23, 2014
PolitiFact Wisconsin, "Gov. Scott Walker says typical Wisconsin homeowner will save $680 in property taxes over four years," Nov. 7, 2013
Wisconsin Legislative Fiscal Bureau, "Property Tax Level in Wisconsin (Table 10)," January 2013
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More by Tom Kertscher
Scott Walker claims credit for $816 in property tax savings over "where things were headed"
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