Tax relief on home renovations in Belleville? It could be happening

July 16, 2020

Marc Pfeiffer, the assistant director of the Bloustein Local Government Research Center at Rutgers University, said the increase in taxes would go up about 20 percent a year.

Township attorney Steven Martino, who helped draft the resolution, said a resident would not see a tax increase in the first year following the improvement. After that, residents will pay 20 percent of the increase in the second year, 40 percent the third year, 60 percent the fourth year and 80 percent the fifth year. Following the fifth year, residents will pay 100 percent of the tax increase.

North Jersey.com, July 15, 2020

Recent Posts

Molloy Discusses Criteria for Healthiest Cities

Location matters when it comes to health. Some places promote wellness by expanding access to nutritious food and recreational facilities. Others strive to keep healthcare costs affordable for everyone or keep parks clean and well-maintained. When a city doesn’t take...

McGlynn & Payne Explore the Relational Reprojection Platform

Counter-GIS Experiments in Distance Interpolation with the Relational Reprojection Platform Abstract In this paper, we discuss the cartographic genealogy and prospective uses of the Relational Reprojection Platform (RRP), an interactive tool that we built to create...

Clint Andrews–The Critical Role of University Research

The Critical Role of University Research: Funding, Challenges, and Impact This week on EJB Talks dean Stuart Shapiro and Associate Dean of Research Clint Andrews discuss the vital role federal-funded university research plays in complementing education, driving...

Payne Investigates City Digital Twins Concepts

Expanding the city digital twin in the context of crisis, cartography and computation Abstract This commentary responds to Gillian Rose's ‘Visualising human life in volumetric cities: city digital twins and other disasters’ as a framework for thinking about crisis and...

Nashia Basit (MPP/MCRP ’24) on Women’s Leadership

This week, alumna and current Governor's Fellow Nashia Basit (MPP/MCRP '24) discussed women's leadership in state government and cultivating spaces for women to be successful with Allison Chris Myers, Esq., CEO of the New Jersey Civil Service Commission....