Believe me, I've read more than a few excellent books on real estate investing and real estate law, But I am a better Gregory Yates lawyer and dirt the guy than I was ten years ago, practice, practice and more practice. Not only is no substitute for experience. During This Time. If there was a quick and easy solution on how to do this, all we're doing it. you live, you learn, you can move on to the next deal and (hopefully) you'll get better every time.Gregory Yates Attorney
Saturday, December 7, 2013
Sunday, October 20, 2013
How to win an election
With the election fast approaching in November and with more rookies realize increasingly to the plate many of us run for political office, that we don't know "How to win an election". Groups, 912ers, we the people and many other conservative groups not the deep pockets of the device have a tea party and not afford rent, the "experienced" and expensive consultant and Manager for your campaign.
Wednesday, October 2, 2013
Wednesday, September 25, 2013
Abolishing Car Taxes
By
Holly Odom
The car tax is the last vestige of an abusive and long ago
discarded tax system. It's the old personal property tax - when the tax
assessor pawed through your belongings and told you how much you had to
pay to keep them. The USA and European Commission are currently calling
for significant changes in the way passenger cars are taxed. The
intention is to gradually apply the user pays principle to motorized
transport. According to DG TAXUD, the envisioned taxation system will
ensure a more appropriate internalization of the external costs of
private cars - an important principle for which T&E has long been
arguing. Taxing the actual use of private cars is an important step
towards sustainable transport. But charges on car user ship ought to
complement the already existing taxation of car ownership, and not just
replace it. A full internalization of all environmental costs of cars
must recognize the problems that result from the still growing sum total
of cars on national and international roads. Road capacity in many
regions has reached its limits - a fact that is most illustratively
expressed by the continuous congestions on national highways and trunk
roads. Capacity limits are reached as well in almost all urban areas,
where evermore space is consumed by car-infrastructure such as parking
spaces, car-dealers or car repair-, maintenance- and washing-facilities -
not to mention streets themselves. Therefore a taxation system is
needed that restricts both private user- and ownership by making sure
that road passenger transport pays for its external costs. The positive
response with which carmakers have welcomed (and had lobbied for) the
abolition of registration taxes illustrates how auto-friendly the
proposed legislation eventually may be. This, however, means that
transport in general will not become more expensive - but that the
sector will just pay differently and still not properly.Thus to create harmonization it will make the economy more efficient, but does not automatically entail environmental improvement. As they stand now, the plans of the Commission to replace Registration Taxes by Annual Circulation Taxes may partially reduce private car use and thus lower the annual emissions of a single car. However, they will not provide any incentive at all to refrain from owning a car. In fact, the opposite is the case, because abandoning registration taxes will further stimulate the production and consumption of cars. This will be most tangible in countries like Denmark that were able to limit the growth of motorization rates and maintain a "greener" modal split by ways of higher registration rates.
It is to be noted that The Government has announced that with effect from 6 April 2002, the basis of taxation on cars provided by employers for employees' business and private use, will be changed to an emissions based system. Pool cars, provided for business use only, and which are returned to site at the end of the working day are currently not liable to benefit in kind taxation, and this will continue to be so. Carbon Dioxide (CO2) emissions will be used as the measure to calculate benefit in kind taxation on company cars from that date. A tax discourages economic activity, such as work or investment. The tax is cut, leading to increased economic activity. Liberals then assume that previous rates of tax would still be collected at the higher rate of activity -- which, of course, only came about because of the lower tax rate -- thus depriving the government of vast revenues it is justly entitled to. It makes no difference to them that economic activity often expands by more than tax rates are cut, thus increasing total revenues. Liberals always still believe that even more would have been collected if only tax rates had not been cut. In the case of the car tax, liberals assume that additional cars would have been purchased anyway, without any change in the tax. And by multiplying the old car tax rate times the larger number of cars registered, they come up with mythical revenues that could pay for more teachers, police, and roads.
Thus, in this paper, we discuss the abolition of car taxes rule in context of California - one of the major and highly populated city of United States of America.
History: In 1935, the Motor Vehicle License Fee Act established a state car tax of 1.75 percent of the value of an automobile in lieu of the personal property tax then assessed on all personal property. The taxes collected under this act were limited to state purposes, including highways. The personal property tax was subsequently abolished, but the car tax remained. In 1948, the fee was raised to two percent. In 1957, the law was clarified to limit the use of these funds for law enforcement, regulation and control of highway traffic, and other state purposes.
In 1988, the law was amended to allow the use of car taxes for any purpose, and in 1993, 25 percent of the funds were earmarked for realignment of health and social services programs. Thus, any linkage between the car tax and roads was obliterated. Worse for taxpayers, in 1991 California's car tax was radically restructured to provide additional tax resources to balance the state budget as part of an $8.2 billion increase in taxes and fees that year. Prior to 1991, automobile owners were charged on a ten-year depreciation schedule, based on the original purchase price of the automobile. The 1991 legislation made three dramatic changes. First, the depreciation schedule was stretched from ten to eleven years. Second, the act provided for a permanent tax on fully depreciated automobiles amounting to 0.3 percent of the price in perpetuity beginning in the 11th year. Third, the new law triggered a restarting of the depreciation schedule, virtually assuring that very few cars would ever reach the bottom of the schedule. The net effect was a $60 per year increase in the VLF paid for an average car.
Another historical note about the 1991 tax increase is also relevant to this discussion. The overall tax increase that year was the largest by any state in the history of the nation. According to revenue estimates made at the time, the entire package amounted to $8.2 billion in additional taxes and fees, or roughly $1,100 per family. The tax increase, enacted in the midst of a recession, broke the back of California's economy. Although some of those taxes were repealed or expired, many are still on the books. Thus, California's Vehicle License Fee began as a substitute for the personal property tax. When the personal property tax was abolished, the tax was maintained under a new name. It was originally limited to state purposes, principally for highways and highway-related services. Today, it is devoted to purposes entirely unrelated to highways. It now consumes $3.3 billion of California family earnings, at a time when they are paying $3.6 billion more than they would have paid without the 1991 tax increases.
Meanwhile, the onerous and outdated automobile tax has proven to be highly unpopular across the country. In the 1997 Virginia gubernatorial campaign, Republican James Gilmore's campaign was stalled until he unveiled a proposal to abolish Virginia's car tax. Gilmore won a dramatic victory for Governor and swept a majority of Republicans into the Virginia state Senate. He has now set about to fulfill his signature campaign promise, backed by an overwhelming mandate from Virginia voters. Meanwhile, in Texas, Democrat Gary Mauro is campaigning against Republican Gov. George Bush, Jr., on a platform to abolish the state's sales tax on motor vehicles. Bush opposes the plan. In Georgia, Republican Guy Millner has proposed ending that state's car tax for a saving to taxpayers of $475 million. In South Carolina, Gov. David Beasley proposed in his State of the State address last month to phase out the car tax over a period of six years.
Abolishing the Car Tax: AB 1776
A car represents security of transport. Even if public transport is adequate for most journeys, people still want a car for the odd occasion or emergency. There will always be places and times when public transport doesn't run. The Government could make a contribution immediately by abolishing car tax and increasing fuel taxes to offset the loss of revenue. This would have the added benefit of doing away with an absolutely pointless and tedious administration system. The point is that public transport will never be able to emulate the flexibility of private transport and that at present the car has so many advantages.
The Virginia experience makes a strong case for California to abolish its car tax. By doing so, California could reduce the overall level of taxation to what it would have been without the tax increases imposed during the 1990's, while still providing for some $14 billion in additional general fund revenues in the last eight years. It would abolish a tax that long ago ceased to bear any resemblance to its original purpose and intention. It would remove a strong disincentive in current law that keeps motorists from shedding older, higher polluting automobiles. It would provide a significant spur to economic activity by reducing the cost of new vehicles in California. It would reduce costs to California families of what is a practical necessity in the Golden State: the family car. The problem in doing so is the built-in special interests that depend on the tax. A $4 billion saving to taxpayers is also a $4 billion cut in the governor's proposed budget. In this case, the beneficiaries are local government budgets, which are still recovering from a multi-billion dollar raid by the state government in 1992 and 1993. In order to back-fill this amount, reductions in the proposed state budget would have to be taken from non-education funds under constitutional provisions enacted by Proposition 98. The "non-98" side of the budget also funds the Department of Corrections, a sacred legislative cow.
In abolishing California's car tax, it would be a desirable policy and a practical necessity:
To hold local governments harmless by back-filling their losses with state funds
To work within the revenue projections of the Department of Finance
Not to affect Proposition 98 funds for schools
Not to affect the administration's proposed funding for state prisons
Not to affect the administration's proposed budget reserve.
The next question is how the funds should be preserved, protected and restored to local governments to replace the VLF taxes they will be losing. This is a particularly important question, since Proposition 47 of 1986 constitutionally earmarked VLF subventions for local governments, providing a relatively tamper-proof and expanding source of local revenues. Even though VLF subventions could be redirected away from local governments in future budgets simply by using them to supplant other sources of local funding, a suitable replacement to the VLF is an understandably important objective of local government.
AB 1776 establishes a strong protection against state government raids by phasing in a dedicated portion of future sales tax revenues to replace the lost VLF subventions. To protect against anomalies occurring between high-sales tax and low sales tax communities, the replacement revenues are placed into a dedicated state sales and use tax account that will replace lost VLF subventions on a dollar-for-dollar basis. When fully phased in, the sales tax rate required to replace the lost revenues will lock, and the subventions from the fund will naturally expand as the economy expands. Indeed, this reform greatly enhances the flexibility of local governments to use these funds by eliminating the straightjacket effect of the 1991 re-alignment legislation. Furthermore, to provide additional protection for local governments, the sales tax provisions of AB 1776 will be placed in a "Local Government Independence Act," a constitutional amendment to be introduced in the Assembly later this month.
Californians pay the third highest combination of automobile taxes in the nation, and they pay $3.6 billion more in overall taxes than they would have without the net tax increases of the 1990's. The largest portion of the automobile taxes is the Vehicle License Fee, also called the "car tax," accounting for an average of $185 per automobile annually. None of this money is used for highways or highway-related services. It goes instead to local government general funds and local health and social services programs. Abolishing California's car tax would make California families whole for the massive tax increases they suffered in 1991. In this period of economic growth, abolition of the car tax could be done while protecting local government from any revenue loss, preserving state funding for schools and prisons, and maintaining the proposed budget reserve. It would require an overall reduction in the 1998-99 proposed general fund budget of just 9/10ths of one percent, or no budget reductions at all if additional revenues materialize in the May Revise.
Antique Car History
By
Sonali Sen
Owning a car is a necessity for many people, but for many other
possessing antique cars is a matter of pride and sort of a prestige
symbol. Owning an antique car is in most times as costly as owning a new
car as there are many people involved who are in the passion of
collecting antique cars. Many antique car enthusiasts collect antique
cars as a hobby or a memory. But there are several others who collect
antique cars as an investment option. For them antique cars are a way to
make profit - these people collect antique cars and sell it after some
time at a higher price than originally brought.
Let us look in
detail what an antique car is and about antique car history. According
to the Antique Automobile Club of America and several other
organizations worldwide, an antique car can be defined as any car which
is more than 25 years of age. Sometimes it is seen that some classic
cars are misrepresented as antique cars, but the real classic cars are
those certain specific high quality cars from the pre-World War II era.
However antique cars are not profitable to use for everyday
transportation, these antiques cars are much popular for leisure
driving. Antiques cars which had survived for more than 25 years are
considered great survivors. And that's why owning, collecting and
restoring such rare antique cars are considered as a well-liked hobby by
people all over the world.
Over the years, the antique car market
has seen tremendous changes. During the 1980's the value of antique
cars has gone a great boom which lasted for several years. But during
the early 1990's there was a great fall in price. Antique car collecting
can be a type of gambling. According to antique car experts it is
better to collect antique cars when you get one as the antique car
market fluctuates from time to time and the future monetary value of
antique car is completely unpredictable.
Most antique car buffs'
love to know antique car history before buying any antique car. For
them, buying an antique car is more important than buying a new car.
They take enough time searching every thing about the antique car before
they make a purchase. Antique car experts say that it is better to take
a look into antique car history before making a deal. By spending some
time in antique car history you can know whether any alterations and
flaws are there in the antique car you are going to purchase. These
alterations and flaws can make a big change in the value of the antique
car. Determining the antique cars status and how much price it worth if
you resell it in any later stage is also a good idea before purchasing
it.
As antique cars are those cars which have survived over a
period of twenty five years, the antique car history is worth
mentioning. If you are an antique car enthusiast check the current
position of the antique car you are going to add to your antique car
collection. If the antique car is a much fashionable one then the value
of antique cars will be highly expensive. If it is not a fashionable one
to collect, then the demand will be less and you can obtain it at a low
price. The condition of the antique car also influences the value. A
good condition antique car will surely cost much more than a poor
condition antique car.
The Smart Girls' Guide to Buying a Car
Buying a new car, or a car that's new to you, can be a minefield. Women
are traditionally vulnerable to con men when buying cars, taking their
cars for a service or anything else related to motoring for that matter.
Although we'd like to think that times have changed, and in the most
part they have, there are still car sales people waiting for an innocent
looking female to trot through the door. This applies to men too, so
don't be offended! At CoverGirl Car Insurance we want you to get the
best deal, cheap insurance and above all a great car. So, we've compiled
a concise guide to what can be one of the most expensive purchases
you'll have to make.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/61290
The first thing you will need to do
is decide whether you want a new or used car. You probably have a make
and model in mind already, so it's best to do as much research into the
car as possible. You can look in trade guides and on the internet to get
some ideas about the production and engineering of your desired car. If
you go to the dealer armed with this information then you will know
what to look for and will know about any parts of the car that are
particularly expensive to replace. Whilst doing your research you could
also look out for any common problems with your car. For example certain
vehicles have notoriously bad electrics and you could be left having to
pay a large bill to have them repaired.
So what's the best bet, new or used?
Buying a new car
Buying
a new car gives you the peace of mind that your car hasn't been rescued
from an accident and 'cut and shut' (more about this later). Plus you
don't have to worry about service history and recurring problems.
If
you decide to buy a new car then you have three options. You can either
buy from dealership, from a broker or by personal import from Europe.
There are pros and cons to each option so you should look carefully at
each to decide what's best for you. The benefits and pitfalls of each
are as follows:
Dealership: Many dealers offer cheap finance
schemes with frequent special offers, you can take the car for a test
drive and you also may be able trade in your existing car. This is often
a more expensive option so it's worth looking around.
Broker: It is often cheaper to buy through a broker and relatively easy to organise. You may not be able trade your car in.
Personal
imports from Europe: Cheaper in the majority of cases. However this is
not the easiest way to buy a car. You'll have to put in quite a bit of
work.
What to check when you collect your car
We advise that you check your new car over before you drive off the forecourt. There are a few key things to check:
We advise that you check your new car over before you drive off the forecourt. There are a few key things to check:
o That you've got a copy of the dealers pre-delivery inspection form
o Check that all lights, electrics, sound systems, alarms, door locks and windscreen wipers work
o Check for any scratches and check that there is no damage to the interior
o Check you've got the spare tyre and any tools that are supposed to come with the car
o Make sure you've got the manual and service book
Buying a used car
When
you buy a used car there are a few more pitfalls to look out for but
you can bag yourself a bargain if you look in the right place. It can
also be great fun deciding whether you want a sexy classic like an Alfa
Romeo Spider or a bargain run-around like a Ford Ka. Whether you chose
to buy from a dealer or from the private market you'll need see the
history of the car. This is really important. You can either buy from a
franchised dealer, a used car dealer or privately. Here are some of the
pros of buying from each:
Franchised dealer: One of the safest
places to buy a car. You'll get a great choice from a franchise. You can
get used or nearly new cars. A franchised dealership also might know
the entire history of the car. They will also provide you with a
warranty, so if anything goes wrong you can take it back and they will
fix it.
Used car dealer: They will usually have checked that there
is no bad history or outstanding finance. Most dealers have an
excellent reputation but you should exercise some caution and again, do
your own research about the type of car you've chosen. You will usually
get at least a 3 month warranty from a used car dealer. But check to see
what it covers. Service items like tyres, exhausts and brake pads are
not usually covered.
Private purchase: Best place for an excellent
bargain. This is the riskiest way to buy a car as the car could have
been involved in an accident, and might not belong to the seller. You
should ask to meet at the sellers' home or work and ask the following
questions:
Image is Everything - Secrets to Cleaning Car Fleets
ecent survey indicated that clean Taxi Cabs Fleets have higher
tip rates and repeat customers. How do you wash a taxicab? You do them
four at a time and you go up and over and up and over when you are
drying them. If they have a little taxi cab sign, dry that last. But you
do the rest of the car the way you do a regular car. The only
difference is you are going to spray three, four, five, sometimes six
cars at a time. Then another crewmember is going to follow behind you
and do all the windows really well. You do a quick vacuum with a
taxicab. Seriously, you do not want to be in that taxicab for more then a
minute or a minute and a half. Now most taxicabs are usually scratched
and they look like crap. This is something you are going to have to deal
with. This is just the way they are going to look which is good for you
because they are not expecting a perfect job. They just want them to
look clean because they have their logo on them. Taxi companies are very
low budget operations and low cost will get you the account. Some
taxicabs are owned by independent contractors. You will need to charge
more since the volume is not there. Staging areas at big airports are a
good place to find lots of taxicabs.
Rent-A-Cars
Rent-a-cars
these days are mostly small, tiny cars that get really good gas
mileage. They are Toyota Tercels, Ford Contours and Dodge Neons and
things like that. You can wash a Dodge Neon in your sleep in about three
minutes. Really easy to clean, really, really easy and that is
important. You want some accounts that are easy. Three dollars is fair
for exteriors, five dollars for in and out is fine. It is important to
have efficiency when washing rent-a-cars. No more than two minutes for
vacuuming. You only want to clean the windows that are dirty. You do not
want to clean all of the windows on a rent-a-car, just where you see
fingerprints. You want to wipe off the dash really quick, wipe around
the center console and use cleaner on the sticky stuff. Hit the inside
windows that are dirty, wash the outside. You want to do them five, six
at a time and you want to dry them off real fast, make sure the windows
are clean and go to the next car. Rent-a-cars are really good money. You
want to charge an extra two dollars for taking out carpet stains. Use
some Folex cleaner or advanced carpet stain remover, some kind of a
little carpet brush and a towel to wipe up whatever you precipitate at
the top of the carpet after you have got it wet. The carpet remover
should come off on the towel. There will always be trash in rent-a-cars,
a lot of trash. You should have a bucket ready that you just put trash
in and move it from car to car. Dump it before you leave. Usually
rent-a-cars will have a Dempsey Dumpster around the back where you can
dump all of your trash.
Rent-a-car companies are very careful and
exacting as to what times of day they want their cars washed. They may
have a whole bunch of vehicles in on Monday mornings and want you to do
cars on Monday mornings. You are going to have to do the cars at that
time. They are probably going to want them done before eight o'clock in
the morning. So if you are doing the cars before eight o'clock in the
morning and there are twenty or thirty rent-a-cars, it is quite serious
that you get them all done in time. The rent-a-car company is paying you
so they do not have to drive them to the car wash. It is rather
important that you get them done on time. It is really easy to get them
all done if you work efficiently. You are doing them six at a time. If
you have twenty cars to do, you need to have them done by eight thirty
to nine o'clock and you are doing them six at a time, you should have
twenty-four cars done in an hour if you are really flying through them
and you have the right crew. So pay attention to this. You can afford to
do the cars for five dollars each because the job comes out to about
one hundred dollars an hour. Think about this for a second. Think about
the time and efficiency and how fast can you do them. This attitude is
what will help you pick up the rent-a-car company accounts. If you can
do them very, very quickly and you can do them not perfectly but good
enough to make them happy, there is a lot of money in rent-a-car
washing. Our crews in other towns already wash for: Budget, Avis,
Dollar, Hertz, Enterprise and generally can afford to wash them and
retain a profit at only $5.00 per vehicle.
Police Cars
It is
time to talk about police cars. We just saw a police car go the other
way with his lights on. In any case, police cars, how do you wash a
police car? Well first of all, you wash it like you would wash any
normal car but you want to make sure you clean the light bar really
well. You do not want to spray water inside the light bar, you will
screw up the electronics. You also do not want to, but some of our guys
love to do it, spray water inside the PA speaker on the front of the
police car that is mounted by the bumper. The reason they like to do
that is because it burns them outs and gives them a short. So, you
should not do that. Now under the seats of a police car you find all
kinds of cool stuff. Best to hand it over to the authorities and not
smoke it yourself. You will find crazy stuff under the seats of a police
car where you are going to have to clean. Depending on how you feel you
can either vacuum the stuff up or put it into a little bag and give it
to the watch commander. You need to dust the radios inside of the police
car, but you have to be careful not to turn any knobs. There are always
bugs on the light bars, but you cannot blast off the bugs as much as
you would like to. You really need to soap them off and not blast them
off. Sometimes the light bars get real brittle on the older police cars.
You can actually blast right through them. I have done it before.
For
some reason police like to go 4 X 4' ing when they are going through
center dividers in order to catch a terrible criminal such as a speeder.
They will go off road and do whatever; maybe they are just having fun.
So you have to make sure that you clean all the mud off the police cars,
they are a little bit muddier then most cars. The bottoms of the police
cars are always muddy and they are going to need hand soaping. Police
cars are often black and white. Usually the white part is where the door
is so the policeman knows where to get in. The rest of the car is
black. Now the part of the car that is black, remember it is black. If
you are doing police cars in the sun and you are trying to do them three
at a time, you may have a little problem getting to all of them. Some
cities have police cars that are all white cars or all green cars or a
mixture and that makes it a little bit easier.
There are certain
additional things you have to watch for when cleaning police cars. Do
not have a bunch of stuff out of your truck when you are washing a line
of police cars. Someone may run out of the building and want to take
their car. If you cannot move the truck in time you will really
frustrate that officer. He wants to look official and squeal the tires
out of the parking lot so you may as well just let him do whatever he
wants to do.
Driving School Cars
Driving school cars are
basically just like rent-a-car companies. The only difference is you
want to spend a little more time on the dash board and a lot of time on
the windows. You probably need to get five or six dollars each. This is
giving them a deal because normally you charge ten dollars for in and
out
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)