For first-time homebuyers, an
$8,000 federal tax credit is good — but not good enough.
That’s the reaction of Syracuse-Area real
estate brokers to the recently enacted federal stimulus package. The $8,000 tax
credit is a cut from a $15,000 credit the brokers had hoped for.
“It stems down to money. I hate to say it but
it came down to Congress and the president deciding the money could be used
elsewhere,” said Dave Manzano, president of the Syracuse Board of Realtors and
associate broker with Hunt Real Estate. After all, Manzano said the nation’s
“housing crisis” has been at the root of the economic meltdown.
Manzano and other real estate
agents in the area acknowledge that the Syracuse housing market is in better
shape than the rest of the nation. They praised the federal stimulus for
offering some help for first-time homebuyers. But local agents expressed
disappointment that the original $15,000 tax credit was not included in the
bill.
“I guess the powers at be in
their infinite wisdom decided it was better to give a smaller handout,” said
Manzano. “I guess you can’t have your cake and eat it too.”
The $15,000 tax credit for all
home buyers was originally proposed in the Senate, but was dropped when the
Senate and the House of Representatives reconciled their versions of the
stimulus package. The final $787.2 billion stimulus measure signed by President
Barack Obama included the $8,000 tax credit only for first-time buyers.
But the tax credit will still
help the housing market, Manzano said, even if he isn’t pleased everything
wasn’t included. “It will definitely have an impact. I really do feel that,”
said Manzano.
Manzano says the effects of people
buying a home are widespread. People spend money to renovate their home before
selling, he said, and contractors and stores like Lowe's and Home Depot see
increases in business.
Other local real estate agents
agree the stimulus will help, but want to see local government step up their
efforts here in Syracuse in conjunction with Washington, D.C., policy.
“A
lot more can be done here, especially like property tax relief,” said Jeff Roney,
a Realtor with Keller Williams Realty and former president of the Syracuse
Board of Realtors.
Property
taxes in Onondaga County are 2.6 percent of a home’s assessed value, according
to Tax Foundation, a non-partisan organization that researches tax policy. The
median taxes on a home here are $2, 9182 a year for a three-bedroom home.
That’s the 13th highest tax rate in the nation, according to Tax Foundation.
The
stimulus will help here and nationally if it can put people to work, Roney of
Keller Williams said. People who have jobs and a stable income are more likely
to make a decision on a huge purchase such as a home, he said.
The
housing market in the Syracuse area has fared better than other parts of the
country, he said. “The Syracuse area did
not take on high-risk mortgages, and home prices never skyrocketed like they did
elsewhere. So we’ve also had a lower foreclosure rate. We’ve been lucky,” said
Roney.
In
Onondaga County, according to the Syracuse Association of Realtors, the median price
of a three-bedroom home in January of 2008 has dropped 5.94 percent compared to
2007. In 2007, the median price was $110,300. Now the same three-bedroom home is listed at
$104,113. That compares to a 10.55 percent decrease nationally in the median
home price of a three-bedroom home. Nationally, the median home price fell from
$217,900 in 2007 to $197,100 in 2008.
Alys
Mann of Home HeadQuarters praises local government for some efforts to increase
home ownership. Mann is a neighborhood planner for Home HeadQuarters in
Syracuse, a not-for-profit organization that creates home ownership
opportunities. Local government has taken steps to help, she says.
“I
think the local government has been doing all they can, considering the tough
circumstances we are in. It hasn’t been easy on them,” Mann said.
Mann
points to a year-old government program that allows not-for-profit
organizations to buy tax delinquent properties for one dollar. Another new
program keeps taxes lower on newly renovated homes by assessing them at their
value before the renovations, she said.
Those
programs allow agencies like Home HeadQuarters, says Mann, to buy these tax
delinquent properties, renovate them, but still keep the property taxes low for
new buyers. But, Mann said, that the best medicine for the local housing market
is to just create a stir.
“The
bottom line,” said Mann, “is we need to get people excited about this city,
about city living, and about all that Syracuse has to offer.”
(Matt Cohen is a junior with dual majors in
broadcast journalism and history.)
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