Thursday, November 17, 2011

NEW CANDIDATES WERE SWORN IN YESTERDAY BUT TAXES REMAIN UN-PAID.

FRANKSMITHSAYSNB EDITORIAL:
Newly elected Common Council Alderman RHA Sheen Brown [D} together with his wife Briggitte P. Brown owing a total $5,391.56 at their 18 Union Street Address, city

And at their 6 Cidermill Ct location. an additional sum of $1,262.37 is also owed.

James Rathbun [D] Constable owes the tax collector $247.30

Peter Spano [D] constable owes a sum total of $777.33

These totals remain un-paid as of 1 P.M. today.

Our Newly elected officials are off to a good start.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

These candidates SHOULD be asked to resign their office immediately.

They should not even been asked to run for office.

Anonymous said...

Democrats continuing to avoid paying the taxes they expect the rest of us to pay. What a bunch of hypocrites.

Anonymous said...

If our elected officials don't pay their taxes, why should we?

Next time you get a tax bill, maybe you should return it with a note that you will pay yours when the council members and constables pay theirs?

Anonymous said...

Since the constables don't get paid for their services, perhaps the tax collector needs to put a lien on the future city pay checks for Rha-Sheen, which will still take at least 2 year's pay to pay off just the delinquent taxes without accounting for the taxes that will come due in that 2 year period.

No elected official should be receiving a pay check from the taxpayers while his/her taxes are delinquent.

Anonymous said...

It was always my impression that to run for public office you had to be a resident in good standing, this means pay your taxes. Since elected officials do meet the standard, why are they representing us who pay taxes?

Anonymous said...

The centerpiece of the “jobs” legislation in Connecticut is the borrowing of $340 million to be dispensed as loans to favored businesses. Another $40 million would create at three vocational schools and three community colleges, the manufacturing technology training program already in operation at Asnuntuck Community College in Enfield. The whole “jobs” package would borrow more than $600 million.

Why, would such special patronage for business be necessary if Connecticut, once the most prosperous state, hadn’t taxed itself into decline over the last 20 years?

And while specialized job training is necessary in some circumstances, the “jobs” legislation overlooks the state’s underlying educational problem?

For proficiency tests keep telling Connecticut what state government itself discovered last year when it surveyed freshmen in the state university and community college systems?

That is, most elementary and high school students in the state of Connecticut are being promoted from grade to grade and then even being admitted into college without having mastered basic skills?

Why? Why? Social Promotion?

Anonymous said...

Why is the revelation that some New Britain Democrat council members are tax cheats always considered to be newsworthy, when what would truly be newsworthy is the revelation that none are.

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