Bad math plagues debate on sales tax proposal

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Some people have – mistakenly – taken that to mean the cost of a hammer, shirt or TV would increase by 14.8 percent.

The only thing that would increase by 14.8 percent would be the tax, which is a small part of the overall purchase price.

That $100 TV will cost you $106.75 today. If the referendum passes, it will cost $107.75.

One dollar more.

Meat, produce and canned goods at the grocery store will cost the same as they do now, as will your blood pressure medication.

If you don’t need it now, you might before Nov. 6.

PROPONENTS OF this new 1 percent tax have contributed to the confusion by posting incorrect figures.

Worse, the local schools website reported the false information.

One opponent of the tax suggested that tax supporters had “lied” about the impact of the tax.

That “lie,” however, seemed to be only an embarrassing ignorance of mathematical expression.

The school website has been corrected to explain this tax proposal would require you to pay an additional “1 cent” for every $1 in qualifying purchases.

But for weeks it had listed that additional tax as being “.01 cent” on the dollar – an apparent mutation of two ways to express a penny: $0.01 and 1 cent.

A rate of “.01 cent” – which is one-hundredth of a penny – would add only 1 cent to a $100 purchase.

An honest math mistake, probably, but one that gave opponents ammunition to attack.

ILLINOIS’ SALES TAX is 6.25 percent (0.0625).

Dixon city government has an additional one-half percent tax, bringing the rate to 6.75 percent (0.0675).

The referendum would add a full percentage point, increasing the rate to 7.75 percent (0.0775).

Lee County voters will decide.

Yes, or No?

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