The NY Daily News posted a new story  the other day on how both taxes and fees are rising as families continue  to struggle during this economic crisis. You can read a snippet of their  article below or check out the full  text here.
Jim Feasel is a retired NYPD detective,  an expert in figuring out who did it and why.
But now there’s a problem in his personal  life that he can’t solve and he feels handcuffed.
 
“How did the city’s appraised value  of my home go up $75,000 last year. . .  when property values went  down 10% or more?” bellowed Feasel, who owns a two-family home in  Woodside, Queens.
Along with thousands of other middle-class  New Yorkers, Feasel is feeling the big squeeze — what happens when  taxes and fees go up while income stays flat and investments and property  values fall.
Property taxes are just part of the pinch.  Water and sewer charges were hiked 14.5% last July 1 and will go up  another 12.9% this July 1. Fares, tolls, utilities and property assessments  are all higher.
Add in 60 increased or new state fees  and taxes — on everything from beer to hunting licenses — and its  no wonder New Yorkers are wondering how they’ll make ends meet.
 
Own a deli or pizza parlor? Your “food  licensing fee” is being jacked up from $100 to $250. Registering a  car will cost $55, up from the old $44 fee. A monthly MetroCard will  set back straphangers $89 instead of $81.
The increases are designed to close city  and state budget gaps of more than $22 billion — but some say they’re  misguided.
