From CNNMoney.com:
 
Loss of dealerships, coupled with declining  car sales, is hammering state and local budgets already thinned by the  recession.
The downfall of the American auto industry  is wreaking havoc on state and local budgets from coast to coast.
 
The decline in auto dealerships, coupled  with the drop in car sales, is costing states and municipalities millions  of dollars in lost sales taxes, not to mention lost income and property  taxes and other fees.
Though exact numbers aren't available,  car purchases account for about 12% to 15% of sales tax revenues in  many states, estimates the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. And  sales taxes usually account for about one-third of a state's revenue.
 
As the recession deepens, state tax revenues  have fallen off a cliff. This has opened up yawning gaps, forcing officials  to scramble anew to balance their budgets.
The drop in sales taxes are the worst  since World War II, and the plunge in car sales are a major reason for  it, said Donald Boyd, senior fellow at the Nelson A. Rockefeller Institute  of Government, a public policy group.
"The declines have been devastating,"  he said. "It comes at a time when the states can't afford it."
 
Take California, which has seen new car  sales plunge 43% in the first quarter and 186 dealerships disappear  since the start of 2008. The Golden State, which is struggling to close  a $21.3 billion budget gap, is slated to lose 32 Chrysler dealerships  and possibly 100 GM dealerships as part of the automakers' restructuring.
 
New car sales are the single largest  component of the sales tax base, accounting for 10.6% in 2006, the latest  year available, according to the state's Department of Finance. Municipalities  also depend on the sales taxes, as well as other revenues such as property  tax, to fund their operations.
"Many communities are having to let go firefighters and police because the sales tax revenues are down," said Peter Welch, president of the California New Car Dealers Association.
Fewer sales, deeper budget cuts
 
Indiana, which is wrestling with a $1  billion budget gap, saw auto sales taxes fall by 23% in the second quarter,  said Chris Ruhl, the state's budget director. Car purchases are the  third largest source of sales tax revenue, until recently accounting  for about $550 million a year.
The state is now tightening its belt,  Ruhl said, to deal with the lower revenues. On Monday evening, Gov.  Mitch Daniels recommended cutting spending by 2.5% across-the-board  and tapping into the state's $1 billion-plus rainy day fund to balance  its budget.
New Jersey, meanwhile, is also feeling  the effects of the auto industry meltdown. The Garden State has lost  170 dealerships since the start of 2007 and could lose 90 more in the  cutbacks by Chrysler and General Motors (GMGMQ), which filed for bankruptcy  on Monday. New car sales are down 33% for the first four months of the  year.
This plunge has a drastic effect on state  revenues, said James Appleton, president of the New Jersey Coalition  of Automotive Retailers. He estimates that the state loses $10 million  in revenue for every 1% drop in car sales. Incomes taxes also suffer  when dealers close since each employs about 65 people.
 
State officials are now scrambling to  close a $4.4 billion budget gap, exacerbated by an unprecedented decline  in sales taxes.
