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Home » News » News » Mainers to Weigh In on Bill Revitalizing Defunct Property Tax Stabilization Program for Seniors
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Mainers to Weigh In on Bill Revitalizing Defunct Property Tax Stabilization Program for Seniors

Libby PalanzaBy Libby PalanzaApril 14, 2025Updated:April 14, 20258 Comments3 Mins Read
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A public hearing has now been set for a bill seeking to revitalize a now-defunct property tax stabilization program for seniors.

On Tuesday, April 15 at 2pm in Room 127 of the State House, Mainers will have the opportunity to weigh in on the GOP-led proposal.

Written testimony may also be submitted online at www.mainelegislature.org/testimony.

Introduced by Rep. Wayne R. Parry (R-Arundel), LD 1481 would bring the short-lived stabilization program back beginning in April of this year for eligible seniors.

To qualify for the program, homeowners must be over the age of 65 and have owned a home in the state for at least twenty years, up from the ten-year threshold included in the original language.

Rep. Parry’s proposal would also make stabilization available only to households making less than $75,000 annually. In these two ways, his bill parries down the pool of eligible recipients, lowering the costs from the short-lived stabilization program of past years.

Also, Parry’s bill looks to simplify the process for annually renewing the stabilization, allowing seniors to submit a written form indicating that the homestead is still eligible for stabilization.

Previously, seniors were required to fully reapply for stabilization every year.

The proposed legislation would also do away with the ability to transfer stabilization from one home to another. Instead, seniors would be able to receive a fresh stabilization for their new property.

Click Here for More Information on LD 1481

When this program was first introduced, it was estimated that stabilization would cost taxpayers statewide millions of dollars, with costs increasing substantially with each passing year.

Although municipalities were to be fully reimbursed for revenue lost as a result of this program, critics pointed out that the design simply shifted costs from municipalities to taxpayers statewide.

The fiscal note attached to the final version of the Stabilization Program indicated that roughly $2 million was initially allocated from the General Fund to cover the cost of municipal reimbursements for fiscal year 2023-24.

[RELATED: Maine Lawmakers Again Consider Stabilizing Seniors’ Property Taxes — Here’s How They Plan to Fund It.]

Another group of Republican lawmakers — including Sen. Jim Libby (R-Cumberland), Sen. Bruce Bickford (R-Androscoggin), and Sen. Trey Stewart (R-Aroostook) — have also made a push to bring back the now-defunct stabilization program.

Under that bill, LD 1144, seniors would be able to apply for the program starting with the 2026 property tax year so that their taxes would be frozen at 2025 levels.

It would also amend the original program by limiting the stabilized value of a senior’s home to $900,000, meaning that for homes assessed above this threshold would only receive stabilization benefits on the value up to $900,000.

A public hearing for LD 1144 was held earlier this month, and a work session has been scheduled for Tuesday, April 15 at 1pm in Room 127.

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Libby Palanza

Libby Palanza is a reporter for the Maine Wire and a lifelong Mainer. She graduated from Harvard University with a degree in Government and History. She can be reached at [email protected].

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Common Sense
Common Sense
1 year ago

Due to the income level stated in this proposal, it makes it just another welfare program. Income restrictions were applied to VA disabilities for years before they came to their senses. Rep. Parry, did you ever consider that the reason some people’s retirement income is over the threshold is because of working two or more jobs over the years and investing it in IRAs etc for future retirement Vs many of whom we know were too damn lazy to get out of bed in the morning and go to work ? In addition, while my wife and I worked, saved and invested, our neighbors whom are now under the threshold went on luxury cruises, hunting trips to Alaska and gambling trips to Vegas. Why should they now be compensated for their previous lack of fiscal responsibility while my wife and I get NOTHING !! Where is the fairness here ?? All or none Rep. Parry ! NO MORE HIDDEN WELFARE PROGRAMS !!!

6
Eric H .
Eric H .
1 year ago

If you can put up with living here for twenty years we’ll give you three hundred bucks a year off your annual taxes . Your brand new spiffey efficiency Maine heat pump will be costing you five times that on your electric bill . Sounds like a good deal huh ?

4
Bingo
Bingo
1 year ago

A better idea is to get off your kiester and vote down the budgets that depend on raising your taxes.

7
Common Sense
Common Sense
1 year ago

I do concur 100% with Bingo’s comment below !!

2
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Gardiner Schneider
Gardiner Schneider
1 year ago

Giant Rat, take your crap to some other site than the Maine Wire.

5
Jimmy Potatos
Jimmy Potatos
1 year ago

Better idea.. Over 65 no more school taxes.

5
DamDoc
DamDoc
1 year ago

WTF? There should be no income or house value limits… If you are an old geek and have been in the same house, you have paid ALOT of property tax, and deserve retirement. Its not like you are NOT paying property taxes, which is bad enough, It is just freezing the amount of tax you are paying per year. I live in a nice house, but not a mansion, I am 71, live in southern maine, and currently paying $16,000 per year (went up $3000 this year).. and therefore am priced out of the freeze. The same house, up north, would be less than 900k… This is penalizing where you live and how much income you need to live.

2
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