The Washington Informer - May 28, 2015

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I N S I D E

This month’s edition of The Bridge inside

Howard Students Get a Lesson in Reality, Pg. 4

VOL. 1, NO. 4

MAY 2015

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D.C. Jazz Festival Returns, Pg. 10

I N S I D E

Vol. 50, No. 33 May 28 - June 3, 2015

Wealth Factory Makes its Mark, Pg. 15

Youth Represents D.C. in Spelling Bee, Pg. 16

Graduate students at the University of Maryland, (L-R) Kendra Browne, Rashid Conteh, Sheraughnne Hutchinson and Karlmichael Bailey attend the commencement ceremony at the Comcast Center in College Park, Maryland on Thursday, May 21. /Photo by Roy Lewis

Decision Day Approaches for Prince George’s Council

Vote Expected on Rushern Baker’s Proposed Tax Hike By Stacy M. Brown WI Contributing Writer Under water, overtaxed and overextended were just some of the adjectives used by residents who continue to voice concern over Prince George’s County Executive Rushern Baker’s proposed 15 percent property tax

increase. “Adamantly opposed,” said Diane Russell, the founder of PG-Politics, the political news and commentary blog about Prince George’s County politics. “We pay the highest taxes in the region and the second highest in the state,” Russell said. At a meeting last month,

76-year-old Eddie Mackey was also adamantly against the proposal. “I’m under water with my property,” Mackey said in a television interview. “In 2006, I was appraised at $500,000. In 2015, I’m at, I guess about $250,000. It doesn’t make sense.”

Baker wants the county council to approve his plan to raise property taxes by 15.6 percent over the next three years, despite county residents having voted three decades ago to freeze taxes. Baker said the tax hike would bring in more cash for the county’s struggling school system. “The only way we’re going to

make a giant leap to catch up with the surrounding jurisdictions is to put the type of resources into our education that our competitors around the region have,” Baker said in a previous interview. While as a teacher, Nina

Celebrating 50 Years of Service / Serving More Than 50,000 African American Readers Throughout The Metropolitan Area

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