wrobert
12-14-2007, 11:24 PM
Crist plans to save day as tax drop rock gets bigger.
ORLANDO (AP) -- From a three-bedroom home for sale since July on a quiet dead-end street Friday, Gov. Charlie Crist started his campaign to get voters to give themselves a property tax cut.
His message: approve the constitutional amendment on the Jan. 29 presidential primary ballot and instantly turn around the state's upside-down housing market. "The day after this thing passes, you will see people, I would predict, go to the home they previously thought they could not go to, because they felt trapped in the home they were in," Crist said.
ORLANDO (AP) -- From a three-bedroom home for sale since July on a quiet dead-end street Friday, Gov. Charlie Crist started his campaign to get voters to give themselves a property tax cut.
His message: approve the constitutional amendment on the Jan. 29 presidential primary ballot and instantly turn around the state's upside-down housing market. "The day after this thing passes, you will see people, I would predict, go to the home they previously thought they could not go to, because they felt trapped in the home they were in," Crist said.