With factors like inflation, Kerr said, “we weren’t sure if the timing was actually right to have it on the ballot. But, once you start it, you got to move it forward.”
Limerick Township Supervisor Linda Irwin said the tax “would have positively impacted Limerick taxpayers from having increased costs for traffic, emergency services, and the potential building of new schools.”
Irwin said residents “deserve responsible development,” and that while many are concerned about the pace of residential housing development, the struggle to afford the cost of living impacted the rejection of the referendum.
Sasek said Limerick residents may not have connected the dots between the tax and preventing development, and the township could have done a better job of informing people before they went to the polls.
Limerick officials will continue to look for other ways to preserve open space, according to Kerr, including through grants or private donations. “It’s not like we’re not going to preserve open space or keep trying,” Kerr said. “We’re just going to have to fund it differently.”