- This topic has 26 replies, 5 voices, and was last updated 16 years, 10 months ago by stockstradr.
-
AuthorPosts
-
January 14, 2008 at 8:15 PM #136131January 14, 2008 at 8:15 PM #136088nostradamusParticipant
Weren’t some of the condo conversions downtown selling by having sexy models walking around mostly nude in windows clearly visible from the open house? Maybe the view he purchased was blonde.
January 14, 2008 at 8:52 PM #136079stockstradrParticipantHere is the inside word from a tax assessor working for county gov in that area, who is handling these requests. Obviously, I cannot comment on where this opinion comes from beyond that. I don’t want to get that person fired.
My read from this is that if possible you want to negotiate your tax reduction without filing an Assessment Appeal application.
My additional between-the-lines read from this is that obviously the assessors are under considerable pressure from higher ups in state and county gov to delay/prevent the tax reductions that will invariably lead to financial crisis for the state and county governments, irrespective of fact that tax reductions are warranted.
This is going to really piss off a lot of property tax payers.
“what most people don’t understand is that the values showing up on their property tax bills now were calculated as of Jan 2006. Since the market was good then, we are rejecting the requests for review stating that the value is good and the taxpayer looks at us like we just landed from mars…. That leads the taxpayer then to file a formal Assessment Appeal application and that takes up to 2 years to process, hear and resolve values issues for each year, so here we are at least 4-5 years from the tax reduction event date and the taxpayer still doesn’t have resolution on the property that has declined…..and in fact some of these properties have declined 45%”
January 14, 2008 at 8:52 PM #136140stockstradrParticipantHere is the inside word from a tax assessor working for county gov in that area, who is handling these requests. Obviously, I cannot comment on where this opinion comes from beyond that. I don’t want to get that person fired.
My read from this is that if possible you want to negotiate your tax reduction without filing an Assessment Appeal application.
My additional between-the-lines read from this is that obviously the assessors are under considerable pressure from higher ups in state and county gov to delay/prevent the tax reductions that will invariably lead to financial crisis for the state and county governments, irrespective of fact that tax reductions are warranted.
This is going to really piss off a lot of property tax payers.
“what most people don’t understand is that the values showing up on their property tax bills now were calculated as of Jan 2006. Since the market was good then, we are rejecting the requests for review stating that the value is good and the taxpayer looks at us like we just landed from mars…. That leads the taxpayer then to file a formal Assessment Appeal application and that takes up to 2 years to process, hear and resolve values issues for each year, so here we are at least 4-5 years from the tax reduction event date and the taxpayer still doesn’t have resolution on the property that has declined…..and in fact some of these properties have declined 45%”
January 14, 2008 at 8:52 PM #136181stockstradrParticipantHere is the inside word from a tax assessor working for county gov in that area, who is handling these requests. Obviously, I cannot comment on where this opinion comes from beyond that. I don’t want to get that person fired.
My read from this is that if possible you want to negotiate your tax reduction without filing an Assessment Appeal application.
My additional between-the-lines read from this is that obviously the assessors are under considerable pressure from higher ups in state and county gov to delay/prevent the tax reductions that will invariably lead to financial crisis for the state and county governments, irrespective of fact that tax reductions are warranted.
This is going to really piss off a lot of property tax payers.
“what most people don’t understand is that the values showing up on their property tax bills now were calculated as of Jan 2006. Since the market was good then, we are rejecting the requests for review stating that the value is good and the taxpayer looks at us like we just landed from mars…. That leads the taxpayer then to file a formal Assessment Appeal application and that takes up to 2 years to process, hear and resolve values issues for each year, so here we are at least 4-5 years from the tax reduction event date and the taxpayer still doesn’t have resolution on the property that has declined…..and in fact some of these properties have declined 45%”
January 14, 2008 at 8:52 PM #136113stockstradrParticipantHere is the inside word from a tax assessor working for county gov in that area, who is handling these requests. Obviously, I cannot comment on where this opinion comes from beyond that. I don’t want to get that person fired.
My read from this is that if possible you want to negotiate your tax reduction without filing an Assessment Appeal application.
My additional between-the-lines read from this is that obviously the assessors are under considerable pressure from higher ups in state and county gov to delay/prevent the tax reductions that will invariably lead to financial crisis for the state and county governments, irrespective of fact that tax reductions are warranted.
This is going to really piss off a lot of property tax payers.
“what most people don’t understand is that the values showing up on their property tax bills now were calculated as of Jan 2006. Since the market was good then, we are rejecting the requests for review stating that the value is good and the taxpayer looks at us like we just landed from mars…. That leads the taxpayer then to file a formal Assessment Appeal application and that takes up to 2 years to process, hear and resolve values issues for each year, so here we are at least 4-5 years from the tax reduction event date and the taxpayer still doesn’t have resolution on the property that has declined…..and in fact some of these properties have declined 45%”
January 14, 2008 at 8:52 PM #135880stockstradrParticipantHere is the inside word from a tax assessor working for county gov in that area, who is handling these requests. Obviously, I cannot comment on where this opinion comes from beyond that. I don’t want to get that person fired.
My read from this is that if possible you want to negotiate your tax reduction without filing an Assessment Appeal application.
My additional between-the-lines read from this is that obviously the assessors are under considerable pressure from higher ups in state and county gov to delay/prevent the tax reductions that will invariably lead to financial crisis for the state and county governments, irrespective of fact that tax reductions are warranted.
This is going to really piss off a lot of property tax payers.
“what most people don’t understand is that the values showing up on their property tax bills now were calculated as of Jan 2006. Since the market was good then, we are rejecting the requests for review stating that the value is good and the taxpayer looks at us like we just landed from mars…. That leads the taxpayer then to file a formal Assessment Appeal application and that takes up to 2 years to process, hear and resolve values issues for each year, so here we are at least 4-5 years from the tax reduction event date and the taxpayer still doesn’t have resolution on the property that has declined…..and in fact some of these properties have declined 45%”
January 14, 2008 at 8:55 PM #135885stockstradrParticipantWeren’t some of the condo conversions downtown selling by having sexy models walking around mostly nude in windows clearly visible from the open house? Maybe the view he purchased was blonde.
Hey, I tried to buy one of those condo units with the naked blonde bombshell view, but my wife nixed it!
🙂January 14, 2008 at 8:55 PM #136186stockstradrParticipantWeren’t some of the condo conversions downtown selling by having sexy models walking around mostly nude in windows clearly visible from the open house? Maybe the view he purchased was blonde.
Hey, I tried to buy one of those condo units with the naked blonde bombshell view, but my wife nixed it!
🙂January 14, 2008 at 8:55 PM #136145stockstradrParticipantWeren’t some of the condo conversions downtown selling by having sexy models walking around mostly nude in windows clearly visible from the open house? Maybe the view he purchased was blonde.
Hey, I tried to buy one of those condo units with the naked blonde bombshell view, but my wife nixed it!
🙂January 14, 2008 at 8:55 PM #136119stockstradrParticipantWeren’t some of the condo conversions downtown selling by having sexy models walking around mostly nude in windows clearly visible from the open house? Maybe the view he purchased was blonde.
Hey, I tried to buy one of those condo units with the naked blonde bombshell view, but my wife nixed it!
🙂January 14, 2008 at 8:55 PM #136084stockstradrParticipantWeren’t some of the condo conversions downtown selling by having sexy models walking around mostly nude in windows clearly visible from the open house? Maybe the view he purchased was blonde.
Hey, I tried to buy one of those condo units with the naked blonde bombshell view, but my wife nixed it!
🙂 -
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.