(Jan.-Feb. 2009 GroundSwell)
THE POLITICS OF ASSESSMENT
The following presentations were made during a panel at the Council of
Georgist Organizations conference Thurs., July 10, 2008, in Kansas City,
MO. (The write-up is from an audio recording and notes by GroundSwell
editor Nadine Stoner.)
DAN SULLIVAN, director of Saving Communities.
Those who went to the Pittsburgh conference heard
the atrocities of what happened in Pittsburgh. (See Sept.-Oct. 2001
GroundSwell, ?Was Pittsburgh Sabretaged??) Now I will just give the very
condensed version of it and then thoughts on assessing and politics in
general. Pittsburgh did its own assessing until the late 1940s, I think
until 1948, and the head of assessing was Percy Williams who was also the head
of the Henry George Foundation at that time. Assessments were very
accurate, the land values were very well done. And then the county took
over the assessing on the argument that consolidating the assessing function
would reduce overlap. When I got involved in 1978 the land assessments
were a very accurate reflection of what those values had been in 1948. As
we started increasing the land tax, a strange thing happened, the land values
started going down in the most trendy neighborhood in all of Pittsburgh because
those people would appeal their assessments and the county didn?t really have a
way to defend them. Those people were the most politically connected
and very influential and paid a lot in campaign contributions. It got
worse and worse until finally Civil Service assessors started leaking corruption
to media people. They leaked it to me and I leaked it to the media
people. And there was a big hue and cry and a rival Democrat won the
election. Many of the people who were appointed to the assessment
board were not assessors, they were just real estate honchos. Though they
are not supposed to be involved in politics, they threw their weight to the
Republicans. The Republicans laid off 85 assessors. There were
several people who were leaking it actually but one was rather flagrant about
it. They knew who she was and she had seniority that was 83 from the
bottom so they laid off 85. In case two people would have retired, she
would have come back so they had to prevent that. She went to Florida and
became an assessor in Florida where the assessors are paid more, but it doesn?t
matter because there is very little property tax in Florida.
Then they hired a private company called Sabre
Systems, who was a computer company that serviced municipalities, and had done
computer work for municipalities for a long, long time. And they hired
some appraisers who do appraisals for banks. We can talk about the
difference between assessors and appraisers but my distinction is assessors do
wholesale work and appraisers will say I am going to figure out what this house
is worth and get some data; I think they are a little less accurate
because it is much easier to gather an intense amount of data if you can apply
that data to all the houses. It is very expensive to gather and sort
through all that data and apply it to one house. The appraiser is not in
charge; the computer company is in charge. A lot of appraisers use Mass
Appraising and my reaction to this is art can hire science but science cannot
hire art. Assessing is an art and they laid off 85 assessors who were
practiced at an art. Then they hired a computer company with computer
geeks deciding what art is and hired people to work for that company who don?t
understand anything except what the computer tells them. So we got pretty
bad assessments.
They redefined land in violation of the state
law. The land under my house is worth $9,000 and the one next door that is
identical was said to be worth $1,000. Zoning doesn?t allow the houses
that are there which is a subject for another discussion. My land is under
a house and therefore, it has a variance that allows the house to be there, the
variance they said was a land value. I argued that the variance is a
building value because if there is no building there is no variance. They
said you were granted a variance because you were grandfathered in. They
said the vacant lot next door was never granted a variance. I said the lot
next door had a building on it when the zoning law was passed. The building
went, the value and the variance went. It didn?t matter, and I didn?t have
the resources to fight this in court. The whole assessment scheme is in the
Pennsylvania Supreme Court now so somebody who does have the resources is
fighting it.
My sense of things is that the
assessors themselves are the least corrupt. Politicians are not so much
corrupt because they get bribes but because the public is corrupt. The public is
corrupt because the people in the richest neighborhoods show up in mass.
At one public hearing this woman wearing a mink thing on her shoulders talked
about how the elderly are poor. Somebody said we have special tax
giveaways for the elderly poor, and she said we don?t want your charity.
And I thought you are not entitled to it, lady, you spent $10,000 on something
to put on your shoulders. So the public is really the most corrupt aspect
of the assessment system. Whenever there is a reassessment and assessments
are made better, people who scream about how bad the reassessments are still
below what they should be assessed, but much closer to what they should be
assessed. They basically want the poor neighborhoods to pay their own
taxes and their taxes, too.
I
think the assessors are operating under a system where no good deed goes
unpunished. We need them because land tax died when this bad reassessment
came in Pittsburgh. They need us because there is nobody standing up for the
assessors. It rings hollow when the people who do the assessing try
to stand up for themselves. ?You are just doing this to try to protect
your job? kind of thing. We need to start getting involved in the
assessment issue and step away from the land tax thing and realize that without
good assessments you can?t have a land tax. The assessment issue is the
first issue.
All the assessors in Pennsylvania are
appointed. In Philadelphia they are appointed by the Judiciary. It
is not working well there either. But I always considered assessors to be
judges of sorts. Regarding elected versus appointed, I think both of
them have problems. An elected official has to run on the assessments
track record. If he is appointed he is appointed by somebody who is
running on something entirely different.
FRANCIS K. PEDDLE, Ph.D., Barrister and Solicitor,
is a director
of the Canadian Research Com. On Taxation.
I am from Ottawa in the province of Ontario
in Canada. The assessing authority in Ontario is the Municipal Property
Assessment Corporation (MPAC). I want to highlight some of the public's
disenchantment with this assessing authority. My perspective is going to be from
the taxpayer appeal standpoint. I have represented people in tax appeals for
over 20 years. I will focus on some of the public's disenchantment of where the
focus lies now. MPAC came into existence after a change in
legislation in the late 1990s. The assessing used to be done by the Ministry of
Finance in Ontario. The government changed it and turned it into a Crown agency
which actually contracts with municipalities. Municipalities are legally
obligated to contract with MPAC to do assessments for that
municipality. MPAC is a big organization. It has a budget of around $160
million and assesses about $1.45 trillion of property value. 85% of those
assessments are residential. The public agitation against MPAC comes from the
residential side. Of course, there are disputes by the industrial
and commercial and multi-residential classes, but they do it in a nuanced way
with ongoing tax appeals with hired guns.
This comes back to the issue of disclosure
which is always a big issue with respect to property assessments. One of the
things that has developed is a very advanced electronic registration system in
Ontario that we created in private partnership with an organization called
Teranet, Inc. They have digitized over a hundred million documents, which was a
billion dollar project over 10-15 years.
As a real estate lawyer I can now register
your mortgage from my home office. I can access the system as I am a licensee
and lawyers can do this. It is probably the most advanced electronic
registration system in the world. Now the land transfer tax that goes with
the registration of every deed automatically goes to MPAC. There is a fee. This
gives them the property values since the consideration for the sale is on the
deed and the land transfer fee is a percentage of the purchase
price. MPAC is a sub-licensee of
Teranet.
Teranet has worldwide
exclusive rights; there are proprietary restrictions on what they
can do with this that has caused some access problems. Also, the other side of
it is that MPAC has developed some commercial products to sell to financial
services and they claim proprietary interest over this also and you can't
disclose it that way. So we have the agreement with Teranet and they have
their own commercial product development in which they are claiming intellectual
property rights.
The other issue is the relationship between MPAC
and the judicial body that reviews appeals if you complain about your taxes, and
that is called the Assessment Review Board (ARB) in Ontario. It is
the
only place to go for the actual trial de nova as we call it, trial of
fact. If you want to go to high court you have to do it by an application
for leave to appeal which is very difficult to do and you have to go to
divisional court in Ontario, the court of Superior Justice. It is not easy to do
that. Most people 90% of the time go to the ARB. There is a
tense relationship between the ARB and MPAC. MPAC views the ARB as
some kind of lower operation with political appointments of people making
decisions over assessments that they have no clue. There is a real clash
between the ARB's approach which is more particularized property assessment
approach to things versus the assessors and their mass appraisal approach.
So MPAC views ARB as arbitrary and too supportive of the taxpayer.
The issue there is a legal issue of equity
versus current value. Property in Ontario has to be assessed at current
value. A lot of the politics of assessment comes from volatility in the
real estate market. We all believe the land value tax will smooth that out
and take care of it, but it won't really. There will always be some degree
of the guy next door puts up a 2-story house and raises your land value.
It is true, I believe, that the land value tax will eliminate a lot of these
problems and take away the volatility, but that is a big problem. What
happens is that politicians come in and say, OK we are just going to freeze the
assessment. The legislation of the late 1990s went to annual assessments.
I think it is a good thing and we can certainly do that with all the digitizing
of all this data. They then had a lot of run up as was globally the case
of real estate values, in the first years of the new century. Then there
was the issue of a political set of problems of those assessments for 2006-07-08
years. In 2009 we are into a new reassessment. The next tax bills in
Ontario are going to change.
There is the issue of politicians dealing
with the volatility and also MPAC tending to be under-resourced. They
basically take the position we can't do it every year. We don't have
enough people to go out and do municipal assessments. So in 2006 the
Ombudsman of Ontario got involved, and he made a lot of recommendations on how
to clean up the system. Most of his recommendations are not assessment
reform recommendations, and 90% of them are procedural issues.
There are three quick areas that are of prime
importance. One is the issue of disclosure. These assessing
authorities develop Mass Appraisal system models. There is a syntax of
formulas used, the databases used, etc., but basically they don't want to reveal
them and say it wouldn't help the ordinary taxpayer much anyway. So it is
very hard to get all the information that goes into the mass modeling for
neighborhoods and things like that.
The next issue is current value versus
equity. The ombudsman says it should all be on current value. We
would all agree with that. I as a tax lawyer representing the guy who is
appealing his taxes, will go in and look at the current value of the
individualized property and that is how I win my case. That is how I convince
the Board, the ARB to come around to lowering the assessment by bringing this
data in, which he may have and may not have accounted for, or he creates some
fiction somehow that you sold your property on the base year valuation date of
$300,000 but we are going to assess you $500,000 because that is what our model
tells us to do. I, of course, say the best evidence is the sale on the
valuation date.
The other issue is legalistic, the onus of
proof. The onus of trying to show that the assessment made by the assessing
authority is not correct is currently on the shoulders of the taxpayer, of the
property owner. The Ombudsman said no, there are reasons why you should not do
that. He wants to switch the onus to be on the assessing authority.
MPAC disagrees with that at this point. That could really shift the
politics of appeals, and would change the approach of representing people before
these Boards.
TED GWARTNEY, Chief Assessor of Greenwich,
CT.
As an assessor I am going to
give you some remarks that I have received from people. Some are
humorous. People come in and honestly express their views and try
everything they can do to get a reduction in their
assessment.
About the
assessing profession, first, I think almost all assessors are honest, hard
working individuals who are attempting to do the best job they can within the
budget they have to estimate property values. Once in a while you hear
about corruption and it is written up in the newspaper. Fortunately, when
there is corruption I think the crooks get caught and voted out.
Most in the assessing profession are hard working individuals who do an
excellent job. I like the comment about it being kind of like a Judge
because it really is. Assessors are responsible for making hard decisions
about what property is worth, and that is a judgment call. To do that you
have to analyze and look at all the evidence there is. They have to talk
with the people and listen to what their views are and then make a judgment
call. It requires a lot of education and
experience.
Here are some
comments that people have
made.
?Why not value
everything for less than what it is worth and then no one would
complain.?
Unfortunately, this
does happen in some assessing jurisdictions but the assessors should be
valuing very close to market value. What many people don?t realize
is that if you are doing a perfect job, if on average you are getting everybody
near market value, The average assessment means the middle point, and that means
that half are slightly above or slightly below market value. And of course
you hear from those that are above the average. And that is part of an
open system where people can complain when they feel like they are assessed too
high.
?Why don?t we just look at sales
that sold for less than my house??
-
Some sales are sold for more than what they
are worth, and other ones are bargains. People get bargains, and we have
to realize that. And in assessing we do a verification of all the sales,
and we have to flag out those that are not really valid market evidence:
sales within families, problems or sales with a special interest involved.
?I am planning on selling my house.
It is assessed for less than it is worth. Please add on all the
improvements that I have made in the past
years.?
I have had many real estate
agents come in and say exactly that. ?We are going to sell this house for
$X and you have it appraised for 90% of $X (that). Are you sure you have
all your information
correct??
?If you really
think my land is worth this much, why don?t you buy
it??
Once in a while you have
to say, well, if you really want to sell it, for that low price maybe I will buy
it.
?I know I can sell my house
for many times what I paid for it, but I just want to live
here.?
Great, we want you to
live here too, just pay your fair share of taxes.
This comment comes from my own
experience. I completed a revaluation in Hartford, CT in 1973.
We had used an automated system and we had revalued all the
property. Hartford had a poor north end and a moderate south
end. After we completed the revaluation, all of a sudden people
realized that people in the poorer north end had been paying higher taxes than
they should have been, and people in the moderate south end were not paying
their fair share of taxes. That became a political issue. Finally
the town attorney called me up and he said well, you must find a reason not to
use this revaluation or we will find a replacement for you and he will find a
reason. That is actually true and it is probably the best thing that ever
happened to me. I told him I am not going to change it; there is nothing
wrong with the revaluation. I gave my friend Mason Gaffney a call, and I
said I don?t like this job that I have and do you have any suggestions. He
said, well, you know, they are talking about doing something for the school tax
and the assessment reform in British Columbia, and I was just appointed at the
Research Institute up there, so let me talk to the new government and see if
they need any assistance. So I got a one year contract to go to British
Columbia and it was the real opportunity of my life because I got to be involved
in what became a total reworking of the assessment system and the school
tax. I became the Assessment Commissioner and stayed there for
13 years. It helped my career and my future. I am now back in
Connecticut and I have a lot of friends in Connecticut, and Connecticut does one
of the best jobs of assessments of anywhere in the United States. So I
think we have a very good system.
Sales in
most states are public information. In Connecticut in particular all deeds
get recorded and we get an electronic copy within a few minutes of all the deeds
as they are recorded and we process them immediately. Every morning we
have six appraisers who come to our office just to check on the sales that
occurred the prior day just to keep them current of what is happening. The
Assessor?s office is a vital source of information about what is happening in
the community. Also, we have a geographic information system and the
public makes good utilization of the assessing office.
JOSHUA VINCENT, president of the Center for the Study of
Economics
(Josh Vincent presented a power point presentation.)
I am following in the foot steps of Steve Cord who
always said adjure assessors, ignore assessments, but we can?t.
There comes a time when we have to face the fact that if there are inequities in
assessment, even if we brought in a land value tax it wouldn?t improve things
and indeed might hurt the lives of very poor people. We can?t have a land
value tax on the ground in the city if we don?t have numbers.
I have every zip code in the city of Philadelphia,
and these are numbers from the fiscal year 2007. I sorted it by the
poorest median income neighborhood to the richest. Whoever knows
Philadelphia knows that north Philadelphia east is by far the poorest
neighborhood in Philadelphia. That is the median, the assessment ratio is
72%, the assessment ratio that is required by the state of Pennsylvania for
Philadelphia to meet which they do city-wide. And this is where the
politics of assessment come in. They satisfy the law by reaching a median
of 72%. That is the median of income. We have the median income for
north Philadelphia of $13,800 a year, median family income. That is
about as poor as it gets in a city in this country. Then we get up to
Manayunk where we have an average median income of $43,000, etc. You
can see the trend. What?s interesting is that if we take the ratio of
market value, in other words what the government assessors say the property is
worth to actual sales, you see not as strong a correlation
downwards. In the same neighborhood, north Philadelphia east, they
are valued essentially at 117%, almost 117% above market value. The legal
target is 72%. The poorest neighborhood is valued at 117%. Then when
you get to the richer neighborhoods you see that they are assessed at far below
what the target is. And that is essentially the issue that we have to face
every day as people who think that the property tax should be the primary
source of revenue for government and that the land value tax should be an
alternative. When you match these two together you can see the upward
trend of income and essentially more of a broken tooth, but as you go to a
richer neighborhood you see that the percentage of value to actual sales gets
dramatically different.
We often talk about other states. In the city
of New London, CT, they just had a reassessment done, and the target there
is supposed to be 100% of market value. We took all the arms length sales,
just like in the last case, arms length meaning an appropriate exchange for
property, not a family and not a special purchase. You have this
sort of a weird aspect where a boarding house is valued far above what was paid
and then you down to commercial buildings. Single family is about 80%, and
then down here you have some very big ticket items indeed. This is after
the reassessment in 2008. We have the biggest sale in New London in
about 10 years and it is an office building . It sold for $2.5
million, but the appraisal is $815,000. Go down to one family again
and you see that the difference between the appraisal and the arms length sales
prices (these are aggregated, these are the totals) is fairly dramatic.
Again you can look, one is supposed to be the median line and you can see
literally hundreds of houses (this is disaggregated data) that are valued at 47%
of true sales price , and then you see up here the ones that are assessed
way above what 100% of market value is. This is sort of composite of
GIS and regular spread sheets; houses that are poor ( in other
words, houses that sell for $100,000 or less ) are often valued above 100% of
market value. Essentially data is going to be key to overturning the bad
politics of assessments.
In Allegheny county where we have been
working, we have an example what I call the sin of base year
values. Base year values are so popular with elected officials
because, of course, you can say at the citizens meetings, at which only the
middle class or the bourgeoisie show up, we are just going to keep your values
essentially where they were and not much is going to change.
In the entire county of Allegheny I picked at
random a few towns that Dan Sullivan and Dr. Herbert Barry and other people from
Allegheny County know, but the Sabre Systems assessment is the fair market
value, the appraised value that was established in 2001-2002.
The Democratic Chairman, whose name is Amarato, said we are going to
freeze assessments because that is the fair thing to do. This is Fox
Chapel which is delightful place where people have horses and their children?s
teeth are all straight, and the median income is very high. You can see
that when the appraisal was done the house values were very high, but that is a
base year. But what if we start looking at fair market residential
sales prices, and look at the sales prices over the past three years, and you
see that the difference, the drop is pretty dramatic. Fox Chapel is now
60% of what the fair market is. Sewickley Hills is a much smaller place,
but still just as delightful, with Chevy suburbans and wooden side wagons, and
they have a high median income as well and you can see they have dropped to
about 60% of market value. Then we go to Sewickley, which is middle class,
and you see that they have maintained their relationship to the old market
value. In Wilkensburg , which is an equity distressed place, they
are bearing the highest brunt and a statistically significant higher brunt of
property tax now that this base year system has been put into place. With
this data I have been able to replicate it all over the state of
Pennsylvania, in New York state, and in Connecticut. It is a trend.
It is a pattern. It is a system of practice.
In closing, I say annual assessments please.
STEVE GARDNER, Public Policy Research Center, University of
Missouri
The people in this room share an almost universal
belief that the taxes on land should be greater than the taxes on human made
improvements. A great number of finance experts throughout the
country and world agree. I would suggest that one of the many reasons that
it is not happening is that in the United States we are not prepared to make it
happen, and we are not prepared to make it happen because of politics. As
you know and as this panel has discussed this morning, in order to make any
property tax system work properly you have to get the values
right. Getting the values right in a split rate system is more difficult
than in a single rate system because you have to get two values right.
Because of the state of the art in regard to getting land values right is more
difficult than it is to get improvement values right. Why? It
is very simple in my mind; it is because of politics. Largely,
I think we pay attention to the wrong politics. It is very common for
people to say, well, assessors don?t get the values right. That is
because of politics, and it is because in many cases they are elected and that
is what they are paying attention to. It is because assessors don?t like
to be buried in appeals and therefore it is better to underassess than to
overassess. It is because assessors don?t want to be super unpopular and
have to deal with all the recriminations, media, complaints, and phone calls,
and in a few cases, I would submit, it is because you need to take care of
buddies. However, I believe we should pay a whole lot more attention to
property values. In most states in the U.S. there is a state level
authority whose job is to police whether assessors are getting the job done
properly and to raise fire alarms when issues are significant.
Before I get to them, let?s talk about the
legislatures a little bit. A lot of attention with regard to the
legislature has to do with dealing with ?policy change?. But there is very
little attention to what the legislatures do or don?t do with regard to getting
the implementation of the property right. The reason for that is that they
do not care. Why don?t they care? Well, number one, in the U.S. the
money from the property tax goes to local benefit, not the state
government. So as a state legislator if property taxes represent a
fraction of 1% of the budget, why would I give that particular policy a lot of
attention. Second, if there is a reason to give it a lot of
attention, it is probably that it is just very complex. A legislator
has a hundred issues to deal within any given session, so why would I deal with
one of the most complex and arcane. So, what does the legislature care
about? And when do they care about the property tax? Only when the
public screams. And when the public screams, what does the public care
about? They care about the results and the symptoms of the
problem. They do not care about the underlying cause of the problem.
They have no clue in most cases as to what it is. And so
the legislature reacts. And how do they react? They react
by addressing the symptoms and ignoring the underlying causes. There is supposed
to be a fix for all that, and that is the state agency. I am going to
refer to them as the State Tax Commission because that is the phrase used in a
lot of states, but it varies. Why don?t they get the job done?
Because of politics. Who do they serve? In theory they serve
getting the implementation consistent with the law. But do they?
What kind of politics do they face? While they are supposed to police
assessors, if they don?t please assessors you got a whole bunch of assessors
running to the legislature. And legislators often care about what is
local, not what is general, in other words, the law.
Another reason that the state tax commissions
have politics that veers from what we think it ought to be is because the
legislature has wants. The legislature wants to assess farmland value,
they want to take care of senior citizens, or they want to take care of rich
screamers. Whatever it may be, the legislature has wants, and the
legislature has power. And they exercise that power by translating that
into that state tax commissions had better do what they want done.
Taxpayers also have wants and they are very vocal about those wants when they
get upset. For example, when assessors in the past may not have done the
job right, and then they decide to do it right, then there is a big change and
that concerns the taxpayers.
State tax commissions also have their own
agendas. They have what they want. In the present, they want to
maintain or increase their appropriations, and the legislature can say no.
Second, they want to make sure that they don?t have to deal with a whole bunch
of new problems and future problems. Therefore, they are not all that
interested in major change, certainly in the short term. What I believe is
a very critical issue is that they don?t want to admit the problems that they
may have caused and therefore they have to defend the past. And as long as
you are defending the past, you cannot stand up and say this is what needs to be
done to improve the implementation of value.
In short, you can?t really proceed to a land value
tax system unless you can get valuation right and in most jurisdictions, not
all, they are not being done right. And they are not being done right, not
because the state of the art isn?t there, sometimes because the resources aren?t
there, but largely because the political forces are such that there is no desire
to get it done.