LOUDOUN PROPERTY TAXES
Assessor, Panel Clash Over Appeals Process
|
Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.
|
Friday, November 28, 2008; Page B03
In an office on the fourth floor of the Loudoun County government building, three, maybe four, members of the little-known Board of Equalization of Real Estate Assessments have been passing judgment on property owners' appeals of about $3 billion in tax assessments.
The owners make their case; then the board weighs the arguments and decides whether to lower, raise or uphold the original assessment. Absent from all but one of the more than 40 public proceedings that have been held since June has been the county tax assessor, who valued the homes in the first place. Loudoun is the only jurisdiction in the region that routinely excludes the assessor from the appeals process.
There were no audio recordings of the hearings. The minutes don't include a detailed explanation of the reasoning behind the board's decisions or a breakdown of how members voted.
"It provides a perception that the system's corrupt," said Todd M. Kaufman, Loudoun's tax assessor. "A lot of these things go on behind closed doors."
Board members say Kaufman consistently overvalued properties without rhyme or reason, sometimes assessing property based on its potential, not what it was worth Jan. 1, as is required by law.
Loudoun is experiencing a breakdown in what is supposed to be an arm's-length but cooperative relationship between the assessor, whose office values real estate for tax purposes, and the Board of Equalization, a court-appointed panel authorized to change assessments through appeals.
At stake are millions of tax dollars, the loss of which would have to be offset by the county, possibly through a tax increase. And Loudoun, like other counties in the region, is scrambling to make up revenue shortfalls related to the national economic slowdown.
The number of property owners appealing tax assessments has surged this year across the region. In Loudoun, appeals have more than tripled, from 513 in 2007 to 1,618, according to the board. Other jurisdictions also report jumps from last year: 132 to 611 in Prince William County, 377 to 601 in Arlington County and 562 to 1,617 in Fairfax County.
Officials attribute the increase to several factors, including the weak economy and the housing market decline.
"It's the real estate market being what it is," said Janet Coldsmith, director of the real estate division in Fairfax. "People are looking at all their expenses and trying to save as much as they can anywhere they can. So they're looking here, too."
In Loudoun, property owners -- residential or commercial -- can appeal assessments to Kaufman's office and then to the Board of Equalization, which conducts a public hearing similar to a court hearing before a judge.
Based on the evidence, the panel, which normally has five members but currently has one vacancy, can reduce, increase or affirm the assessor's valuation.


![[The Presidential Field]](http://media.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/graphic/2007/09/17/GR2007091700670.gif)



