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Property Values For Reappraisals Up By Double Digits

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By Jimmie Covington

Shelby County’s assessed value of property for tax purposes this year – which includes reappraisal figures – is up almost $2.1 billion from last year, certified tax roll figures released April 20 by the County Assessor’s Office show.

Countywide, the increase is 12.4 percent, including 11.9 percent in Memphis. The highest percentage increases among suburban municipalities are 14.9 percent in Arlington and 14.6 percent in both Collierville and Millington.

The largest dollar value increase among the suburban municipalities is $219.4 million in Collierville.

Tennessee’s truth-in-taxation law requires all local governments to calculate and adopt a resolution identifying a certified tax rate that would bring in the same amount of property tax revenue as the previous year. (The calculations must be approved by state Board of Equalization officials.)

Options

Governments can set a rate higher than the certified rate by publicly advertising that they plan to adopt a higher rate, holding a public hearing and then adopting the higher rate.

Tax rates higher than the certified rates have been proposed in at least two suburbs – Germantown and Bartlett.

Some Shelby County commissioners have said they want to cut county tax revenue by setting a rate lower than the certified rate.

The governments are allowed to receive new revenue from new construction and other properties that have come onto the tax roll for the first time in the past year.

Calculations used by county officials show new property-assessed value growth totaled $489 million in the year that ended last Dec. 31. Of the growth, $224.5 million was in real estate and $264.5 million was in taxable personal property.

Appeals

Thousands of property owners are expected to appeal their reappraisal figures to the Shelby County Board of Equalization before a June 30 deadline. When the Assessor’s Office mailed out the reappraisal values several weeks ago, the notices suggested that people who believed their new value was incorrect should request an informal review by the assessor’s staff.

The office has announced that taxpayers who were not satisfied with the review results or have not received the results by June 9, should file an appeal with the county Board of Equalization. The board office may be contacted at 901-222-7300 or online at boe.shelbycountytn.gov. The board is located at 1075 Mullins Station Road, Suite C-142, near the Shelby County Corrections Center.

The increased values this year are a far different situation from the last reappraisal year in 2013. At that time, the effects of what has been called the “Great Recession” caused a major drop in home values across the county and nation.  Governments had to increase their tax rates to maintain the same revenue as in 2012. For example, the county’s tax rate went from $4.02 in 2012 to $4.38 in 2013. However, an official in county Assessor Cheyenne Johnson’s office said at the time that even with the higher rate, about two-thirds of homeowners would receive a reduction in their county taxes.

For most homeowners, those reductions have continued until this year’s reappraisal.

No Windfalls…Supposedly

Reappraisals affect property owners individually in an effort to have each person pay his or her fair share of taxes. Generally under a reappraisal, some people pay higher taxes, some pay the same and some pay lower taxes.

County commissioners in May approved a certified county property tax rate of $4.137, a reduction from the past year’s $4.37 for each $100 of assessed value.

Memphis City Council members approved a $3.271 city certified rate, a cut from the current $3.40.

If these figures turn out to be the actual rates that the governments set, the county break-even point on taxes would be a 5.6 percent reappraisal increase. The city’s break-even point would be a 3.94 percent reappraisal increase.

Property owners whose reappraisals increased more than these percentages would have tax increases and those whose reappraisals went down or were less than these percentages would have tax cuts.

Calculations through the years have indicated that in several reappraisal years through the decades Memphis and Shelby County governments have received revenue increases as a result of reappraisals by having appeals allowances in their certified tax rates that produce more revenue than the governments lose in revenue from successful appeals.

State law provides a procedure to address this but it never seems to work as far as Memphis and Shelby County governments are concerned.

Assessed Values for Tax Purposes

 

Places                                 2016                   2017                  Increase        % Increase

Shelby Co. all          $16,871,863,015    $18,963,394,275        $2,091,531,260         12.4
Arlington                       $294,855,710         $338,870,090             $44,014,380         14.9
Bartlett                      $1,146,813,937       $1,303,003,810           $156,189,873         13.6
Collierville                 $1,505,569,330       $1,725,044.030           $219,474,700         14.6
Germantown             $1,447,257,150       $1,637,981,540           $190,724,390         13.2
Lakeland                      $315,999,720          $350,643,485             $34,643,765         11.0
Memphis                 $10,300,420,103     $11,521,720,355        $1,221,300,252         11.9

 

Millington                     $164,444,435          $188,394,465             $23,950,030         14.6
Unincorporated         $1,696,502,630       $1,897,736,500           $201,233,870         11.9

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This post is written by Jimmie Covington, veteran Memphis reporter with lengthy experience and expertise covering governmental, school, and demographic issues. He is a contributing writer with The Best Times, a monthly news magazine for active people 50 and older, where this appears in its latest issue.  


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