He talks about fairness...
Betcha a dollar to a donut that nobody is gonna pay less.
http://www.wxyz.com/dpp/news/region/...essment-system
He talks about fairness...
Betcha a dollar to a donut that nobody is gonna pay less.
http://www.wxyz.com/dpp/news/region/...essment-system
Last edited by Dan Wesson; January-27-14 at 12:48 PM.
This article actually has some writing to it.....
http://www.detroitnews.com/article/2...xt%7CFRONTPAGE
I'll take that bet.He talks about fairness...
Betcha a dollar to a donut that nobody is gonna pay less.
http://www.wxyz.com/dpp/news/region/...essment-system
I hardly think this sounds like an intention to increase taxes:
“We’re going to make a significant step on Monday to get the property tax assessments back in line to where they should be,” Duggan said.
From The Detroit News: http://www.detroitnews.com/article/2...#ixzz2rcg8yRb9
And I hardly think he wants to discourage people from staying in, or moving into, the city.
I agree. Easy to have a knee-jerk reaction from that 2 paragraph WXYZ blurb.I'll take that bet.
I hardly think this sounds like an intention to increase taxes:
“We’re going to make a significant step on Monday to get the property tax assessments back in line to where they should be,” Duggan said.
From The Detroit News: http://www.detroitnews.com/article/2...#ixzz2rcg8yRb9
And I hardly think he wants to discourage people from staying in, or moving into, the city.
Also interesting in that article:
Convincing Snyder to cede one of his two appointments to the Land Bank Authority, which was awarded $52.3 million in redirected mortgage aid to eliminate blight, and shift two city appointments from council and the economic growth agency to the mayor is Duggan's biggest coup so far. The vote culminated an agreement that let Detroit's mayor to pick four members, while the governor made one.
“What you’re seeing is a mayor and a city council president working hand in glove,” Duggan said.
And then he shifted to public lighting:
When is the last time you heard of the Mayor and Council agreeing on a plan?As for lighting in the city’s neighborhoods, the mayor says the current plan for the Detroit Public Lighting Authority is not good enough and would “put Detroit on a plan for the next generation that doesn’t meet the standards of other cities.”
Instead, he and the City Council will present a new plan on Wednesday that will include a mid-street light on nearly every block and the replacement of all old sodium lights with energy-efficient LED lights.
This just in:
http://www.freep.com/article/2014012...ax-assessments
He talks about fairness...
Betcha a dollar to a donut that nobody is gonna pay less.
http://www.wxyz.com/dpp/news/region/...essment-system
Where do we collect our winnings from you at?
http://www.freep.com/article/2014012...ax-assessments
It was never going to be true that no one's taxes would fall--even if taxes on average were going to rise, there are some seriously overassessed properties out there, and the tax rate is more or less fixed. But it looks like the intention is to cut the assessments, and hence the taxes, overall.He talks about fairness...
Betcha a dollar to a donut that nobody is gonna pay less.
http://www.wxyz.com/dpp/news/region/...essment-system
Its all theater if collection rates stay at 50%.It was never going to be true that no one's taxes would fall--even if taxes on average were going to rise, there are some seriously overassessed properties out there, and the tax rate is more or less fixed. But it looks like the intention is to cut the assessments, and hence the taxes, overall.
According to a Detroit News analysis of more than 4,000 appeal decisions from 2010-12 by a state board, Detroit was over-assessing homes by an average of 65 percent.....
I disagree. One thing that discourages people from buying houses in the city is the unreasonable tax bills that come from unrealistic assessments. Most people buying a house aren't planning to go into tax default, even if they may do so eventually.
I agree 100%, but I think the intention is to also actually collect the taxes. iirc it was Orr's intention to lower taxes and make up the difference with a functioning collection system. I imagine Duggan will have the same goal.
I see's it as correcting all the under-assessed and abated properties.
Sort of a rising tide raising more cash. Then collections is a must.
This thread reminds me of holiday dinner table discussions between aged relatives who could not quite make out what the others were saying.
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