24
California Municipal Treasurers Association April 17, 2013 Paul Cowdery

California Municipal Treasurers Association April 17, 2013 Paul Cowdery

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

California Municipal Treasurers Association

April 17, 2013

Paul Cowdery

Why ParcelQuest?

Over 30 Years of Experience

Unique “Public / Private” Partnership

Reciprocal County Relationships

We Speak “County Property Data”

Typical City Budget

Property Tax Revenue

Property Tax Estimates Used to be SIMPLE

2% Plus Turnover & New Development

What Happened?

To understand the present…

We must look to the past

Proposition 13 passed

The EVENT DRIVEN tax assessment era began.

Bought 1988Tax: $2,710

Bought 1994Tax: $3,300 Bought

2005Tax: $7,100

Bought 1971Tax: $970

Typical Neighborhood in 2005

Following the crash…

The game is completely different!

It is not just about ForeclosuresRelative to Assessed Value … It’s Complicated!

Foreclosures Reset to new Prop-13 base year values

Prop-8s do one of three… and two are bad!1.They can return to factored base year2.They can go lower3.They can stay flat and eventually turnover

Example: City of Long Beach

6%

Its no longer just about “The Appeals”

Commercial Appeals used to be “at-risk AV”Now… Everyone wants an appeal

-Tax Consultants assist Commercial property owners by presenting “comps” to Assessor

-The assessor uses a computer (CAMA System) to automatically calculate Residential Prop-8 values

Prop-8 Paradigm has the Same QuestionsBut New Answers

Do you have trend data for my City…?

Are there specific metrics I can follow…?

What will my assessed value be this year…?

If the Roll Closed Today …?

Example of I-TRaC ReportIf The Roll Closed today…

?

In the new Assessment Paradigm…

… The game has changed

Bought 2009REO SaleTax: $3,710

Bought 2015Tax: $6,000 Bought

2005Tax: $7,600

Bought 2010Short SaleTax: $3,500

Typical Neighborhood in 2020

Thank you

Paul Cowdery