Hartford
Advocate
Don’t Know Their Assets From Their Elbows...
Reassessment Promises Higher Tax Bills For
By Jennifer Abel
March 22 2007
Life’s full of things that work well individually but clash together. Like
plaids and stripes. Toothpaste and orange juice. And
high home values and low tax rates.
Wait, what’s wrong with the last pair?
“[There’s] going to be a significant tax increase for many people,” says Judy
Aron of the West Hartford Taxpayers’ Association. Here’s why: every so often,
town governments throughout
The last revaluation before that was in 1999. And between then and 2006 came
this thing called the “housing bubble,” where home prices rose far faster than
incomes. According to Joanne Ferraresso, the city’s
director of sssessment, in 1999 (through 2005) the
average assessment for a single-family home in
That’s an increase of over 70 percent, and even that only applies to homes
fair-to-middling by city standards. Overall, “values rose anywhere from 60 to
200 percent,” says city spokesperson Renee McCue.
Quite a windfall for anyone who wants to sell a house bought in 1999, but a
mixed blessing for those who simply wish to keep living where they are. More
value in the home means more value to be taxed.
So where do those low tax rates come in? Next month, in light of the increased
assessments, the town’s going to lower its mill rate, used to determine
property taxes.
Though mill sounds like million it actually comes from the Latin mille , meaning thousand. It’s a dollar of tax on every
$1,000 in value, and since
Actually, the rate is likely to drop at least 15 points, according to the town
manager’s report to the council. Though it’s too early to say for sure, the new
rate is expected to be around 31.43.
Not low enough, says Aron. She calculated that, with her home’s increased
assessment, the mill rate would have to go down to 24.69 for her tax bill to
match last year’s. What’s worse for homeowners is that they’re paying taxes on
profits they won’t see unless they sell their house.
“We’re paying taxes on unrealized capital gains,” Aron said.
Ferraresso agrees. “The basis for property tax in
The mill rate is calculated every year, basically by taking the cost of the
city budget and dividing it by the property on the grand list. Since the list
remains essentially the same between revaluations, residents see their mill
rates rise each year and recognize that for the tax increase it is. This year,
with the rate drop, some might not realize how much they’ll owe until their tax
bills arrive in June.●
Tell us what you think. E-mail editor@hartfordadvocate.com or
jabel@hartfordadvocate.com
Copyright © 2007, Hartford Advocate