Stories poured in from across the state this week as property assessments started arriving in Iowa homeowners' mailboxes. The value of a property is of interest to homeowners for several reasons, not least of which is because it is a key aspect determining how much property tax is levied on a property. Sioux City Journal, Quad City Times, Radio Iowa, and the Cedar Rapids Gazette all published stories about homeowners' shock and dismay about the increased property assessment. One exasperated homeowner remarked, "How does anyone live a normal life when all you do in the morning is wake up and go work to barely live and pay taxes upon taxes upon taxes?" According to news articles, statewide assessment increases are an average of 20-30 percent this year. Some Iowans saw their property rise by as much as $50,000 or $100,000. Property taxes are difficult for many reasons, but principally they are difficult because they are not tied to Iowans' income or purchases. Property taxes are tied to the value of a property someone may have purchased decades ago. Their income may have changed because they retired or had another life change. A huge increase in valuations could lead to a huge increase in property taxes. Many Iowans fear that outcome because they have experienced it repeatedly. It does not have to be this way. The problem with property taxes is rarely an unfair valuation. The problem with property tax increases is local government spending and taxation. Since property taxpayers have yet to get the relief they seek at the local level, they have come to their Iowa Senators looking for relief.
TheIn the coming weeks, the Iowa Senate will continue its work on controlling property tax increases. Senate File 356 is one bill to address rising property taxes. It gets the property tax system back to basics by reinstating hard caps, consolidating dozens of levies, and closing loopholes regularly abused by local governments. The Iowa Senate is not asking local governments to do anything differently than state government has done for the last six years: control spending and return savings to the taxpayer in the form of permanent, sustainable tax relief.
If readers do think their valuation exceeds the market value for their homes, they have an option. Taxpayers can challenge their valuations through property tax appeal boards at the county or city level.
Thank You District 42!
Feel free to contact me with any comments, questions, or concerns regarding how I can best serve you as your Senator. As always, I look forward to another great week of representing the people of District 42!
Comments
Submit a CommentPlease refresh the page to leave Comment.
Still seeing this message? Press Ctrl + F5 to do a "Hard Refresh".