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Commentary: Reform property taxes — then eliminate them

Anne Englert, For the Express-News

May 15, 2022

We tell their stories, because the circumstances are real.

The middle-aged woman who inherited her grandmother’s home, the young couple wanting to start a family but wondering how long they can pay the property taxes before they are forced to move; the family that takes out a loan to meet their property tax; the long-term residents in a rapidly changing neighborhood who face displacement; the resident on a fixed-income forgoing repairs and sometimes necessities to pay even moderately rising property taxes.

We know these people. They are our neighbors. They are us.

High property taxes displace families, severing support and destabilizing neighborhoods.

We are tired of Band-Aid solutions. We’re tired of attending workshops on how to protest our property taxes instead of workshops on how to change the system. We are tired of the anxiety that hits us when the tax bill comes. For some homeowners, the property tax is a financial burden.

No one should have to spend 15 to 20 hours to take on the government, pleading their case for their home’s appraisal to be lowered a few thousand dollars, year after year. No one should fear the property tax process, but many do because they don’t have the resources to fight back.

Until property taxes are eliminated, we implore our elected officials at all levels — school boards, county, municipal and state — to create change that is meaningful for homeowners. Elected officials have proven that if they want to do something, they can. They have the power and the tools to lower the tax rate and give the maximum protection to homeowners.

They should:

Run a more efficient government. It is time to stop waste. Governments are to be good stewards of other people’s money. Fair and efficient government must do the right thing so homeowners and renters can live in their communities affordably and not be taxed out of their home.

Cut the tax rate in half.

Double or triple the homestead exemptions. The $5,000 exemption offered by the county is roughly only $30 a year, equal to three trips to the coffee shop, one month’s prescription, a half-tank of gas or one bag of dog food.

Freeze the tax burden on the valuations at the year the purchase was made. If someone buys a $150,000 home, they pay taxes at that rate until they sell it. If someone buys a million-dollar home, they know they will pay approximately $33,000 each year in property taxes until they sell.

Replace the property tax with a strong consumer tax.

Taxing residents out of their homes is an ethical, not just economic, issue.

We cannot continue living in fear that we will not be able to afford our property taxes. Join forces for property tax relief, reform and, ultimately, elimination.

Anne Englert has lived in San Antonio for 25 years; she is a Dellview Area Neighborhood Association board member.

Demolitions Lead to Increased Property Taxes

On April 14, 2019, Bexar County Chief Appraiser, Michael Amezquita told the San Antonio Express News that the “biggest horror shows” when it comes to property tax increases are, “Anything within 3 miles of the Pearl.” Among many near-downtown neighborhoods, he specifically called out Tobin Hill North.

In 2016 a developer bought two older but structurally sound duplexes at 421 and 425 E. Mistletoe Ave. in Tobin Hill North. They obtained a demolition permit, cleared the land and built six two-story houses, facing a center drive. In some cities, they call these slot homes, and in 2018, Denver passed an ordinance which does not allow themto be built there any longer. The houses on Mistletoe were completed this spring and they sold for between $325,000 and $370,000 each. And they are driving our property taxes up.

Of course, most people will tell you is that these new, two-story houses will not be used as a comparable property with our older, single-story bungalows and cottages. They are right, the improvements portion of your tax valuation won’t use these new houses as comps. However, that only accounts for part of your tax valuation.

New house next to an existing one on E Mistletoe Ave.

Between 2015 and 2017, the Bexar Appraisal District increased only the improvements portion of the appraisal by about $2000 on my house, which is across the street from the new Mistletoe development. In that same time, the land value went from $25,000 to $61,000. This is about a 144% increase in just two years. The 2019 valuation has now increased our land value to $177,290. It has nearly doubled again, a 369% increase over four years. 

Sometime between 2015 and now, the Appraisal District realized that the original house on each lot could be torn down and three could be built in its place. Try going to Bexar Appraisal District and arguing that your landis not worth what they say it is.

Since January 2019, the Office of Historic Preservation has received seven demolition applications for Tobin Hill. Of those, three have been approved, two are on hold for evaluation by the Historic Design Review Commission, and two, 430 and 434 E. Magnolia, are still awaiting a decision by OHP. 

Like the properties on Mistletoe, 430 and 434 E. Magnolia are on a quaint and quiet street on the northern end of Tobin Hill.  While this part of Tobin Hill is not currently designated as Historic, it is surrounded on all four sides by Historic Districts: Monte Vista to the north and west, River Road to the east, and the Tobin Hill Historic District to the south. These two homes would be contributing to structures to a future Historic District in this area which has been identified in the past as being eligible for Historic Designation. 

400 block of E Magnolia and E Mistletoe

The applications for the demolition of these houses on E. Magnolia have generated a lot of neighborhood concern. OHP received 24 letters of opposition to the proposed demolition of these homes. This far exceeds what OHP’s Scout SA team typically receives for demolition applications. It was enough that Shanon Shea-Miller, Director of the City of San Antonio’s Office of Historic Preservation, requested a site meeting between Scout SA and the property owner. 

During the meeting with the property owner, we discovered that the owner believes he can get a better offer on the land if it is vacant. However, these houses are occupied and in good structural condition. Demolition should be a last resort, not a quick path to making a buck.  While the Appraisal District views the land as more valuable than the houses built on them, to the renters living there, this is home. 

When taxes go up, it makes it hard to stay in your home. This is how many homeowners go from living in housing that is affordable to becoming cost-burdened by their home. Landlords in my neighborhood, unable to get a homestead exemption on their rental properties, will need to raise rents to cover increased property taxes. Land values that have doubled, or in cases like mine, gone up 369% in just 4 years, mean that rents will rise to compensate for this increase. It is likely that many renters who could afford a place in Tobin Hill North in 2015 will soon be so cost-burdened they will have to find somewhere else to go.

430 and 434 E. Magnolia, photo from Google

430 and 434 E Magnolia are not stunning. They are not what some would consider worthy of a Landmark status. They are humble homes, and some of the last remaining affordable housing we have in Tobin Hill North. They are currently providing affordable housing in an area where finding an apartment or house to live in is becoming increasingly expensive.  The demolition of these homes, which are both currently occupied, and in sound structural condition, will cause the direct displacement of these residents. 

We need to focus on preserving the affordable housing that we already have. San Antonio’s Housing Policy Framework specifically calls for the preservation of naturally-occurring affordable housing, especially rental units, like the duplex at 430 E Magnolia and the home behind it at 434 E Magnolia.  The Policy calls for the prevention and mitigation of displacement, and the need to address the impact of rising property taxes on housing affordability. 

It is clear that in neighborhoods like Tobin Hill North, affordability is tied to the land valuation. Demolitions like the ones proposed on E. Magnolia should be vehemently opposed. Our city: Development Services, the Office of Historic Preservation, our City Council and our Mayor should be denying requests for demolitions on houses that are structurally sound, and especially those that are occupied. It is in the best interests of not only those currently in need of affordable housing, but also of those who live nearby, who don’t want to see exponential growth in their tax bill every year. 

430 and 434 E. Magnolia will go before the Historic Design Review Commission for consideration of Landmark Designation in order to prevent demolition on May 1 at 5:00pm. The Tobin Hill Community Association would appreciate letters in support of the Landmark Designation of 430 and 434 E. Magnolia. Statements can be emailed to jessica.anderson@sanantonio.gov

We are also asking for community support in attending the hearing and speaking in favor of the Landmark designation. If you intend to speak, please sign up in person at 1901 S. Alamo St. on the day of the hearing. You may sign up anytime between 2:30 and 5:00 PM before the cases are heard.  

Rising Property Taxes: Paying a Fair Share

Property taxes in downtown neighborhoods are on a steep incline. We have conversations about them on Next Door and FaceBook and in neighborhood meetings and wonder what is causing the rise and how we can fight it. We talk with our next door neighbors across the fence to see if they are fighting the increase this year.  If you are upset about your property taxes and want to fight them, it may feel as though you are fighting a losing battle. You are right.  You may be able to lower them this year, but the fix is temporary and will not address the systemic issues of rocketing property values.

This issues around our rising property taxes seems complicated, but it comes down to one simple idea: Everyone must pay their fair share. The first part of this series explains the heavy burden that commercial property tax laws put on the average homeowner. The solutions are not complicated, but they will take political will which can come only from a concerted effort on the part of citizens for meaningful change. Corporate and large commercial property owners are able to shift their share of the tax burden on to others by the use of unequal comparables, lowered median values, and deep pocket lawsuits.

Unequal Comparables

One of the biggest reasons that large commercial property owners are able to avoid paying for their fair share of taxes is that they are able to compare, for assessment purposes, their properties with those of lesser value creating a tax loss for which residential property owners are responsible.

In 1997 a third paragraph was added to Section 42.26 P a1 and a 2 of the Texas Tax Code which deals with appraisal ratios. The uniform and equal (sometimes called “equity”) provision passed without notice but it provides a lucrative opportunity or loophole for commercial property owners to exploit to pay less in property taxes. It states:

“The district court shall grant relief on the ground that a property is appraised unequally if the appraised value of the property exceeds the median appraised value of a reasonable number of comparable properties appropriately adjusted.”

Bexar County Chief Appraiser Michael Amezquita states in one of my favorite quotes, “Paragraph 3 is where the money is. Any blind monkey can win that deal.” (County)

This “equity” provision as well as a series of court decisions have rendered the constitutional requirement that property be taxed in proportion to its market value moot.

Corporate and commercial property owners continue to sue and win large reductions in their appraisals regardless of the market value of their property because of the ambiguity and lack of definition of terms like “reasonable number” and “comparable.”

Since enacted, this provision has undergone some revisions but none more significant and more beneficial to commercial property owners than when the words, “appropriately adjusted” was tacked on to the end of paragraph three in 2003 causing a flurry of  litigation. Through interpretation, an overwhelming majority of judges have sided with the property owners, again, because there isn’t a definition of “comparability” in the tax codes.

These reductions in commercial appraisals has meant hundreds of millions of lost dollars for Texas’s school districts, roadways, emergency medical services and fire protection, a loss homeowners shoulder. “Homeowners pay taxes based on something reflecting market value, but corporate taxpayers just don’t,” said Amezquita. “That’s not equal, and what they’re doing puts upward pressure on tax rates.” (County)

Lowered Median Value on Commercial Properties

The effects of the unequal comparisons allowed by the tax codes to commercial properties is that it lowers the tax base down longer term.  When high value commercial properties are compared to those of lower value the median is lowered. This new lower median level creates a level by which all properties can be reduced. Jim Robinson, who retired from HCAD in May 2013 after serving 28 years at the agency states in the Houston Press, “What we see happening time and time again is tax consultants get everything that’s out there and they’ll pick a set of alleged comparables at the very bottom of the list and argue that they should be adjusted to that.”

The result of the drop in median value is a constant and growing erosion of the tax base” on which Texas’s public-school finance channels are dependent.

Deep Pocket Lawsuits

In 2013,  State Rep Mike Villarreal (D) and Austin property tax agent Jim Popp authored HB585 to make administrative changes to the tax code. It was an attempt to address issues of bias, lack of responsiveness and transparency in Appraisal Review Boards and local appraisal districts. Rep. John Otto (R)  added an amendment that states if a property owner wins an appeal of the property’s value (whether through litigation, arbitration, or through a board hearing) the appraisal district would have a higher burden of proof if it wanted to raise the value the next year.

It did not take long for attorneys to act on behalf of their clients: In San Antonio in 2014, JW Marriott Hill Country Resort & Spa, with a construction price tag that nearly eclipsed $600 million, had been able to lower its value by $125 million by winning multiple lawsuits against the Bexar County Appraisal District.

 Bexar County Chief Appraiser Michael Amezquita told the Houston Press: “I’ve been sued every year by [JW Marriott],” Bexar County at the time was facing $10.3 billion in appraisal-reduction litigation compared to the annual $4 billion to $5 billion average. In the 2011 tax year, BCAD’s ten most expensive courtroom losses to class A commercial and industrial property owners resulted in an absence of $1.8 million in tax revenue for San Antonio-area school districts.

“Valero sues every year,” Amezquita added. “H-E-B is suing every year now. They never used to sue me before.” (http://www.houstonpress.com/news/texas-is-losing-out-on-millions-of- dollars-thanks-to-its-defective-property-tax-system-6601492)

In 2016 local news aired a piece on deep pocket lawsuits by commercial and corporate property owners to lower their appraisal values: “These are the cases set for trial, hundreds of them,” declared Deputy Chief Appraiser for Bexar County Mary Kiekie. But she noted, none of these will ever make it to trial, lawyers will settle it in litigation.” Litigation is the ugly thing that nobody knows about,” she explained.

Of their $15 million budget, in 2016, at least $1 million had been spent on lawyers litigating.” It’s shifting the burden from the corporate and commercial properties onto the backs of the homeowners,” Kiekie said. “The tax rates would go down and still generate the same amount if indeed commercial properties were paying at the same rate that residential properties were paying at.”

Corporate lawsuits had more than doubled in 2016 . From 2009 to 2014, they accounted for an average of 474 lawsuits per year. In 2015, that number jumped to 965.

“It’s a game that the tax lawyers and tax agents are playing, and it’s so easily played,” said Kieke. Last year alone, corporations were able to litigate off almost a billion dollars in taxable value.

Kieke says a loss at trial, even if it’s just by a dollar, could mean a death sentence for her office. So they have to litigate.”If the appraisal district loses at trial, we can be responsible for the other side’s attorney fees up to $100,000 per property, per year,” said Kiekie. “So if Valero sues us on all their convenience stores and puts 130 stores into a lawsuit, they can bankrupt us.” (New4SA)

The problem has been exacerbated by Texas’s absence of sales-price disclosure, which gives property owners a running start in property-tax disputes because appraisal districts must rely on private databases to procure sales numbers. Even then, it’s impossible to seize reliable data for every property.

“Whoever heard of doing an appraisal without sales information?” says Amezquita. Idaho, Utah and Alaska are the only other states that lock away all sales figures on taxable properties.

“It’s like boxing with one hand tied behind your back,” says former Houston County Appraisal District (HCAD) Chief Appraiser Jim Robinson, who retired from HCAD in May 2013 after serving 28 years at the agency. “What we see happening time and time again is tax consultants get everything that’s out there and they’ll pick a set of alleged comparables at the very bottom of the list and argue that they should be adjusted to that.” (Houston Press).

And Now: Dark Store Legal Battle

This from the Texas Comptroller:

Dark store theory primarily concerns the property taxation of big-box stores, behemoth department stores, hardware sellers and other outlets often running to 50,000 square feet or more.

The dark store theory of property valuation, championed aggressively by many big-box retailers, suggests that commercial properties should be appraised and valued the same whether they’re operating or shuttered. They favor appraising all big-box properties as if they were vacant or “dark” to calculate property value, arguing these locations will be difficult to sell because they have little appeal to subsequent buyers. In essence, they’re asking that these properties be appraised according to how the next occupant may use it.

Appraisal districts, by contrast, appraise such buildings according to their “highest and best use,” which in practice means appraising them as operating locations.

The difference between these perspectives, as you might imagine, can be significant. Dark store proponents often ask that the value of their property be reduced by more than half, in one instance from $82 to $20 per square foot. Big-box retailers have pushed dark store theory most vigorously, but the practice has spread to other commercial property types as a way to seek tax reductions.

In Texas, the main proponent of the theory has been Lowe’s Home Improvement, which has 141 stores in the state.

Property tax appraisal methods for commercial properties usually rely on “comparables” — the sale value of similarly situated properties — to determine a property’s market value to a hypothetical buyer. Texas Property Tax Code Section 23.01(a) requires taxable property in Texas to be appraised at its market value as of Jan. 1 of each year.

The Property Tax Code requires determinations of appropriate comparable sales to include the property’s condition, occupancy and any legal burdens. Considering vacant properties as comparables for a property that isn’t vacant is akin to using a ghost town as a “comp” for a vibrant city block.

Bexar County Chief Appraiser Michael Amezquita also believes dark store theory is inappropriate precisely due to the use of comparables, because it begins with the assumption that stores should all be appraised as if they were closed.

“It turns all appraisal theory on its head,” he says. “The first step in any appraisal assignment is to determine the highest and best use of a property. The highest and best use of these properties is usually continued use as a big-box retailer. It’s never appropriate to pretend one could only look to sales of failed, vacant stores for comparables.”

The state comptroller’s office estimates Texas cities, counties and school districts will lose $2.9 billion if Lowe’s wins its Bexar County lawsuit and other commercial properties take up the “dark store” legal argument, potentially leaving homeowners to pick up the property tax burden. (Houston Chronicle)

Solutions

The solutions are simple, finding the political will is much more challenging. While we can fault corporate and commercial property owners for shifting the burden of their fair share to the rest of us, they could make the case that anyone would take advantage of what the law allows. However, if loopholes were closed, If commercial property owners paid their fair share, billions of dollars of revenue would be pumped into our tax base possibly lowering the tax rate of residential property owners. There are other factors such as tax abatements and school financing, but the failure of commercial property owners to pay their fair share contributes greatly to the problem.

This is a legislative issue.

In this last legislative session, HB 27, authored by Rep. Drew Springer -Muenster (R) and backed by Comptroller Glenn Hegar, aimed to limit businesses’ ability to use the unusual legal strategy when contesting their property values. The bill passed out of two committees but never made it to the House floor for a final vote.

In 2013, State Senator Wendy Davis (D) and Rep Sylvester Turn (D) co-authored a bill that would have addressed the ambiguous language of the equal and uniform provision.

In 2009, Rep. Michael Villarreal (D), Sen. Leticia Van de Putte (D), and Sen. Jeff Wentworth (R) authored a series of bills that would require sale-price disclosure in the state.

All of these attempts at property tax reform have failed.

It is up to homeowners to demand that all property owners pay their fair share, no more, no less.