Hurricane season costs tax collectors as well as homeowners

July 9, 2013

Tropical Storm Chantal, the third named system of the 2013 Atlantic hurricane system, is churning toward the United States.

Homeowners, especially those with coastal properties, are keeping an eye on the system.

Tropical Storm Chantal spaghetti runs 070913 scenario header
Tropical Storm Chantal spaghetti runs 070913 map
Tropical Storm Chantal spaghetti runs 070913 sourcing

But tax collectors also keep close watch on tropical storms because especially destructive ones cost onto only the homeowners, but local governments' treasury balances.

The most recent example is in New Jersey. Tax assessments on more than 40,000 properties
in the Garden State are down by $4.3 billion because of damage caused by
Superstorm Sandy.

Ortley Beach NJ Superstorm Sandy damage June 2013 vy  Rosanna Arias_FEMAOrtley Beach, N.J., June 4, 2013 — Workers wrap up the day by enclosing
a demolition site in Ortley Beach of homes too damaged by Hurricane
Sandy to be saved. Photo by Rosanna Arias/FEMA.

That hit to New Jersey property tax rolls was calculated by the Press of Atlantic City, which acquired the previously unreleased figures from the state Department of the Treasury via an Open Public Records Act request.

Storm damages homes, tax values: The reductions, according to the newspaper, were made in
the months after the storm as the Division of Taxation created a
system for tax assessors in the hardest-hit communities to use that
would help track losses to ratable bases.

Through the spring, the state
compiled that data into one document to help analyze which local
governments would see their budget revenue be most affected by the
storm. The storm affected assessments in all but three of the state's 21 counties.

The figures, says the Press, represent reductions on properties that could not be
immediately repaired and will therefore be valued less for 2013 tax
purposes.

The good news for the property tax collectors and mixed news for the real estate owners is that the drop in assessed taxable value is for most just temporary.

"If they got a reduction, and if they made repairs, they could end up
going back to full value at the start of the year," George R.
Brown, Cape May County's tax administrator, told the newspaper.

Prepare for potential damage: As the 2013 hurricane season progresses, storm activity likely will increase. So now is the time to prepare.

As you make your physical and financial disaster preparations, make sure a property inventory is part of your plan. This written and photographic record will help you when you make insurance claims.

And the post-storm photos also could help show your tax collector that your property tax bill needs to be adjusted downward until you get your home repaired.

You also might find these items of interest:

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