Nine Things I've Learned About Tax From My MomBy the time that you read this, I will be at home in NC with my family as my mom gears up for some major surgery. It's a big deal. I know surgery is always a big deal but this is serious and it's my mom. If you follow the blog, you know that I talk a lot about my mom.
include the following ideas:
• Assess business property based on current use only, instead of “highest and best use” value.
• Cap tax revenue growth for individual local governments.
• Cap tax increases on individual properties or classes of property.
• Full or partial replacement of the property tax with other forms of taxation.
• Assess properties using a moving average value of several years’ assessments instead of using just the current year’s value.
• Simplify the “Truth in Millage” annual notice of proposed property taxes to be more easily understood by taxpayers.
• Increase the amount of homestead exemption and/or index it by percentage of value.
• Institute “portability” or transferability within Florida of the Save Our Homes cap, in whole or in part.
• Phase-out the Save Our Homes tax preference.
• Partial-year assessments of improvements to real property.
• Improve or limit agricultural use classification regulations.
• Protect homestead-related property tax benefits when property is taken for public use by eminent domain.
• Protect homestead-related property tax benefits upon relocation required by military service.
Further Proceedings
A preliminary report was issued by the Committee in December 2006. A mid-term report is due on or before March 1, 2007, and a final report no later than December 1, 2007. Ultimately, the Committee is charged with responsibility to issue recommendations to improve property taxation in Florida through a comprehensive approach, with an emphasis on simplifying the system for all taxpayers.
The responsibility with which the Committee is tasked is fraught with difficulty, since any adjustment to the current system has repercussions throughout the remainder of the property tax administration system of the State. Think of it as a water balloon; if you squeeze one side, the volume of water displaced expands the rest of the balloon. The metaphor is not exactly Archimedean, but it does give you a visual image of the problems involved.
Notably, most of the changes being considered may require a constitutional amendment before implementation. This means that the most the Legislature can do is propose constitutional amendments. After that, it will be up to the voters of the State of Florida whether the proposals will be adopted.
Daniel A. Weiss is an attorney with 25 years of property tax experience and was recently named one of the "Top Lawyers" by the South Florida Legal Guide. For more information go to: www.tannebaumweiss.com
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