Live reporting by
Benjamin Haddix
Councilmembers talk property tax overassessment with city assessor Alvin Horhn, who said the Board of Review is closed and complaints should be referred to the State Tax Commission. The council also approved a resolution to support a continued moratorium on some foreclosures.
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09:00 AM Mar 26, 2024 CDT
Here is a link to today's agenda: pub-detroitmi.escribemeetings.com/Meeting.aspx?I…
pub-detroitmi.escribemeetings.com/Meeting.aspx?I…
The pastor offering the invocation asks God to help the council remember the citizens of Detroit who have been over taxed, are losing their homes, and are owed money by the city…
Lilianna Angel Reyes, the director of the LGBTQ youth drop-in service at the Detroit's Ruth Ellis Center, is being presented with the Spirit of Detroit award.
Absent from today's meeting: Angela Whitfield Calloway – District 2, Fred Durhal III – District 7, and Coleman A. Young II – City Council At Large.
Multiple comments regarding: Detroit's over-taxation of it's people, and April being sexual assault awareness month.
Member Santiago-Romero just shouted out activist frequent public commenter Marguerite Maddox and an Outlier Media article discussing her work: outliermedia.org/marguerite-mad…
outliermedia.org/marguerite-mad…
A lot of discussion regarding Detroit Property Tax (historical and present injustices) and specifically the University of Chicago study regarding the over-taxing / over-assessments.
I have not looked deeply into this, but here is online documentation of the UChicago study: propertytaxproject.uchicago.edu
propertytaxproject.uchicago.edu
And specifically here is the research for Wayne county: s3.us-east-2.amazonaws.com/propertytaxdat…
s3.us-east-2.amazonaws.com/propertytaxdat…
Professor Bernadette Atuahene with University of Southern California speaks in the public comments to remind the city about it's lack of follow through with promised annual Assessment-Ratio Study. She suggests that it is for this reason that all we have to work with is…
… the UChicago study. The Coalition for Property Justice has research by Prof. Atuahene regarding Detroit property taxes: illegalforeclosures.org/research
illegalforeclosures.org/research
I have not read this, but here is the piece of Prof. Atuahene's research (could be useful/illuminating): scholarlycommons.law.northwestern.edu/cgi/viewconten…
scholarlycommons.law.northwestern.edu/cgi/viewconten…
Note of previous comment regarding Prof. Atuahene: Sans exact quotes I took away that she was suggesting that while the city was busy disputing and limiting the existing research, they were also not honoring a commitment to it's own Annual Assessment studies. […]
[…] As a researcher of the subject herself, I gather she knows there is more existing research than just the UChicago study.
(I didn't mean to imply she herself was limiting the research to just one source)
Detroit Assessor Alvin Horn is discussing / answering questions regarding the assessment of property in Detroit.
He says, in terms of the UChicago research (which I gather is the primary source for the council's process in reviewing the assessment in the city): "That report cannot be the basis for our action. It simply does not comply with Michigan Law."
The council is asking Horn when a contract can be provided for the city to do its own research into property assessments or malpractice therein. He gives a very unclear answer. He said (my paraphrasing) he just earlier sent a text trying to find out that very thing.
Member Young II ask Horn why advocates have not gone to the level of the state to try to take this up with the Michigan Tax Commission. Horn suggests because advocates have not done that, it says everything.
annnd that seems dishonest. Though I would have to ask all the people working on this issue on the grassroots level of the people
Horn says the reason for the delay for the contract with an independant evaluator has to do with other organizational bodies (missed which he said) not wanting to get involved because “This has become an attraction. Unfortunately a bit of a circus.”
(So I guess the frustration of people who've had their money stolen, the suggestion of malpractice, and the demand for justice is a "circus".)
So to be clear, Horn's suggestion is that the IIAO (International Association of Assessing Officers) has "cold feet" and is hesitating to take on the contract of evaluating Detroit Assessment practices.
Deputy Chief Financial Officer Sandra Stahl jumps on the call to say that IAAO IS in fact ready to finalize the contract. This is promising, if not a bit confusing.
The discussion with Horn is over. There was a lot going on there. The council passes a resolution to send the "lower value homes" to the assessors officer for review. The consequences of this I'm not sure I totally understand.
If I had to characterize Horn's mode of responding to the council I would say defensive. Defensive of his office's work and resistant to honoring the idea that properties had been over-assessed. That was my impression.
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This concludes my coverage of the Detroit City Council meeting. Learn more about our coverage of local meetings here: Documenters.org
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