The Assessor’s Office is apparently not pursuing assessed value changes and escape assessments in Santa Cruz County in a timely fashion. The Grand Jury reviewed a year’s worth of permits issued to correct “Red Tag” infractions, and one other permit that came to its attention. Many do not appear to have been correctly assessed. The description included in the Assessor’s Office’s records does not match the information on the permit. The Grand Jury also found that when the Assessor’s Office finds an escape assessment it does not inform (and is apparently not required to notify) the Planning Department unless it notices safety or environmental concerns. This means that the Planning Department may not be able to ensure public safety of the un-permitted construction unless violations are obvious.
Recognize As Built: A building permit that has been issued to recognize previous construction that was done without a building permit. This permit may be requested by the owner to mitigate illegal work done prior to the sale of the house.
Red Tag: A Stop Work Notice (actually a red paper tag) that is issued by the county Planning Department when it finds that un-permitted work is being or has been done. A permit must be issued to the owner or contractors to correct, remove and have inspected the un-permitted modifications.
Assessment: The cash value that the Assessor’s Office places on houses and property.
Escape Assessments: A portion of the assessment on a property that was not properly evaluated. These might be the result of an error by the Assessor’s Office or caused by new construction that was not reported to the county (done without a permit).
SFD: Single Family Dwelling.
Enacted by voters in 1978, Proposition 13 changed the manner
in which the Assessor’s Office can arrive at the value of a property. Most
reassessments are made at the time of an ownership change. Reassessments can
also be made based on new construction that alters the habitable square footage
of the residence. Converting the basement to a playroom, converting the garage
to an extra bedroom or adding a guesthouse are all examples of new construction
which would trigger reassessment. This new construction is appraised at the
present rate (value) while the existing portions of the improvements (home) and
the property stay at their existing Proposition 13 value.
There are approximately 95,000 parcels on the Santa Cruz County Assessor’s Roll. Estimates of illegal units existing in the county range into the thousands.
The Assessor’s Office reports that there are very few escape
assessments in the county. It believes that most people follow the law and that
it isn’t worth the money to pursue those who don’t.
The Grand Jury was unable to find any ordinances or laws that would require or prohibit the Assessor’s Office from reporting escape assessments to the Planning Department. It is the Assessor’s Office’s practice not to report modifications that it finds to the Planning Department unless safety or environmental issues are visible. This practice has been followed for many years.
This report looks at the processes and policies of the Assessor’s Office and its interactions with the Planning Department. The Assessor’s Office is instrumental in the funding of all local county government. The Grand Jury looked at the Red Tag permits that were issued during 2003. The Grand Jury also reviewed one other building permit that came to its attention.
Interviewed:
Santa Cruz County Assessor’s office officials.
Santa Cruz County Planning Department officials.
Reviewed:
Assessor’s Database.
Assessor’s Handbook.
California Revenue and Taxation Code.
Planning Permits.
1. At the sale of a property the individual appraiser (in the Assessor’s Office) reviews the Assessor’s records and the final price to see if the description justifies the price for the property. If the appraiser is concerned, he will go out and review the property to see if the description is accurate.
Response: Santa Cruz
County Assessor’s Office AGREES.
2. The Assessor’s process then relies on the individual appraiser in order to determine if justification exists for seeking escape assessments.
Response:
Santa Cruz County Assessor’s Office AGREES.
3. Property was regularly reappraised in Santa Cruz County until adoption of Proposition 13. As a result of Proposition 13, reappraisal to increase property valuation was generally limited to transfers of ownership and new construction.
Response: Santa Cruz
County Assessor’s Office AGREES.
4. Proposition 13 made regular property reviews less important because a review of building permits would identify new construction.
Response: Santa Cruz
County Assessor’s Office PARTIALLY DISAGREES.
Property reviews are an
important tool for the Assessor. Unfortunately, current staffing levels prevent
the Assessor from conducting any mass property reviews in the County. Prior to
the passage of Proposition 13 the Assessor had an appraisal staff of 20+.
Currently the appraisal staff is at 11. With the number of changes of ownership
and number of permits issued annually we can barely complete our work and turn
the roll over to the Auditor by July 1st as required in Section 616
of the California Revenue and Taxation Code.
5. The Planning Department notifies the Assessor’s Office of every building permit issued.
Response: Santa Cruz
County Assessor’s Office AGREES.
Response:
Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors AGREES.
Furthermore, the
Assessor’s Office is given a copy of the plans for the new construction.
6. The Jury reviewed the 134 Red Tag permits issued during 2003 for this report.
Response:
Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors AGREES.
7.
Seventeen permits involved significant changes in the
habitable square footage.
Response: Santa Cruz
County Assessor’s Office DISAGREES.
This finding is not supported by any reference to parcel numbers or
addresses or any other evidence which would assist this Office in addressing
this issue. Therefore, while the Assessor disagrees with this finding, it is
impossible to further comment.
Response:
Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors NEITHER AGREES NOR DISAGREES.
The finding is not supported by any
reference to parcel numbers or addresses or any other evidence that would
assist the County in evaluating the accuracy of the finding. In the form the
data has been presented in the Grand Jury Report, the Planning Department
cannot tell which records correlate with the data presented to the Grand Jury
by the County.
8.
The following tables illustrate the discrepancies between the
planning permits and the Assessor’s Office’s computer description for the 17
properties identified.
Assessor/Planning Data Comparison
Table 1. Appraisal and
permit information for 17 Red-Tagged parcels, 2003.
Source: Assessor’s parcel database, Santa Cruz
County Planning Department.
Assessor/Planning Data Comparison (continued).
Table 2. Comparison of
property descriptions on the Assessor’s database and the County of Santa Cruz
Planning Department’s records on 17 Red Tag parcels, 2003.
Number of Bedrooms and
Bathrooms.
Source: Assessor’s parcel database, Santa Cruz
County Planning Department.
Assessor/Planning Data Comparison (continued).
Table 3. Comparison of
property descriptions on the Assessor’s database and the County of Santa Cruz
Planning Department’s records on 17 Red Tag parcels, 2003.
Number of Rooms and Units.
Source:
Assessor’s parcel database, Santa Cruz County Planning Department.
Response: Santa Cruz
County Assessor’s Office DISAGREES.
Again, the seventeen items are not identified by either their parcel
number or address so it is impossible to comment on your findings.
Response: Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors NEITHER AGREES NOR DISAGREES.
The finding is
not supported by any reference to parcel numbers or addresses or any other
evidence that would assist the County in evaluating the accuracy of the
finding. In the form the data has been presented in the Grand Jury Report, the
Planning Department cannot tell which records correlate with the data presented
to the Grand Jury by the County.
9. Twelve of the Red Tag permits show 100% change of ownership as the reason for the last reappraisal. One of the Red Tag permits showed an appraisal date after the permit issue date.
Response: Santa Cruz
County Assessor’s Office NEITHER AGREES NOR DISAGREES.
It is unclear of the finding’s
relevance.
Response: Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors NEITHER AGREES. NOR DISAGREES.
The finding is not supported by any reference to parcel numbers or
addresses or any other evidence that would assist the County in evaluating the
accuracy of the finding. In the form the data has been presented in the Grand
Jury Report, the Planning Department cannot tell which records correlate with
the data presented to the Grand Jury by the County.
10. Thirteen Red Tag permits show significant discrepancies between the Assessor’s description and the description from the Planning Department on the permit:
· Four initially reflect the added illegal rooms in the Assessor’s description but do not show the lower number of rooms when the permit required that the rooms be removed.
· Seven show a lower total number of rooms on the Assessor’s description than are shown on the permit information.
· Four show one unit on the Assessor’s description when the permit requires the removal of the kitchen fixtures taking the property from two units to one unit.
Response: Santa Cruz
County Assessor’s Office PARTIALLY DISAGREES.
The number of rooms is not as important to
the Assessor as is the correct square footage of the structure. While attempts
are made to determine the room count it is not always possible to gain access
or talk to the property owner to obtain the information. When making an
appraisal of the property, the value is determined by multiplying a dollar cost
per square foot by the square footage of the structure to determine the value.
What the Planning Department calls a bedroom may be an office, a den or have
other use designation in the Assessor’s records.
Response: Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors NEITHER AGREES NOR DISAGREES.
The finding is not supported by any reference to parcel numbers or
addresses or any other evidence that would assist the County in evaluating the
accuracy of the finding. In the form the data has been presented in the Grand
Jury Report, the Planning Department cannot tell which records correlate with
the data presented to the Grand Jury by the County.
Furthermore, the number of rooms is not as
important to the Assessor as is the correct square footage of the structure.
Assessor staff does not always have access to the property or the property
owners and may use different criteria for identifying rooms and bedrooms than
the criteria used by the Planning Department. For instance, the Planning
Department may identify a bedroom where the Assessor records indicate an
office, den or other use. Each department collects data needed for its own purposes,
and discrepancies are not always relevant.
11. A property was reviewed that had a permit to recognize, as built, a new 2-story SFD that was built over 10 years earlier. This permit was taken out so that the property could be sold. The Assessor’s description of the house changed from a 600 square foot cabin to a 1,400 square foot, 2-story house at the time of sale. The new owner was correctly assessed for the fair market value of the property. The Assessor’s Office had not identified the escape assessments by the previous owners until the Grand Jury asked it to explain the assessment process on this property. This property did not show any reappraisal from the permit issuance.
Response: Santa Cruz
County Assessor’s Office PARTIALLY DISAGREES.
The property referred to in this finding is - APN 091-141-69. The
Assessor met with the Grand Jury specifically regarding this property and at
that time explained that the permit issued on July 29, 2002 to “recognize
as-built 2 story single family dwelling 1 bedroom, 2.5 bath, covered porches …”
had actually in part been picked up by our office and placed on the assessment
rolls on March 11, 1981, with additional square footage picked up on January 2,
1983. The property sold on December 20, 2002 and unfortunately the appraiser
overlooked yet another addition constructed since our last visit in 1983. We have now gone back and levied the escape
assessments for prior years.
12. The Assessor’s Office does not notify the Planning Department when it finds that modifications have been made to a structure unless there is a visible safety or environmental violation.
Response: Santa Cruz
County Assessor’s Office AGREES.
Response: Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors AGREES.
13. The Grand Jury was unable to discover whether any law requires or prevents this.
Response: Santa Cruz
County Assessor’s Office AGREES.
Response: Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors AGREES.
14. Part of the Planning Department’s purpose is to see that building construction and modifications meet the requirements for occupant safety.
Response: Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors AGREES.
15. The Assessor’s Office is allowed recovery of escape assessments, on real property, for four years prior to the date of discovery.
16. The Santa Cruz County Assessment Roll for 1968-69 amounted to just under $1.2 billion. When Proposition 13 passed in 1978, the base year 1975-76 assessment roll amounted to just under $2.5 billion. Today the assessment roll is over $24 billion, with a $1.5 billion increase last year.
Response: Santa Cruz
County Assessor’s Office AGREES.
17. The return to county government is a small percentage of the property tax revenue collected. The Assessor’s Office believes that it is hard to justify the expense of pursuing escape assessments.
Response: Santa Cruz
County Assessor’s Office DISAGREES.
It is the duty of the Assessor
to discover all assessable property in the County. Appraisers are assigned a
geographic portion of the County and it is part of their responsibility to
identify illegal construction and place it on the assessment rolls. When
non-permitted construction is discovered, the appraiser must determine what
year it was constructed and who was the owner at the time. If the construction
was done ten years ago we must use the construction cost for that time period
and factor the value forward and enroll the last four years as escaped
assessments. If the property has sold, which could be multiple times, the task
of identifying the responsible party and their whereabouts is even more
difficult. If a property has sold the construction is included in the sale
price and assessed from that point forward. Also the costs of preparing a roll
correction costs the County approximately $50.00 per correction plus the costs
of collection by the Tax Collector. It is correct that we do not run escaped
assessments on all illegal construction because the cost of preparation and
collection may exceed the amount of taxes collected. Santa Cruz County has also
had a low value ordinance in place since 1982.
The current Board of Supervisors resolution is 480-99, “Resolution
Exempting From Property Tax
Certain Property With An Assessed Value For Which Property Taxes Would Amount
To Less Than The Cost Of Assessing And Collecting The Tax”. This ordinance is
provided for in Revenue and Taxation Code Section 155.20.
18. Taxes that are collected based on the Assessor’s valuation are distributed in the following manner:
· 56% to schools.
Response: Santa Cruz
County Assessor’s Office AGREES.
1. Illegal construction in Santa Cruz County has led to an Assessor’s database that is inaccurate and out of date.
2. The Assessor’s Office is apparently not processing the permit information provided to it by the Planning Department in a timely manner. The Assessor’s office may find these Red Tag permits sooner or later but the revenue that is postponed affects many county agencies.
3. County, school and library budgets are losing revenue because of the errors in the Assessor’s database.
4. County, school and library budgets are losing revenue because of failure to more aggressively pursue escape assessments.
5. When the Assessor’s Office does not notify the Planning Department about building modifications unless there are visible safety or environmental violations on buildings that do not match the Assessor’s records, it is depriving the inhabitants of the protection of the Planning Department’s safety review. If appraisers have no training in code enforcement inspections, then many safety or environmental hazards may go undetected. The question of liability should be considered.
6. An error as small as one percent in the Assessor's Roll would yield about $400,000 per year in additional direct revenue to county government alone.
1. The Assessor should review every permit to ensure that all revenue due is collected as soon as possible. Particular attention should be paid to updating the Assessor’s property description. Every time a property’s records are accessed they should be reviewed for accuracy and a correct description.
Response:
Santa Cruz County Assessor’s Office AGREES.
The
recommendation has been implemented since at least 1975.
Every permit issued has always
been reviewed to ensure that a proper assessment is
made. As for the collection of revenue, the Assessor has no control over the
collection of taxes. Supplemental tax bills are mailed monthly and regular tax
bills are mailed in late October and the two installments are delinquent
December 10th and April 10th. See Assessor’s response in
Recommendation #4 below to the statement about updating records.
2. Any change to the Assessor’s description should be reviewed for escape assessments. These escape assessments should be recovered.
Response: Santa Cruz
County Assessor’s Office AGREES.
The recommendation has been implemented since at least 1975.
It has always been the
practice of the Assessor to pick up escapes as they are discovered. As I stated
in finding #17 the cost to process the escape may exceed the taxes recovered
and in those cases the change is noted in the records. If the property has
transferred the value of the escape is included in the sales price. If it is
new construction and the value falls under the guidelines of the low value
ordinance the value is added to the current assessment roll.
3. The Assessor’s Office should report any discrepancies it may independently find to the Planning Department Code Enforcement section if no codes or laws prevent it.
Response:
Santa Cruz County Assessor’s Office DISAGREES.
The recommendation will not be
implemented because it is not reasonable.
It is not the duty of the
County Assessor to report building code violations to the Planning Department.
The Assessor is only responsible for the proper assessment of taxable property
within Santa Cruz County. The Assessor’s Office has no authority in the code
enforcement legislative scheme, since that is a function of the Planning
Department.
Response: Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors DISAGREES.
This recommendation will not be implemented.
The Assessor is responsible for the proper assessment of taxable
property within Santa Cruz County and has no responsibility for reporting
building code violations to the Planning Department. While there may be
benefits to such an approach, it is likely that such a program would in the
long run simply result in lower levels of accessibility by the Assessor to
sites, thereby reducing the County’s overall property tax revenues and the
effectiveness of the Assessor’s activities.
4. The Assessor’s Office should implement a program to update its database and review the parcel descriptions. This could require increased resources. Other counties have contracted with outside sources, paying a percentage of the recovered assessments. A signed property statement for real property, as allowed under Section 441 (a) of the California Revenue and Taxation Code, might prove successful. This statement would ask property owners to describe their property. Failure to supply accurate information would be perjury. It may also be possible to prioritize properties, looking at those that have not been examined recently for other causes, such as sales or permits.
Response:
Santa
Cruz County Assessor’s Office DISAGREES.
The
recommendation will not be implemented because it is not reasonable.
The Assessor has an ongoing program of updating
property characteristics. Each time we visit a property the file is reviewed
and updated to the extent possible. As stated in my response to finding #10,
oftentimes the property owner is not available when we visit a property and it
is not possible to obtain all of the interior information.
I have been in the Assessor’s office almost thirty
years. I have been involved in the Chief Appraiser’s Association and a member
of the California Assessor’s Association and I do not know of any county who
has contracted with outside sources who are being paid on a percentage of the
recovery. If someone could be hired to do contract work they would have to have
an appraisal certification issued from the State Board of Equalization and
would have to be an employee of an Assessor’s office, Revenue and Taxation
Code, Section 670.
The final part of this recommendation contains many
mischaracterizations of applicable law. First, Section 441 of the California
Revenue and Taxation Code pertains to business property not real property.
Second, any form that could be created to accomplish this scheme would have to
be approved by the State Board of Equalization. Third, costs to produce any
such form, envelopes, processing and postage could exceed $93,000 for a mailing
to each property in this county. Finally responses would then have to be
tracked along with additional mailings to non-filers. The Assessor’s Office
does not have sufficient staff to make a field check of the non-filers and from
past experiences the response rate to questionnaires is very low.
Entity
|
Findings
|
Recommendations
|
Respond Within
|
Santa Cruz County Assessor’s Office |
1 - 5, 7 - 13, 16 - 18 |
1 - 4 |
90 days (September 30, 2004) |
Santa Cruz County Planning Department |
5 - 10, 12 - 14 |
3 |
60 days (August 30, 2004) |