Showing posts with label William V. White. Show all posts
Showing posts with label William V. White. Show all posts

Equalization board votes to restore $2.5 million in values to Monticello Park

David Shaw (left) and William V. White, John Burgiss and Michael Pollock
An official panel tasked with hearing appeals to property tax valuations voted today in a unanimous decision to restore $2.5 million to dozens of properties in Monticello Park, an upper-middle income neighborhood that is home to a number of prominent African-American civic leaders such as Winston-Salem Mayor Pro Tem Vivian Burke, along with retired educators and business owners.

The Forsyth County Board of Equalization and Review approved the recommendation to make blanket changes to 51 properties at the recommendation of county Tax Assessor John Burgiss. Many of the properties are larger and newer homes located either on Cumberland Road or nearby. Burgiss said staff determined that three sales in 2012 and 2011 that had been used to set values for the neighborhood were not representative of the houses recommended for adjustment.

The 51 properties affected by the blanket change include homes owned by Jim Shaw, a retired tire dealership franchisee and nonprofit executive who is Mayor Allen Joines' reelection co-chair and the widow of the late Judge Roland Hayes. The previous valuations assigned to the properties represented a 71.2 percent decrease from 2009, while the new valuations reduce the blow to a loss of only 39.4 percent.

"These are extremely large changes," board member William V. White said. "They're based on lack of sales. I guess the concern is, what other neighborhoods do we have the same situation that we're not going to know until we receive the appeals and it's too late to do anything about the remainder of the properties?"

Burgiss said staff looked intently at 14 neighborhoods where residents expressed concern about severe drops in valuation and was still open to making further changes.

"May I suggest a potentially radical action to go further into that?" White continued. "Whenever there's so few sales, there's a situation where those sales may not reflect values even though even though all rules say that they do. What about the concept of asking the appraisers in the field the question of, 'Do you think that this work adequately reflects the values out there, notwithstanding the methodology that we use?' The answer is either a yes or a no. If it's a no, then I suggest going back again and looking at the neighborhood, do what you can, and maybe you can expand the number of sales used outside the neighborhood."

The changes made today follow a decision last week by the board to restore more than a $1 million in values resulting from individual appeals in several east-side neighborhoods that were flagged for review because of community outcry, including Monticello Park, Dreamland Park, Castleshire, Slater Park and Shalimar/Salem Village.

White publicly urged property owners to continue to file appeals through the statutory deadline of June 28 so that the board can get a sense of whether further blanket changes are needed.

"I think what the board is looking for is by the 28th to have a comfort level that a) the right methodology was used, b) in your judgement that's the best we could do with it, and then c) we've gotten the word out about the opportunity for individuals to bring an appeal to us," White said. "That even if they don't plan to be present, it forces the assessor's office to take another look at the property. So their individual properties will be examined even further.... I just want to on the 28th say that Forsyth County, the tax assessor's office and the board have done everything they could possibly do to ensure that every citizen had the right to appeal and we've gotten it as good as we possibly could do it in a less sale than desirable environment."

The staff also addressed the findings of an investigation conducted by YES! Weekly and Camel City Dispatch into the tax revaluation.

Real Estate Division Manager John Potter noted that the investigation raised questions about roughly a dozen sales out of 750 sales reviewed in 55 neighborhoods, and that the staff concurred that six of the transactions were either counted, or in one case discounted, in error. The 750 some sales reviewed in the investigation covered only a portion of the 14,000 qualified sales across the county.

"That's six out of 750 — less than 1 percent," Potter said. "We feel that's a pretty good accuracy score."

Staff acknowledged that the disqualified sales that were used in comp lists to set values for neighborhoods included transactions between family members, sales involving churches and foreclosures.

Appraisal Manager Michael Pollock said he used a methodology known as "trended sales ratios," which compares sale amounts to the 2013 valuation with adjustments made for observed market trends, to determine if the errors would have affected the neighborhood values. In all six cases, with the exception of one that he characterized as a judgment call, Pollock said the errors had no material effect on valuations.

In a neighborhood the tax administration calls Anderleigh, but many residents consider Konnoak Hills, Pollock said removing an incorrectly qualified foreclosure sale reduced the sales ratio from 0.97 to 0.94, where 1.00 is the ideal.

"Generally, we like to be .95 to 1.05 in our sales ratios, but in taking a look at that, that was a 5 percent appealed neighborhood," Pollock said. "Looking at it more, I didn't think I could justify making a change. That's my opinion."

Pollock said that adding an improperly excluded sale in the Cameron Park neighborhood (also known as East Winston) had the effect of changing the trended sales ration from 0.995 to 0.990, and was too small to warrant any changes.

The investigation by YES! Weekly and Camel City Dispatch estimated that the exclusion of the sale reduced values in the neighborhood by about 6 percent. The investigation used a methodology of comparing sales to 2009 valuations and pegging changes to the median value to reach that conclusion.

White alluded to two sales flagged by the investigation involving the use of transactions recorded on quit-claim deeds, which the tax administration deemed to be legitimate for the purpose of building sales comps.

"I have a possible concern about quit-claim deeds," White said. "Notwithstanding what the [NC Department of Revenue] says, I think you have to go all the way to the bottom of a quit-claim deed. You usually can't do it with just the deed."

Pollock said staff concurs, and that in the two cases brought to its attention assessors believe that they reflected true market values and 100 percent interest in the property being transferred.

Burgiss reiterated staff's position that the errors had no material effect on valuations for the neighborhoods.

"The one that potentially comes the closest to that is Anderleigh, and that does put us at an assessment level of 94 percent," he said. "We do like to be between 95 and 105 percent. That's the comfort level — that's the range that we like to be in. Certainly, 94 is not 95, so we can understand the question: Was that enough of a change to warrant a change in the neighborhood? There's 400 properties in that neighborhood. The one neighborhood we did bring, we were asking for pretty big changes on those properties. If we were to look at something like Anderleigh that would be very minor."

Board of equalization looks at tax appraisals in neighborhoods with plunging values

John Burgiss
Members of the Forsyth Board of Equalization and Review debated how they should address deep cuts to property valuations in Monticello Park and other predominantly African-American neighborhoods of Winston-Salem on Thursday.

The volunteer citizen board, which is comprised of real-estate professionals appointed by the county commission, is tasked with hearing appeals to property valuations and making mass adjustments if they find systemic problems in the recent reappraisal by the county tax department.

Board member William V. White expressed doubt that the board will uncover any evidence of error sufficient to justify the kinds of mass changes sought by residents of neighborhoods who have seen their home values plunge by as much as 70 percent. 


“In aviation there is a concept called ‘slope line’ to where when you slow the air speed down to the point where the controls get kind of dysfunctional and mushy,” he said. “And it sort of likens to a valuation problem with no sales. I think we are victim of general economic conditions and few sales. But I don’t see any compelling reason to do anything different. I think you’ve got to follow the sales. I don’t see significant problems with it. I know it’s not what everybody wants to hear. I do have some concerns about a shoot-the-messenger reaction.”

John Potter, real estate division manager for the tax department, reviewed sets of qualified sales used to set appraisals for properties in Monticello Park, Konnoak Acres, Shalimar/Salem Village and Reynolds Park.

Due to the wild fluctuations in the real estate market between 2010 and 2011, Tax Director John Burgiss told board members that staff relied on sales from 2011 and 2012 to compile qualified sales lists, commonly known as “comps,” for each neighborhood. Neighborhoods with high numbers of foreclosures, which are excluded from consideration, also had low numbers of qualified sales. Narrowing sales to 2011 and 2012 further winnowed the list.

There were only three sales on the comp list that were used to set values in Monticello Park.

In one, a woman represented by a power of attorney sold a brick ranch house under a generous tree canopy that had been previously valued at $114,300 to a couple for $32,900 in September 2011. In November 2011, seven heirs of William Nelson Knight sold a handsome, split-level ranch house previously valued at $184,000 to Carrboro couple for $82,000. And in November 2012, an investor from Maine picked up a house for $27,000 in a second estate sale. The property had previously been appraised at $120,000.
Chair Richard N. Davis challenged the use of estate sales to determine values for the neighborhood, noting that in his professional experience heirs often sell below market value.

“The heirs didn’t put any money into the purchase of the house, so everything they get is gravy,” he said. “And some people want money. And if it’s a $150,000 house, they get an offer for $65,000 or $75,000 and they say, ‘Let’s sell.’ In a case where it’s multiple heirs, you can’t say it’s majority wins. Everyone has to agree. They put pressure on the one who is holding out, and say, ‘We need the money.’ So I don’t personally think an estate sale should be an indication of a market-value sale.”

Burgiss interjected that, in fact, the tax department does consider estate sales in its comps, in accordance with the state law governing tax appraisals.

“I don’t mean to be in conflict with you, but we are in compliance with Department of Revenue standards,” Burgiss said. “I just want to make sure we’re on the same page.”

Vice Chair David Shaw said he doesn’t relish hearing individual appeals from property owners in Monticello Park.

“What disturbs me is we’re going to have to make decisions based on such limited information,” he said. “In that one neighborhood we’ve only got three sales, maybe one or two are questionable as estate sales. It’s going to be real tough to work through this.”

Board members approved a proposal by Burgiss to front-load the individual appeals from Monticello Park and other troubled neighborhoods so that the board can make any mass changes deemed necessary before a June 28 deadline.

Potter said the dearth of qualified sales presented challenges to appraisers in Monticello Park.

“It’s not something that was easily done all the time,” he said. “Our objective is to show you how it’s done. But that’s what an appraiser has. And when he walks away he’s got to match that to a sale that’s out there. So whether it’s up or down, or way down, that’s what the appraiser is charged to do.”

Davis inquired about a number of sales in neighborhoods such as Reynolds Park and Shalimar/Salem Village that had been cited to him by concerned property owners. Potter said that they were bank sales and were appropriately excluded from the comps.

Board members also looked at how close the recent 2013 reappraisal tracked with market sales in several of the neighborhoods flagged for review. Staff presented average sales ratios, which compare appraised values to actual sales, for that purpose.

“Konnoak seems to be right on the money,” Davis said in reference to the sales ratios presented by staff. “It impressed me as being more accurate than any of the others.

“Some of the others I had problems with,” he added.

Davis cited a decision by the Mecklenburg County Commission to bring in an outside firm to review the 2011 tax revaluation and asked Burgiss if he saw the situation in Forsyth County as comparable. In Mecklenburg, some property owners in the Cornelius area complained that their assessments were too high. The outside review commissioned by the county found instances of erroneous data that had “a significant impact on the valuation” of whole neighborhoods, including sales that should have been excluded from comps and misapplication of grades to individual properties.

“Eighty-five percent of the public regarded public relations [by the Mecklenburg County Tax Department] as poor,” Burgiss said. “I can’t speak for the public, but we don’t have that problem here.”

Davis expressed disappointment that staff was unable to report how many informal appeals in the troubled neighborhoods had resulted in valuations being changed.

“In my opinion the whole idea behind this is to find out where we were, how we stood,” he said. “And I would hope one of the objectives of the effort would be to. ‘Okay, we did this. Here’s how we came out. We adjusted some higher.’ I mean, what’s the use of doing this study if you don’t know the outcome? This is the thing that disappoints me: We did this to put our hands on the problem, and yet we don’t know the results of it.”

Shaw and White suggested that the board take a look at sales after Jan. 1, 2013 — the legal cutoff point for the revaluation — to see if they’re relatively aligned with those used to set values, particularly in neighborhoods such as Monticello that are challenged by limited samples. The two board members acknowledged that only sales from 2009 to 2012 can be legally applied for the purpose of setting values.

“I would feel more comfortable in that neighborhood if we knew how many houses are on the market and how many sold in the last six months,” Shaw said. “I think it would certainly be an indication, and it would make me feel good that, hey, these valuations are right.”

Burgiss responded that he can provide any information board members want, but added that the values are assumed to be correct and the burden is on appellants to prove that they are incorrect.

Davis said as he reviews individual appeals he will be mindful that overall values dropped by 11.9 percent across the county, and measure some of the troubled neighborhoods against that metric.

“Some of these homes that dropped 65 or 75 percent just because they happened to be in a neighborhood where there was a problem, we ask ourselves a question: Is it fair to that homeowner because he just happened to live in that neighborhood that their values dropped so drastically?” he asked. “That’s the question, is how we deal with it and treat everybody equitably, treat everybody fairly.”