Nancy Jester Town Hall Meeting - How To Appeal Your DeKalb County Property Value Assessment
Wednesday 1 July, 2015 7.00pm - 8.30pm
Dunwoody City Hall 41 Perimeter Center East, Dunwoody, GA 30346
Home business owners with licenses anywhere in DeKalb County: check your tax assessments. Your home is assessed $265 for sanitation. However, your actual bill is likely to be $400 just because you have a business license. Even if you do not produce any more trash than any other household. Even if you are following every regulation to the letter. Even though your home is designated as a residential area. If you possess a 8.5 x 3.6 inch piece of paper, the County has reserved the right to re-designate your home as a "commercial" area and increase your taxes.
Make sure to ask your local elected representatives and others running for office if they believe you should be fined for having a business license and why. I plan on doing so and remembering the answers on election day.
If you live in Dunwoody, this meeting is even more critical. It turns out that if you own your home, and your home has increased in value, you are entitled to a refund due to a snafu at City Hall.
Per the AJC, quoted on the Georgia Pundit blog:
The refunds will be paid as a result of reporting by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution and questions raised by Sen. Fran Millar, R-Atlanta, and DeKalb County Commissioner Nancy Jester.AJC Article (requires subscription)
The error occurred because Dunwoody officials didn’t notify the county, which handles the city’s tax billing, after voters approved a tax exemption during a November 2010 election, said Dunwoody Finance Director Christopher Pike. The measure passed with 81 percent of the vote.
The tax break provides residents with a discount on the city portion of their tax bills to negate tax increases caused by rising home values.
“It’s great news that the oversight was uncovered and remedied, but it’s still disturbing that this could be something that’s voted on and then all of a sudden it’s one big nevermind,” said Al Tiede, who has lived in Dunwoody for 24 years and believes he’ll receive a refund.
It’s unknown how many people are owed refunds and how much money they’ll receive. DeKalb Tax Commissioner Claudia Lawson said her office is reviewing tax bills from 2012 to 2014, and she plans to have more information next week.
Once the county recalculates taxes, the city will be billed and then refund checks will be mailed to residents, Lawson said.
GA Pundit
It's time to stop making mistakes, gang. From slicing and dicing city codes during ratification to create massive loopholes to "forgetting" to inform DeKalb County of tax changes, to personal zoning tweaks that come dangerously close to ethics violations, to petty battles that lead to legal settlements and long-standing citizen feuds, Dunwoody is at risk of becoming the corrupt incestuous enclave that our critics have claimed we always were. Don't get me started on the philosophy of "redevelopment by neglect" approach being taken with the theatre at Brook Run. Lots of talk of community pride, and then (to quote my friend Al above) "Nevermind".
It's an election year. Start paying attention to the details and taking them seriously if you want to earn (or keep) your seats.
Let's hope no one running for office commits a JMax between now and November. There's enough excitement to come.