Just received this press release...........................
Somerville property owners are in for some good news regarding their tax bills. Real estate values in Somerville are climbing, but tax bills will hold relatively steady in fiscal year 2014 (FY14) with a decline in tax bills for some and only modest increases for most—thanks to unprecedented gains in new growth fueled mainly by new development in Assembly Square.
Residential and commercial tax rates to be lower in FY14; Significant shift in tax burden from residents to commercial properties keeps taxes low despite rising property values
Somerville property owners are in for some good news regarding their tax bills. Real estate values in Somerville are climbing, but tax bills will hold relatively steady in fiscal year 2014 (FY14) with a decline in tax bills for some and only modest increases for most—thanks to unprecedented gains in new growth fueled mainly by new development in Assembly Square.
The
residential tax rate will decrease 5.7 percent in FY2014 from $13.42
per thousand dollars of property value to $12.66 per thousand, and the
commercial rate will be lowered 3.9 percent from $22.38 per thousand to
$21.51. At the same time, an unprecedented shift in the tax burden from
residential to commercial property owners will take effect. The share of
total taxes paid by residential property owners will decrease 3
percent, more than three times the decrease in any previous year.
“We
have never seen anything like this before. This is a truly historical
shift, and the slightest shift of the tax burden can have a dramatic
impact when you are dealing with numbers this large,” said City Assessor
Marc Levye. “This will save residential owners $2.6 million next year
compared to what they would have paid if their share of the tax burden
remained unchanged from the previous year. Most residential owners will
see either a smaller increase or an outright decrease in their tax bill.
This is significant good news, and it’s due in large measure to
Assembly Row.”
The
City is able to reduce the tax rate due to an unprecedented $3.5
million in new growth last year—more than $1 million more than the
previous year. Most of that new growth stems from new commercial and
residential construction at Assembly Row. Max-Pak construction and the
increased value created by renovations carried out by the Public Storage
facility at 50 Middlesex Ave., the new Stop & Shop on Route 16 and
new personal property growth at 50 and 70 Inner Belt Road also
contributed significantly to new growth. (New growth is the value added
to homes and buildings by improvements or new construction. The new
taxes collected on these properties are based on the higher or newly
created value.)
“This
is just the beginning of the benefits that Somerville residents and
businesses will reap in return for the prudent investments that the
City, the Board of Aldermen and this community have been making to spur
smart development in our city in recent years,” said Mayor Joseph A.
Curtatone.
Curtatone
has long pointed to Cambridge as the goal for distribution of the tax
burden. In Cambridge, 61 percent of the tax levy is paid by businesses
while residents bear only 39 percent of the tax burden. In
Somerville—despite this year’s important progress—the reverse applies:
more than two-thirds of the tax burden is still resting on residents
while businesses contribute less than one-third.
“This
must change,” said Curtatone. “Somerville property owners who receive
the residential tax exemption already receive one of the lowest tax
rates in the region, but that is not enough. And building affordable
units alone is also not enough if we want to maintain affordability in
our city. We are experiencing a historic shift toward the urban core
that is driving up real estate prices metro-wide. To help maintain
affordability for all Somerville residents—including the many
middle and working class families that have lived here for
generations—while still improving city services and investing in our
schools, we must increase the commercial tax base so that we can lower
the residential tax burden.”
Taxes
will decline or only modestly rise for most residences despite overall
increases in property values and sale prices, which led to higher
assessed values for most property types as determined by the Somerville
Board of Assessors and approved by the Mass. Department of Revenue.
Single families saw the most significant change with an average increase
of just under 12 percent in assessed value. Two- and three-family
assessed values increased citywide on average by 7 percent, and average
condo assessed values increased more than 4 percent. Meanwhile, in
another sign of the ongoing real estate recovery in Somerville,
foreclosures are down 74 percent through October 2013 over the previous
year.
While
property owners are gaining value from their investments in their
homes, both condo owners and owners of 4-8-families will see an average
decrease of $88 and $42, respectively, in their FY14 tax bill. Average
increases for two- and three-family owners will be just $39 and $53,
respectively. Single-families will see increases on average of $293.
However, these changes also reflect an average savings of $165 per
residential property for FY14 assuming the percentages of the
residential and commercial tax levies stayed the same in FY13. For
example, without the decrease, condo owners would on average see an
increase of $77 rather than a decline of $88 had the lower tax rate not
been possible. (Numbers assume a residential exemption but do not
include the Community Preservation Act surcharge.)
“To
lower residential taxes, we must bring in new businesses to Somerville
and create the infrastructure that will attract them. That’s why the
community members who developed the many value-based goals in our
20-year SomerVision plan call for doing exactly this via the kind of
smart, community-guided development that we are working to realize in
Assembly Row, in Union Square and Boynton Yards, in Inner Belt and
eventually along McGrath,” said Curtatone. “So again, this year’s
dramatic shift in the tax burden from residents to businesses is just a
start, and we will hold steady to ensure our residents—all
residents—reap more of these benefits in the future.”
No comments:
Post a Comment