Philly Appraisal Blog

Philadelphia's Board of Revision of Taxes (BRT) to be Disbanded
December 18th, 2009 3:47 PM

For decades the tax situation has been a mess.  There has not been a city-wide reassessment of properties in more than 40 years.  As a result, many property owners have been paying too little in taxes while certain zip codes within the city have borne the brunt of the tax burden.  At the center of the whole mess is the BRT.  Now, it appears as though the BRT has been marked for disolution.

Below is an article by Patrick Kerkstra of The Philadelphia Inquirer that outlines the city council's decision to approve a referendum on dismantling the BRT.  Only two members of the council voted against the bill...Jannie Blackwell and Curtis Jones, Jr...which to most Philadelphians will come as no surprize.

Getting rid of the BRT is a step in the right direction for Philadelphia.

 

Council approves referendum on disbanding BRT

In an historic vote, Philadelphia's City Council this morning approved legislation 15-2 that would disband the embattled Board of Revision of Taxes on Sept. 30, 2010, pending approval of a majority of city voters in May's primary election.

The bill will replace the BRT, which sets property values for each piece of real estate in Philadelphia, with two new agencies. One, under the indirect authority of the mayor, will set property values in the future. The second agency, run by an independent board, would consider property assessment appeals.

For decades, the BRT has endured as one of the city's largest bastions of patronage, presiding over one of the nation's most inaccurate and inequitable property tax systems.

The BRT's property values bear little resemblance to the actual market value of real estate in the city, a failing which has lead hundreds of thousands of property owners to pay much more than their fair share in taxes, while many others have paid less then they would under a more equitable system. Past Inquirer stories have documented the failings of the BRT's assessment system, and chronicled widespread mismanagement and cronyism at the agency.

The Nutter administration has already assumed day-to-day control of the BRT's property assessment functions. But that arrangement, codified in a memorandum of understanding signed by both parties in October, is only temporary. The legislation council approved yesterday would make that arrangement permanent.

Council members Jannie Blackwell and Curtis Jones Jr. were the only dissenters. Because the bill amends the City Charter, the city's voters must also approve it before it takes effect. The council vote ensures that the question will appear on the May primary ballot.


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Posted by Michael Coyle on December 18th, 2009 3:47 PMPost a Comment

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