Politics & Government

Fitzgerald: Recent Assessment Numbers 'Null and Void'

Allegheny County Chief Executive Rich Fitzgerald said on Thursday that 2012 assessments will remain at 2002 levels.

Chief Executive Rich Fitzgerald said it over and over again during a press conference on Thursday afternoon at the Allegheny County Courthouse: When it comes to property tax reassessment, Allegheny County shouldn’t be singled out.

That’s one reason that Fitzgerald said that he directed the certification of the 2011 assessed values for 2012 taxation purposes—values that are based on the 2002 tax year.

For Allegheny County property owners, that means that the assessment numbers that some of them recently received in the mail are “null and void.”

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New notices will be sent out on Thursday, Fitzgerald said, and those are “the ones that matter.”

And he was clear: Despite a court order that mandated a property tax reassessment, he is following all state laws.

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“Earlier this week, I took an oath to uphold the laws of the commonwealth,” Fitzgerald said. “The Second Class County Assessment Law and our own administrative code requires that certified assessed values be provided to taxing bodies on or before Jan. 15.

“Certification reports were sent out this afternoon to all taxing bodies that will now allow officials to set their tax millage rates—if they have not done so already—and to move forward with their tax billings.”

Characterizing the court-ordered property assessment as “chaotic and disastrous,” he indicated that, when he had the opportunity to review the numbers, they disturbed him.

“We’ve all seen the stories about the large numbers, substantial increases and shocking values from just the 119,000 residential properties,” he said. “This is the first update of values in a decade, and the increases are simply terrifying to some property owners. Imagine what the rest of the county may look like if we continue down this road.

“We cannot continue to allow Allegheny County to be singled out while counties around us have gone for decades without a reassessment. The stability that we have brought to (the county) over the last decade has shown results, and we cannot allow that progress to be jeopardized through a discriminatory practice.”

Flanked by city, school, county and state officials, Fitzgerald said that he urged all taxing bodies to come together to support a moratorium on the court-ordered assessment.

He said that the largest school district in the county, Pittsburgh Public Schools, has joined him in asking the court to stop the reassessment. Letters are being sent to all 130 municipalities and the other 44 school districts in the county urging them to pass resolutions asking the courts to stop the assessment.

Another letter calls on Gov. Tom Corbett and the state Legislature to impose a moratorium on “singled-out, court-ordered county reassessments until this is addressed on a state level.”

He then asked all those in attendance to support a House bill authored by state Reps. Jesse White and Rick Saccone that calls for a moratorium on property tax reassessment, as well as a similar measure in the state Senate.

Fitzgerald said that he worried that, if an assessment is forced, residents and businesses would “migrate” to surrounding counties—setting back economic development gains that Allegheny County has made over the years.

And he hopes that residents will join him in his opposition to a forced reassessment.

“I hope that residents of this county will also join us in this effort. Go to your school board meeting. Talk to your elected officials. Reach out to your representatives, senators and governor and let them all know that these steps are important to you and that the court-ordered reassessment cannot be allowed to continue to the detriment of this county.”

This article originally appeared on the .

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