Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

‘FREEZE’ FRAY

Citing Sun-Times reporting, County Clerk Karen Yarbrough has warned Assessor Fritz Kaegi of tax-bill delays until he fixes ‘major errors’

- BY TIM NOVAK AND LAUREN FITZPATRIC­K Staff Reporters

Cook County property tax bills that were supposed to be delivered Aug. 1 could be delayed because of “major errors” the Chicago Sun-Times exposed in a $250 million-a-year program that offers a tax break to certain seniors.

In a letter Friday to Cook County Assessor Fritz Kaegi, Cook County Clerk Karen Yarbrough cited the newspaper’s reporting in warning there could be a delay in sending tax bills to Cook County’s 1.77 million property owners.

Yarbrough told Kaegi her office “will not begin its calculatio­n of Tax Year 2020 second-installmen­t tax rates until we have received corrected and accurate data . . . related to senior tax exemptions.

“Given the major errors with the Senior Citizens Assessment Freeze Homestead Exemption program revealed recently in the Chicago Sun-Times, we cannot in good conscience perform the aforementi­oned calculatio­ns pursuant to our fiduciary duty to the citizens of Cook County,” Yarbrough wrote.

If the bills go out late and that results in a delay in collecting property taxes, that would affect hundreds of school districts, municipali­ties and other government agencies in Cook County that rely on that money.

The Sun-Times reported June 27 that Kaegi’s office incorrectl­y calculated the value of the senior assessment freeze for many of the 144,904 homeowners receiving the tax break — a program that shifted $250 million in taxes last year from homeowners 65 or older claiming household income of less

than $65,000 a year onto the rest of Cook County homeowners and businesses.

Among the errors, senior freezes had been granted in some cases to businesses, which aren’t eligible, and property assessment­s had been frozen based on the value of buildings that had been torn down years before.

Also, Kaegi cited a computer programmin­g glitch he acknowledg­ed gave further tax breaks to seniors who’d gotten refunds on taxes they’d previously paid.

Yarbrough pointed to the program’s aim of helping “a targeted, vulnerable population,” writing: “This demographi­c’s vulnerabil­ity increases dramatical­ly when they are people of color. They deserve to be protected and not subjected to the exploitati­on that precipitat­es from an inefficaci­ous government

program.”

Deciding what homeowners and businesses pay in property taxes in Cook County involves three agencies, each headed by an elected county official. The assessor, Kaegi, sets the value of each property. The clerk, Yarbrough, calculates each property’s share of the taxes needed to bring in enough to cover government budgets. The treasurer, Maria Pappas, mails the bills

and collects the taxes.

Pappas also is asking that any errors in assessment­s or exemptions be fixed so she can tell taxpayers when they will have to pay their final bill this year.

“When a taxpayer receives an excessive tax break, everybody else must make up the difference,” Pappas wrote in a letter Thursday to Kaegi. “I am concerned that these errors will persist and result in continued inequities for our residents and our businesses. It is crucial that these bills be fair and accurate.”

Kaegi’s spokesman Scott Smith says the assessor’s office has corrected some errors the Sun-Times found.

Among those: correcting a property assessment that resulted in a tax bill last year of only $2,502 for a Water Tower Place condominiu­m whose owners are listing it for sale — at $3.3 million.

The assessor will reset the base year of the frozen assessment on the Water Tower Place condo, according to Smith, likely resulting in a significan­tly higher tax bill.

Kaegi’s office is still investigat­ing to determine whether the annual income of the owners, Barbara Kaplan and Martin Israel, qualifies them for the exemption.

Smith says Kaegi’s staff provided Yarbrough’s office with upto-date assessment­s Wednesday for all 1.7 million properties in Cook County.

“This doesn’t mean that we won’t, in the future, find someone that doesn’t qualify for the exemption,” Smith says. “There is a process to claw back exemptions from people who don’t qualify for them.”

After the Sun-Times story was published, Smith says Kaegi’s office reviewed the assessment­s of the properties the newspaper cited and also others that reporters had asked about.

But the office didn’t review all 144,904 properties that now have a senior assessment freeze.

“This analysis revealed that the majority of the [properties] were calculated correctly,” Smith says. “Some senior freeze exemptions in the story do not conform to our office’s current policy for the administra­tion of the senior freeze exemption. In these cases, those exemptions have either been changed or removed for the 2020 exemption roll. The Erroneous Exemption Department is currently investigat­ing the [properties] mentioned in the Sun-Times story that may have erroneousl­y received exemptions.”

Smith later released a letter from Kaegi to Yarbrough that challenges her authority to delay the property tax process. It cites an appellate court ruling that “a clerk has no power to determine whether taxes have been legally assessed.”

 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES ?? Cook County Assessor Fritz Kaegi.
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES Cook County Assessor Fritz Kaegi.
 ??  ??
 ?? ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/ SUN-TIMES ?? Cook County Clerk Karen Yarbrough.
ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/ SUN-TIMES Cook County Clerk Karen Yarbrough.
 ?? TYLER LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES ?? A 58th-floor condo at Water Tower Place, 180 E. Pearson St., that owners Barbara Kaplan Israel and Martin Israel are trying to sell for $3.3 million was among the properties the Sun-Times has reported had a much lower tax bill because of errors by the Cook County assessor’s office. The tax bill last year for the three-bedroom, 5 1⁄2-bath unit was $2,502. The owners have long had a senior tax freeze — a tax break for people over 65 making less than $65,000 a year.
TYLER LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES A 58th-floor condo at Water Tower Place, 180 E. Pearson St., that owners Barbara Kaplan Israel and Martin Israel are trying to sell for $3.3 million was among the properties the Sun-Times has reported had a much lower tax bill because of errors by the Cook County assessor’s office. The tax bill last year for the three-bedroom, 5 1⁄2-bath unit was $2,502. The owners have long had a senior tax freeze — a tax break for people over 65 making less than $65,000 a year.
 ??  ?? Cook County Assessor Fritz Kaegi
Cook County Assessor Fritz Kaegi
 ??  ?? Cook County Clerk Karen Yarbrough
Cook County Clerk Karen Yarbrough

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