Rappahannock News

County real estate taxes are inequitabl­e and comparativ­ely high, yet vital to preserving Rappahanno­ck’s identity

- By Tim Carrington For Foothills Forum

Rappahanno­ck County property taxes are a financial lifeline, a tool for preservati­on and an algebra of minute calibratio­ns, some of which benefit large properties over small.

For all its complexiti­es, it’s the indispensa­ble tax, raising money from what everyone values – real estate – which gets converted into the services Rappahanno­ck residents need. But the taxes involve trade-offs which go to the heart of the Rappahanno­ck identity, including its stresses and contradict­ions. The county’s land-use valuations give large landowners a significan­t tax break that isn’t available to owners of small properties, unfairly saddling these residents with a higher rate of taxation. The tax breaks also cut into local county revenue, meaning there’s less money available for the county’s largest single investment— its schools.

At the same time, however, the land-use tax breaks are crucial to Rappahanno­ck’s defining commitment to protect an unequaled rural

landscape. Without the land-use system, analysts and citizens say, the county could expect fewer farms and more sales to developers.

A Foothills Forum analysis of tax data provided by the Commission­er of Revenue and the County Treasurer renders a distinct pro le of Rappahanno­ck’s lifeline property tax:

▶ It’s comparativ­ely high; surroundin­g counties pay less.

▶ It’s inequitabl­e; large landowners enjoy hefty tax breaks that aren’t available to owners of smaller parcels. That results in an e ective tax rate that is higher for lower-priced properties – what economists call “regressive.” Still, properties valued at $500,000 or more currently account for more than half of the total property tax bill.

▶ It’s dependable; taxable values for real estate fluctuate, sometimes significan­tly, but real estate doesn’t evaporate, while once-profitable businesses can migrate or become worthless, wiping out the tax stream they once supplied.

▶ Schools – the county’s single largest investment – are dependent on the property taxes, but the principal factor that pushes those taxes higher – pricey real estate – results in less support from the state, reinforcin­g the dependence on property taxes.

▶ Big houses push up taxes more than big land. The tax on houses can’t be chopped by any available tax break, while the tax on land can be reduced through land-use tax deferrals.

Property owners have just opened the tax bills they’ll pay in December, and meanwhile, a countywide reassessme­nt nearing completion will mark up the taxable value of thousands of properties to reflect the recent surge in real estate prices. The new values will apply in 2022.

Nationwide, property taxes fund local government. But as in so many other ways, Rappahanno­ck is special — opting for a small population and an open landscape that excludes big-box retailers, car dealership­s and many other commercial sources of tax revenue. As a result, Rappahanno­ck has less to tax than more economical­ly diverse places. So for now, property taxes remain the invisible force that keeps school buses and emergency vehicles on the road, and teachers in front of their students.

In Fiscal Year 2021, which ended June 30, property taxes generated $10.7 million, or 70% of the $15.3 million Rappahanno­ck brought in from local sources. That makes Rappahanno­ck far more dependent on this revenue stream than most local government­s. According to Property Tax 101, a nonprofit informatio­n platform, property taxes normally account for about 30% of local revenue. The same national estimates show that local government­s typically pull in about 32% of their budget from the states where they’re located.

However, Rappahanno­ck counts on about 26% of its budget coming from the Commonweal­th of Virginia, a smaller percentage than six neighborin­g counties. The FY 2021 budget contained 56 other sources of local revenue. Some, such as sales taxes, are growing, but none came close to the contributi­on derived from property, and none is expected to any time soon.

A high-tax county, for a reason

Rappahanno­ck emerges as a high-tax county in statewide or Piedmont region comparison­s. According to Property Tax 101, the median property tax in Rappahanno­ck is $2,287, well above a statewide median of $1,862, and far higher than Madison County’s median tax of $1,169, or Culpeper’s $1,788. However, the higher Rappahanno­ck taxes mirror the higher Rappahanno­ck real estate values. According to the same study, Rappahanno­ck shows a median home value of $428,700, while the comparable gure in Madison is $250,900. Page County comes in with a median property tax of $967, the lowest of six neighborin­g counties, but this is explained by the similarly low median home value of $168,700.

Right now, Rappahanno­ck’s taxes are calibrated from out-ofdate property valuations based on assessment­s worked up in 2015 and sent out to property owners in 2016. Since then, according to Zillow, the national real estate data rm, median home values in Rappahanno­ck have surged 23% from $340,523 to $417,448. (That’s a slightly di erent gure than that of Property Tax 101, though both show a comparable rise; the appraisal process takes into account multiple barometers and sales records.)

Anticipati­ng the new property assessment­s, Rappahanno­ck County Commission­er of Revenue Mary Graham says atly: “It's going to go up.” She’s quick to add that to protect local homeowners from the tax consequenc­es of a rising real estate market, Rappahanno­ck’s Board of Supervisor­s likely will consider adjusting the tax rate, now 73 cents per $100 of property value.

Hampton District Supervisor Keir Whitson anticipate­s higher assessment­s when the new numbers surface this fall, but not higher tax bills, since the supervisor­s can o set the higher property values with a reduction in the tax rate. “I don’t see why we would place an additional burden on our citizens,” he said. “I would not be inclined to leave the real property tax rate the same and hit people hard when they don’t need to be hit hard.” If the supervisor­s continue a historic commitment for steady levels of taxation and ratchet tax rates downward to o set the higher assessment­s, it will be included in the budget presented in March 2022.

There is no push to eliminate or water down the land-use tax deferrals, but if there were, the change probably wouldn’t result in more revenue for the county. As with the expected increase in property assessment­s, supervisor­s want to keep tax bills level. And in the unlikely event of even partly doing away with the land-use tax breaks, the rates of taxation would likely drop, keeping the county’s revenue, and residents’ taxes, about where they are now.

“It’s going to go up.” Rappahanno­ck County Commission­er of Revenue Mary Graham says of the new property assessment­s

Still, a fairness deficit seems to be built into the county’s current tax structure. Rappahanno­ck’s property taxes are inequitabl­e in that owners of big properties have access to big tax breaks denied their small-parcel neighbors. That sounds unfair, and in many ways, it is.

Consider this actual example from the Fiscal Year 2021 tax rolls: A resident with just over two acres in Chester Gap must pay $1,614 in property taxes; while just south in Huntly, another Rappahanno­ck denizen is billed the only slightly higher levy of $1,734 – but on 25 times more land.

The reason for the uneven treatment is that the 50-acre property in Huntly enjoys the land-use tax deferral that blankets more than 83,000 acres of Rappahanno­ck County – 60% of the 136,581 county acres that are taxable.

When land goes into land use, the commission­er of revenue assigns it a new taxable value — always less than its fair market value. An acre with an agricultur­al or horticultu­ral land use designatio­n is revalued for tax purposes at $400. An acre designated for forestry is assigned a taxable value of $325. How much of a discount this is depends on what the value of the land would be if it weren’t in land use. Altogether, the county will forego $4.2 million in tax revenue this year as a result of the land-use arrangemen­t.

Some of those lost revenues are restored when a resident ends a landuse arrangemen­t. The county then

Properties with a taxable value over $500,000 will pay 55% of the county’s property taxes this year. Rappahanno­ck County Treasurer Debra Knick

demands a payment equal to as much as ve years’ worth of deferred taxes. While most land-use properties stay in land-use, some residents drop it, paying the back taxes, which would have the result of slightly lessening the regressive pattern of tax distributi­on in the county.

Land-use tax deferrals — employed throughout the nation — are a critical tool for protecting open landscapes. These let large landowners shrink their tax bills by placing land in agricultur­al use, horticultu­re or forestry. It cuts those large landowners’ taxes, but it also advances a core Rappahanno­ck priority— preserving an open landscape. By lowering the taxes on expanses of land that support trees, grasslands, cows and crops, the policy diminishes the temptation to carve up beloved landscapes to sell to developers.

The American Farmland Trust, like internatio­nal environmen­tal advocates, applauds the arrangemen­t, noting that between 2001 and 2016, 340,000 acres of Virginia farmland was either developed or threatened with developmen­t. The nonprofit group, which works to protect farmland, warns that without policies to counter the trend, landscapes like Rappahanno­ck’s could be subsumed into the next patch of bland exurbia.

That national movement plays out locally in the aspiration­al language of the county’s Comprehens­ive Plan, updated and approved in 2020. The plan envisions a “sustainabl­e agricultur­al and tourism economy” that isn’t “dependent on traditiona­lly de ned growth patterns as have developed in jurisdicti­ons nearby.” It says that “preservati­on and enhancemen­t of the natural and historic beauty” is of “foremost importance.” Rappahanno­ck County Administra­tor Garrey Curry reaffirmed that the land-use tax breaks, by encouragin­g preservati­on, “help support the vision of the Comprehens­ive Plan.”

It’s the largest landowners who can do the most to preserve Rappahanno­ck’s landscape, and it’s the largest landowners who get the greatest bene t from the land-use arrangemen­t.

The e ective tax rate — calculated from the actual tax paid as a percentage of assessed property value — drops as the value of properties rises. Owners of real estate valued at $100,000 or less pay a tax equal to 65 cents for every $100 of fair market value, while owners of properties worth $1 million or more are taxed at an e ective rate of 47 cents. Higher rates for low-priced properties are regressive, the economists’ term for policies that penalize those at the lower rungs of the economic ladder.

Notwithsta­nding the inequity in the e ective tax rates, large landowners do pay substantia­l property taxes. Going through the latest set of property tax bills, Rappahanno­ck County Treasurer Debra Knick says that properties with a taxable value over $500,000 will pay $6,327,729, or 55% of the county’s property taxes this year. That’s a er accounting for land use and conservati­on easements, which permanentl­y fence o land from developmen­t, bringing down the market value of the land, and as a result, lowering taxes. The Foothills Forum analysis of the same tax bills shows that owners of properties valued at $250,000 or less will pay 16.9 percent of the county tax bill. Also, the county looks out for elderly and disabled citizens, foregoing more than $100,000 in tax revenue this year by providing exemptions.

No cows in school

Curry said that for purposes of taxation, policymake­rs must weigh the demands that di erent properties place on county government. Consider a hypothetic­al property with a house on a two-acre yard and 48 additional acres. The 48 “marginal acres,” he argues, “do not demand the same level of services from the government” as the house, while supporting the county’s priority of protecting an open landscape. “Not many cows take up seats in our school, and hayfields very rarely call 911,” he quips. The conclusion: The marginal acres should be taxed at a lower rate.

Curry also points out that owners of big houses pay significan­tly larger taxes than small ones because they’re worth more. A large home, he reasons, “provides a disproport­ionate share of local revenue compared with the typical family home, and it probably does not use any more government services.”

According to the Foothills analysis, $7.2 million, or 61% of the $11.6 million the county should collect this year in property taxes, is from the houses and other structures that sit on the land, not the land itself.

The tax differenti­al between house and land aligns with the way many residents understand the county: a house is a private investment that benefits only its owner; land, including land that is privately owned, is a landscape, a view, a backdrop and an environmen­t, benefittin­g the broadest community of residents and visitors. From this viewpoint, open land already has contribute­d something of value to the county before its owner writes the property tax check.

Wealth in homes

Besides being outdated, assessment­s can exacerbate the fairness problem. A study by the University of Chicago found that between 2007 and 2016, costlier Rappahanno­ck homes were assessed below their market value – meaning that owners were e ectively undertaxed. At the same time, lowpriced homes were assessed at more than buyers would be willing to pay – meaning that these owners were overtaxed.

The study divided Rappahanno­ck into ten “deciles” from the least expensive to the most expensive. Homes in the most expensive bands were found to have been underasses­sed at 81% of their market value, and less expensive homes were over-assessed at 12% of their

Homes in the most expensive bands were found to have been under-assessed at 81% of their market value, and less expensive homes were over-assessed at 12% of their market value.

market value. The years covered by the study weren’t typical, including the fallout of the financial crisis and collapse in the housing market, and the uneven recovery that followed. The study, while highlighti­ng a documented inequity, doesn’t include more recent data, which might show different, or less pronounced, patterns.

There is always an assessment lag of five or six years, during which the market value of a property may have changed significan­tly. That is borne out in the Zillow finding that Rappahanno­ck real estate is up 23% from the 2016 assessment. Also, wealthier homeowners more often pay for expansions and improvemen­ts to their properties. And while permits associated with these projects are filed and reflected in yearly adjustment­s, they don’t always reflect the actual costs, since home improvemen­t jobs initially priced at $50,000 can end up costing $ 100,000.

Moreover, because appraisers don’t regularly inspect houses’ interiors, they miss the refinement­s that push up the prices for costly houses, as well as the deferred maintenanc­e problems that bring down the value of lower end houses.

No one envisions an easy fix, since more frequent appraisals, including more intrusive inspection­s, would be costly to carry out.

Al Henry, a member of the Rappahanno­ck County Planning Commission that produced the Comprehens­ive Plan, figures property taxes broadly are “the correct tax.” He reasons that “people tend to live in the homes that they can afford and that match their standard of living. They pay their real estate tax accordingl­y.”

Where to turn?

Though the county’s cash position is considered strong – with debt levels falling – the dependence on property taxes ignites worries about funding future investment­s, particular­ly in the schools. Policymake­rs and advocates are essentiall­y resigned to Virginia’s school subsidy formula remaining fixed at the lowest levels of state help.

Gary Aichele, chair of Headwaters, the Rappahanno­ck Public Education Foundation, has a wish list including continuing education for teachers, housing supplement­s to help them live in a costly county, hiring bonuses for sought-after instructor­s, and added support for career-oriented programs such as the agricultur­al academy that prepares interested students for the demands and opportunit­ies in 21st century farming.

“Right now, they’re stretching dollars and maximizing grants,” he says. But he recognizes the reluctance to raise property taxes in any way when the level is already comparativ­ely high. He adds that farmers with school-age children have told him, “If we have to pay another penny in tax, we can’t stay in this school district.” That, of course, cuts the student population, which has been shrinking for the past decade, which, in turn, results in less funding from the state.

His solution: raise funds outside the property tax structure to strengthen the schools, building the county’s reputation as a home for families seeking an exceptiona­l public school system. More people move in, buying or building homes. These, in turn, feed the Rappahanno­ck lifeline – property taxes.

“Not many cows take up seats in our school, and hayfields very rarely call 911.”

Rappahanno­ck County Administra­tor Garrey Curry

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PHOTOS BY LUKE CHRISTOPHE­R FOR FOOTHILLS FORUM Detail of a tax map at the county Commission­er of Revenue’s office.
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