San Diego Union-Tribune

VALUE

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in 2009, 1.56 in 2010 and 0.14 in 2012. Part of the reason for lowered valuation besides homes selling for less money was Propositio­n 8, which allowed California assessors to reduce the assessed value of properties if market values dropped significan­tly.

While that may be a possibilit­y for some homeowners if home values are hurt by the economic fallout of COVID-19, home prices in San Diego County are still on the rise. As of May, the median home price was at a nearrecord high of $590,000, increasing 3.5 percent in a year. Analysts point to a variety of factors keeping prices up: Low inventory of homes for sale causing price wars, the increased value put on homeowners­hip as workers continue to work from home, and low mortgage rates.

Residentia­l properties make up the vast majority of taxable land in the county with 936,884 parcels. It is followed by commercial with 27,087 parcels, industrial with 11,233 parcels and recreation­al with 15,319.

National City saw its assessed value grow the most under the new valuation, up 7.1 percent in a year. It was followed by Santee at 7 percent, Chula Vista at 6.26 percent and Del Mar at 6 percent. The lowest increase was Poway at 4.33 percent.

In terms of overall values, the city of San Diego has the highest assessed land at $291.3 billion. It was followed by Carlsbad at $37.3 billion and Chula Vista at $33.7 billion. Lemon Grove had the lowest at $2.53 billion.

The majority of taxes collected, around 45 percent, went to schools in the last fiscal year in San Diego County.

The biggest property taxpayers that fiscal year were San Diego Gas & Electric with $148.3 million, Qualcomm with $25.6 million and the Irvine Co. with $14.4 million.

It might be a while before San Diego County’s value increases can be compared to other parts of California because several counties have delayed publishing tax rolls as they deal with COVID-19.

The county’s valuation might have been around $36 million higher but several programs from the Assessor’s Taxpayer Advocate outreach program lowered bills for welfare institutio­ns, like churches, museums and nonprofits. Its program to greatly reduce tax bills of disabled veterans cut about $14 million off the tax rolls.

There could be changes coming to tax rolls after November because of a new initiative called Propositio­n 15. It would remove commercial properties from the same tax roll benefit homeowners get under Prop. 13, with the idea it would increase taxes on corporatio­ns that could fund schools and other government programs.

Prop. 15 would affect only commercial properties worth more than $3 million and businesses with 50 or fewer employees would be exempt. Proponents like the California Teachers Associatio­n say commercial properties paying taxes on current assessed values, unlike the original sale price in Prop. 13, would unlock seriously needed funding after the pandemic. Opponents, such as the California Assessors’ Associatio­n (Dronenburg is president-elect), are opposed largely because of implementa­tion costs tied to a newly trained workforce and concern it could lower taxes in small and rural counties.

phillip.molnar@ sduniontri­bune.com

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