The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Fulton still grappling with 2017 tax digest

If year’s tax digest isn’t OK’d, county residents may have to pay more.

- By Arielle Kass akass@ajc.com

Depending on the outcome of the county’s fight with the state, Fulton taxpayers could end up owing more than original bill.

When the bills arrived last November, most Fulton County residents paid their property taxes.

In their minds, after that, the 2017 tax year was over.

For county officials, however, 2017 has raged on.

Even as they prepare to send out 2018 bills, officials are still trying to get the state Department of Revenue to approve last year’s tax digest. Depending on what a judge decrees, some taxpayers could eventually owe more than they were originally billed nine months ago.

How did we end up here? You may remember — property values spiked last year, and county residents revolted. County commission­ers decided to roll back most residentia­l values to 2016 levels, pleasing residents but angering the Department of Revenue. State officials said the county didn’t have the authority to make that unilateral move and refused to accept the tax digest. That’s the official list of all property subject to assessment, and all taxes due, and it must be approved each year.

Fulton leaders appealed the rejection, saying an 1880s law gave commission­ers of roads and revenues — precursors to these county com-

missioners — authority to modify the county’s tax digest. So they reasoned they had the authority, too. They even hired former attorney general Sam Olens — at a cost of $20,000 — to try to broker an agreement.

None of it worked. So now Fulton County is going to court, in the hopes that a judge will tell them what they did was OK.

If a judge sides with the Department of Revenue, Fulton County could be forced to re-bill for 2017. Property values could be retroactiv­ely raised.

Doing so would cause “substantia­l harm” to taxpayers and to the school districts, cities, county government and other groups that use Fulton’s tax digest as the basis for their own bills, court papers filed last week by the county said. Those entities would have to issue new tax bills and, potentiall­y, handle more appeals. The filing explains that Lynne Riley, the state revenue commission­er, “has verbally informed representa­tives of Fulton County that she will not approve the 2017 digest without a ruling by a court that the 2017 digest as submitted was proper under Georgia law.”

Riley’s “refusal to act has created uncertaint­y for Fulton County and its taxpayers,” the filing said. The delay also means the 2018 tax digest hasn’t been approved — and it won’t be, until the digest for 2017 is.

Robb Pitts, chairman of the Fulton County Commission, said he’s willing to work with Riley to get the issue resolved — perhaps she would let the 2017 tax bills stand if Pitts apologized for commission­ers’ presumptuo­usness? It doesn’t hurt to try.

“Relying upon some obscure law was a mistake,” he said.

The county, with Olens’ help, resolved a number of technical issues that were contributi­ng to the holdup. That alone is worth cheering, County Manager Dick Anderson said.

“The ability to re-engage and work through the technical issues is an accomplish­ment that’s noteworthy,” Anderson said.

He said the county is “one step closer to having a resolution.” But one step closer still isn’t a resolution.

“We’re going to have to resolve this at some point,” Pitts said. “There’s going to have to be a compromise.”

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? Robb Pitts (left), chairman of the Fulton County Board of Commission­ers, celebrates Tuesday with Atlanta Schools Superinten­dent Meria Carstarphe­n and Jeff Rose, superinten­dent of the Fulton County Schools, after Judge Alan Harvey ruled that they could collect property taxes despite thousands of pending valuation appeals. The money is critical for school operations.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM Robb Pitts (left), chairman of the Fulton County Board of Commission­ers, celebrates Tuesday with Atlanta Schools Superinten­dent Meria Carstarphe­n and Jeff Rose, superinten­dent of the Fulton County Schools, after Judge Alan Harvey ruled that they could collect property taxes despite thousands of pending valuation appeals. The money is critical for school operations.
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? Robb Pitts, chairman of the Fulton County Commission, sits in Judge Alan Harvey’s courtroom Tuesday hearing arguments in the county’s bid to collect property tax revenue despite thousands of outstandin­g valuation appeals.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM Robb Pitts, chairman of the Fulton County Commission, sits in Judge Alan Harvey’s courtroom Tuesday hearing arguments in the county’s bid to collect property tax revenue despite thousands of outstandin­g valuation appeals.

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