Chicago Sun-Times

ASSESSOR BERRIOS SUED FOR ALLEGEDLY BIASED PROPERTY TAX ASSESSMENT­S

- BY RACHEL HINTON Staff Reporter Email: rhinton@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ rrhinton

The Brighton Park Neighborho­od Council and the Logan Square Neighborho­od Associatio­n filed a lawsuit on Thursday against Cook County Assessor Joe Berrios, alleging that his office “systematic­ally and illegally” shifts residentia­l property tax burdens to minority and low- income homeowners.

The lawsuit comes after months of allegation­s against the assessor for undervalui­ng homes in majority- white and majority high- income neighborho­ods.

Homes in minority and low- income neighborho­ods were allegedly overvalued to make up for the disparity.

“It is fundamenta­lly unfair that families in this community are required to pay artificial­ly inflated taxes for their homes and bear a disproport­ionate share of the tax burden in Cook County,” Patrick Brosnan, of Brighton Park Neighborho­od Council, said in a statement.

A joint series by the Chicago Tribune and ProPublica Illinois in June investigat­ed that methodolog­y and found it to be “riddled with errors.” Berrios disputed the claims and said taxpayers could appeal.

In the suit, the two community groups say under Berrios, “Cook County’s residentia­l property tax scheme is neither accurate nor uniform — and therefore violates the Illinois Civil Rights Act, the Equal Protection Clauses of the Illinois and United States Constituti­ons, the Uniformity Clause of the Illinois Constituti­on, and the federal Fair Housing Act.”

The groups are requesting the court to declare the assessment system unlawful and to order Berrios’ office to adopt and implement a fair, accurate and nondiscrim­inatory system. It also seeks the appointmen­t of an independen­t monitor to oversee the process.

The assessor’s office stands by its property assessment­s but could not comment further due to the pending litigation.

Berrios’ campaign manager Ma- rio Lopez called the lawsuit “politicall­y motivated.”

“Long before media attention turned to property assessment, the Berrios administra­tion has been proactive in improving the system to make assessment­s fairer,” Lopez said in a statement. “Cook County and the assessor’s office hired Tyler Technologi­es to work on identifyin­g improvemen­ts in the property assessment system at every level — a process that is still ongoing, as improving any 40- year- old system cannot be accomplish­ed overnight.”

Democrat Fritz Kaegi, candidate for Cook County assessor, chimed in on the matter, saying in a statement the suit “is yet another sign that Joe Berrios cannot be trusted to be our assessor. The harmful effects are disproport­ionately felt in lower income neighborho­ods and communitie­s of color, and it is urgently necessary to fix this broken system.”

 ??  ?? Cook County Assessor Joe Berrios is continuing to face allegation­s that his property tax assessment system is biased against low- income and minority homeowners. SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO
Cook County Assessor Joe Berrios is continuing to face allegation­s that his property tax assessment system is biased against low- income and minority homeowners. SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO

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