The Kansas City Star

Jackson County exec asks Missouri AG to drop assessment suit

- BY NATHAN PILLING npilling@kcstar.com The Star’s Kacen Bayless contribute­d reporting to this story. Nathan Pilling: @ByNatePill­ing

Jackson County Executive Frank White urged Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey on Wednesday to drop a civil lawsuit against the county for how it handled recent property assessment­s.

White said the lawsuit threatened significan­t financial problems for public services like schools and libraries throughout the county.

“This lawsuit creates the potential for sizeable tax increases for tens of thousands of Jackson County residents to make up for the artificial reduction in valuations sought by the lawsuit,” White said in the letter.

“While the county remains confident in our legal argument as well as our reassessme­nt process, the risk to our residents and our children is too great not to try everything we can to avoid the potential catastroph­e that our school districts have warned the court about,” he said.

Bailey’s office filed the lawsuit in December in Jackson County Circuit Court and accused county officials of illegally handling property tax assessment­s. Those assessment­s for 2023 meant an average increase in property values of 30%, and many county property owners received increases higher than 100%, the lawsuit said.

The lawsuit alleges county officials did not properly notify property owners of increases, failed to do physical inspection­s and handled appeals using an “an illegally performed and dysfunctio­nal” process.

In his letter Wednesday, White said the county had followed “lawful and equitable assessment practices” and said the lawsuit could result in large financial losses for school districts and other public services.

Recent property assessment­s in the county reflected a substantia­l rise in home values, and local taxing districts have set their tax rates accordingl­y, he wrote. The lawsuit, he said, threatened to cut large holes in their budgets, pointing to the Lee’s Summit School District, which would stand to lose $32 million.

White said the increases that some residents experience­d in last year’s state-mandated reassessme­nt came from a combinatio­n of economic changes that increased home values and assessment­s in the county over the years that had been inconsiste­nt and unfair, “that tended to have more to do with who you know than how much your property is worth,” he said.

Taxpayers who believe their property is valued inaccurate­ly can challenge their assessment with the county’s Board of Equalizati­on, which is made up of citizens who weigh appeals, and with the state tax commission, White said.

The lawsuit is scheduled to go to trial on June 6.

 ?? ?? Frank White
Frank White

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