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CA -- Property values set for the purposes of collecting
taxes will decline in 14 of Contra Costa County's 19 cities this fiscal year as
a stubborn recession continues to hit local government budgets.
"The market is bouncing around on the bottom trying to
recover," said county Assessor Gus Kramer. "That's what we are seeing
in most areas of the county. In every recession we have had in this country
since 1946, we have seen this type of pattern."
It wasn't all bad news.
Countywide, the combined assessed property value rose to
$141.2 billion, up from $140 billion last fiscal year, according Kramer's
annual report of the property tax assessment roll released Monday. Property
owners' tax bills are based on a percentage of assessed value.
Richmond's roll value spiked 16.7 percent, an anomaly Kramer
attributed to Chevron's failed property tax appeal.
An appeals board raised the Richmond refinery's fair market
value to $3.7 billion, $4.4 billion and $3.8 billion for 2007, 2008 and 2009.
The trend is reflected in the assessor's 2012-2013 calculations.
Danville and Lamorinda saw slight improvements. San Ramon
edged downward by just a fraction.
Every other city will again receive less property tax money
this fiscal year than it did the year before. Most anticipated the declines
although some will see larger hits than expected.
Hercules, whose voters approved a sales tax hike in June to
help the city's budget, tops the list with a 5.9 percent drop.
Other cities and their reductions include: Antioch, 1
percent; Concord, 4.6 percent; Martinez, 1.5 percent; Pinole, 3.41 percent;
Pittsburg, 0.9 percent; Walnut Creek, 0.7 percent; Brentwood, 2.1 percent; San
Pablo, 2 percent; Pleasant Hill, 2.3 percent; Clayton, 4 percent; Oakley, 0.65
percent.
Some city leaders are relieved it wasn't worse. After losses
each of the past three years, Antioch had braced itself for another 2 percent
cut. Instead, the number fell by only half that amount.
"It represents what we've been hearing anecdotally,
that property values are starting to turn back upward," said City Manager
Jim Jakel. "I think it shows that the worst is over, but we still have a
long ways to go."
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