Constitutional amendment; exempts certain homeowners from taxation (second reference). (HJ4)

Introduced By

Del. Dave Albo (R-Springfield)

Dave Albo (R-Springfield)
Served: 1994–
with support from 43 copatrons, whose average partisan position is:

Progress

Introduced
Passed Committee
Passed House
Passed Senate
Signed by Governor
Became Law

Description

Constitutional amendment (second resolution); property exempt from taxation. Authorizes the General Assembly to enact legislation that will allow localities by ordinance to exempt from real property taxes, or defer real property taxes on, up to 20 percent of the value of residential or farm property that is the owner- occupant's primary dwelling and lived in continuously.   View Full Text »

Outcome

Bill Has Failed
View Bill's History

Video

Votes were cast on this bill on the following dates for which Richmond Sunlight has video: 01/25/2008, 01/29/2008, 01/29/2008, 01/30/2008, 01/30/2008, 02/21/2008, 02/22/2008, 02/22/2008 and 02/25/2008.

Comments

Jim Duncan writes:

Why 20%?

robert legge writes:

20% is a nice round number, Jim. This bill looks hard to vote against. It will be of more help to areas with a lot of second homes. In urban areas it will probably hurt renters, if the landlords taxes go up. But in areas where land values have risen thanks to rich second home buyers, and the district's local composite index has risen, it seems fair to get some more money from them. But if there are few second homes, people should not think their taxes will drop 20%. If the county has less assessed value to deal with, they are going to raise the tax rate. But I still think I will support this one.