Steady single-family home sales last year amid the Los Angeles area's limited mid-priced housing supply helped push the county's property tax assessment rolls over the $1-trillion mark for the first time, officials said in a report to be released today.Look who like high property values:the tax man.
The county's 2006 assessed value grew by 9.3%, or $88 billion, over the previous year, despite widespread anxiety over a real estate slowdown.
The increase — above the county's average annual growth of about 7% in the last three decades — "kind of reinforces that property values in Los Angeles County are really not going down, and are at least stable at this point in time," Assessor Rick Auerbach said.
The bulging county coffers mean more money for city, county and school programs, Auerbach said.
However, a sluggish overall real estate market dampened growth of the county's assessed value, compared with the previous year's increase of 11%, Auerbach said.
"It's the year-to-year [changes] in the long term you always have to keep your eye on," said David E. Janssen, the county's chief executive.
Tuesday, July 10, 2007
L.A. County's property tax rolls hit $1-trillion mark
The L.A. Times reports: