04-04-2020, 07:39 PM
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#16610
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Has a particular set of skills
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: On the water
Casino cash: $-671038
 VARSITY
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Quote:
Originally Posted by DaneMcCloud
Prop 13 basically says the county can't raise property taxes equivalent to their value today.
So for example, someone who purchased their home in 1993 for $150,000 pays property taxes based on that purchase price plus modest and incremental increases in assessed value each year. In this case, the homeowner paid approximately $1,800 per year in property tax and 27 years later, are likely paying somewhere around $3,000 a year or less today.
Without Prop 13, the property tax on such homes would be closer to $11k per year on the low end and more than $20k on the high end, something those people most likely cannot afford.
The result would be catastrophic, with tens of thousands, if not millions, unable to afford their property tax and in the process, either lose or be forced to sell their homes, something no one wants to see happen.
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I’m paying $5200 for flood, $3700 for regular insurance and $4700 for property taxes. So sounds like we have it worse here, at least us on the water. But, we pay no state taxes.
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