Chicago property taxes

Chicago City Council Approves Budget With Property Tax Hike

Like a lot of city residents, Jose Caraballo of the Belmont Craigin neighborhood wonders how he'll pay higher property taxes.

"The city is going to have a bunch of houses empty," Caraballo said.

The disabled laborer lives on social security, but bought his house in 2003. Now real estate pros tell him it's worth maybe half of the $267,000 he paid for it - yet, it's assessed at $350,000.

"I wish I never buy my house," Caraballo said.

He's not alone in feeling the pinch of a $7.8 billion city budget passed Wednesday that council veterans said was hard.

"If it was a dollar to be found, I guarantee you we would have found it," said Ald. Carrie Austin, 34th Ward.

Ald. Austin - the council's veteran budget committee chairman - predicted the massive increase in property taxes and new fees nearly a year ago.

"None of this is easy! Absolutely none and I've lifted some heavy budgets and this one is about to wear me down," Austin said.

To make a state-mandated payment to shore up the city's police and firefighters pensions and to fund school construction, the aldermen voted 35-15 to approve the $588 million property tax increase.

"In my view, 35 people stood up, stood up for their city's future," said Mayor Rahm Emanuel.

And to address the continuing operating budget deficit, the council okayed a $9.50 a month garbage pickup fee and new taxes on ride-sharing services like Uber and Lyft.

"What do you think would happen in the City of Chicago if we don't take the steps today that we're taking?" said Ald. Pat O'Connor, 40th Ward.

"I'm sad for the senior citizens who will get a property tax increase and will get a garbage fee in the mail," said Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa, 35th Ward.

The no votes includes several North Side alderman whose wards supported the mayor's re-election last spring.

"I question are we doing everything in our power to shrink the size of government before we go and ask the homeowners to pay more?" said Ald. Harry Osterman, 48th Ward.

The city's portion of property tax revenue eventually will increase 72 percent between now and 2019.

It will mean an overall tax bill increase of 13 percent over the next four years. For each $250,000 of a home's appraised value, owners can expect a $500 annual increase in taxes.

The mayor called it progress toward securing the city's future.

"The City of Chicago's public finances are more secure, more stable and stronger today than they were before," Emanuel said.

At a community meeting not far from Caraballo's home, renters know they're facing what are unsustainable increases as landlords pass on the tax increases. Carlos Ayala's salary is $1,260 per month.

"We come here to this country to work hard," Ayala said. "It is getting hard for us."

"I do not minimize what we just did in the sense of the burden, but I know there are other burdens far bigger and far worse if they weren't addressed," Emanuel said.

The ordinance does not include any exemptions for lower-valued properties, nor does it include any rebates for low-income homeowners as have been previously discussed before Wednesday's vote.

The Cook County Assessor's Office says that under the current proposal, residents would receive the first bill in February 2017 with payment due March 1, 2017. The second bill would go out in July 2017 with a due date of Aug. 1, 2017.
 

 

Article source: http://abc7chicago.com/politics/chicago-city-council-approves-budget-with-property-tax-hike/1055185/

 

Who Exactly is Affected by Chicago's Record Property Tax Hike?

Yesterday, the Chicago City Council voted in favor of a budget that will include a historic property tax hike of $589 million to fund the city's police and fire department pensions. And while we were warned about the looming property tax hike weeks ago, it seemed like there was a chance that the plan would face some stiff resistance. Instead, the budget passed in the city council yesterday in a 36-14 vote. But who will this record property tax increase really affect? In a geographic sense, the increase will spare much of the city's south and west sides. In fact, many homeowners throughout the south and west sides may actually have a lower property tax bill. However, some aldermen and activists have warned that the historic tax hike will hit renters the hardest.

Chicago Tax Increase Mapping.jpg

Rents throughout downtown and the North Side have been steadily increasing, with rents for a new studio in a luxury tower breaking the $2,000/month mark. The home buying and rental markets in neighborhoods like the West Loop, South LoopWicker ParkLogan SquareHumboldt Parkand even Avondale have been hotter than others, and the renters in these neighborhoods are the ones who should be most concerned about a possible increase in their rents. There have already been some neighborhood skirmishes in Logan SquareHumboldt Park and notably in Pilsen regarding runaway gentrification, and some activists say that the property tax increasewill only exacerbate the effects.

So, would the property tax hike prevent potential homebuyers from buying in Chicago, or would it cause current homeowners to leave the city? In a poll taken in September, Curbed readers were largely split. Many said that property owners were already paying enough, while the majority said that they could stomach the budget plan and the tax increase that will come with it. A smaller number said that they were still unsure but were concerned.

The new property tax increase will be rolled out over four years, with the biggest increase hitting homeowners next year. For 2015, the city will seek $318 million, then $109 million in 2016, $53 million in 2017 and finally, $63 million in 2018.

And the list of the aldermen who voted no to the plan:

- Ald. Brian Hopkins (2nd) 
- Ald. Susan Sadlowski Garza (10th)
- Ald. Roberto Maldonado (26th) 
- Ald. Jason Irvin (28th) 
- Ald. Chris Taliaferro (29th)
- Ald. Milly Santiago (31st) 
- Ald. Scott Waguespack (32nd) 
- Ald. Deb Mell (33rd)
- Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa (35th)
- Ald. Gilbert Villegas (36th)
- Ald. Anthony Napolitano (41st)
- Ald. Brendan Reilly (42nd)
- Ald. Harry Osterman (48th) 
- Ald. Debra Silverstein (50th)

Article source: http://chicago.curbed.com/archives/2015/10/29/who-does-the-property-tax-hike-affect.php