Blame game politics at the Courthouse didn't work in Jeff City this week as this note offers a glimpse at how UNFORGIVABLE BUREAUCRATIC INCOMPETENCE will spike taxes by nearly 400% for many locals. Read more:
Jackson County assessment director concedes process is 'deeply flawed' as concerns remain - The Missouri Times
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. - The Jackson County assessment process is "deeply flawed," Gail McCann Beatty, its director of assessment, conceded before a House committee Monday. Many Jackson County residents have seen dramatic increases in property value assessments in recent months - raising concerns among senior citizens in particular about whether they can remain in their longtime homes.
Notice she never talks about about all the houses that suddenly this year went from $139K to $390k? Or lot's that went from $24K to $290K?
ReplyDeleteSo in other words we are fucked.
ReplyDeleteSeniors who live in their long time homes have the same responsibility to pay taxes as the rest of us do.
ReplyDeleteWTF
ReplyDeleteLets just call her (Gail Beatty) a US Gov spy/whistleblower against the Trump Administration and hopefully she will go missing soon. Lol
ReplyDelete4:17 PM So suddenly jacking their taxes up 50 times what they can afford to pay is responsible? Considering they've always payed on time for an entire lifetime? How does the city lose when people pay their taxes on time because they can afford it?
ReplyDeleteWe are going to get robbed here shortly when the bills arrive and even Burnett doubts people will see any money back even if they file protest.
ReplyDeleteKeepin' It Frosty!
Flawed?????
ReplyDeleteIsn't it her job to fix it not point fingers at it? Typical black behavior.
Plaza has a briefcase full of appeals heading to appeal on the 17th. They hired some guns at Polsinelli to represent them.
ReplyDeletesplit KCMO from jackson county
ReplyDeleteThe tax-paying citizens of Jackson County are nothing more than serfs living in a feudal state, toiling madly away in vain in order to pay King Frank and his minions.
ReplyDeleteThat’s called a stacked deck. A rigged game against the tax-paying public and the county, and the BOE doesn’t care a whit about who loses their property in the process.
http://northeastnews.net/pages/a-rigged-game/