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Friday, February 22

What the Re- evaluation is about

Anonymous said...
Publius: Please post this as an Article Submission

The country knows that the mortgage crisis is up side down. The assessment policies of the town of Atkinson are also up side down, and has been for many years. The Atkinson Taxpayers For Fair Evaluations Committee realize this article is long, but worth reading to make our point. Please take the time to read what the New York Times has to say about this crisis, and imagine what it is going to cost all taxpayers to correct the problem. (and the time it will take to correct it.)

Most homes in Atkinson are over valued. Those over $400,000.00 less so than those under $400,000.00. That’s not proportional and fair assessment required by law. If we are successful in getting the BTLA to order the revaluation of the town at no cost to the taxpayer, why not? If we have to pay for revaluation, (which your committee doesn’t believe will happen) it’s still better to know the real value of the property, as compared to what we hope we can sell it for. The necessary corrections will be made, and the tax rate will fall more closely to where it should be. It’s better to know the truth before making critical decisions, as compared to making decisions on false data.

Our currant selectmen are responsible by RSA to verify that assessments are done correctly. The fact that they obfuscate their responsibility, should not be a comfort to the taxpayer.

Your committee would like all taxpayers to support the revaluation of Atkinson, so fair and proportional assessments are assured. We are not against everybody paying their fair share, but we are against anyone paying more than their fair share.

The question should be: Why are our selectmen and the “Powers To Be” working so hard to defeat that goal?

Your comments please.

Sincere regards,
Leon Artus
Atkinson Taxpayers For Fair Evaluations Committee (spokesperson








From today’s New York Times

February 22, 2008
Rescues for Homeowners in Debt Weighed
By EDMUND L. ANDREWS and LOUIS UCHITELLE
WASHINGTON — Prodded in part by some of the nation’s biggest banks, the Bush administration and Congress are considering costly new proposals for the government to rescue hundreds of thousands of homeowners whose mortgages are higher than the value of their houses.
Not since the Depression has a larger share of Americans owed more on their homes than they are worth. With the collapse of the housing boom, nearly 8.8 million homeowners, or 10.3 percent of the total, are underwater. That is more than double the percentage just a year ago, according to a new estimate of the damage by Moody’s Economy.com.
Administration officials say they still oppose any taxpayer bailout for either people who borrowed more than they could afford or banks that made foolish loans during the height of the speculative bubble in housing.
But with the current efforts to arrest the housing collapse so far bearing little fruit, Washington is being forced to explore new ideas, among them the idea of a federal mortgage guarantee for troubled borrowers.
And policy makers are listening to proposals from industry and community groups to use government funds to purchase and refinance billions of dollars in mortgages now in danger of default.
Many owners are only gradually becoming aware that their homes would sell for less than the debt against them — a phenomenon, said Richard T. Curtin, director of the Reuters/University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers, that is “beginning to weigh on people, making them uncertain and nervous about the future.”
That nervousness is evident across the country, particularly in places like Memphis, a city of nearly 1.3 million people where falling home prices and negative equity are new experiences.
The housing slumps of the mid-1970s and late 1980s were confined to the coasts. The current bust, while leaving some cities relatively unscathed, has cut a far wider path and it comes just when home debt is at its highest level since World War II.
For Stuart B. Breakstone, the problem hit home when he was forced to come to the closing on the sale of his eight-year-old custom-built house with a check for $65,000. The money, out of his own pocket, was to pay the difference between what he still owed on the mortgage for his home and the lower selling price.
Mr. Breakstone, a 42-year-old lawyer, and his wife, Lori, chief of customs agents at Memphis International Airport — who together earn more than $250,000 a year — managed to extricate themselves by paying off the mortgage. But millions of others are trapped in their homes. They have jobs, make their mortgage payments on time, but cannot raise enough cash to cover the shortfall.
Some eventually default, surrendering to foreclosure. But the vast majority — embedded in their communities, their children in public schools, their reputations at stake — wait nervously in hope that prices will bottom and rise once again, eliminating their negative equity and restoring their freedom to sell or refinance.
“People can’t believe this is happening to them,” said Robert Moulton, president of the Americana Mortgage Group in Manhasset, N.Y.
In Washington, it will be difficult to engineer a bailout similar to the one for savings and loan companies in the early 1990s, because Democrats and Republicans alike cringe at the very word bailout and fear a backlash by people who never became overextended.
But with millions of homeowners already underwater and the prospect that millions more may face the same situation, Democrats and Republicans alike are scrambling for ideas to keep people from simply walking away from their homes and to help those struggling to pay their bills.
Bank of America, which is in the process of acquiring Countrywide Financial and has potentially huge exposure, has circulated a proposal to create a new federal agency that would buy vast quantities of delinquent mortgages at a deep discount and replace them with fixed-rate federally guaranteed loans.
The bank warned that tightening credit conditions were leading to “escalating levels of delinquency and default among borrowers” and “an unprecedented number” of homes that would enter foreclosure.
Administration officials have given the Bank of America plan a cold reception. But the idea is similar to one proposed by Senator Christopher J. Dodd, Democrat of Connecticut and chairman of the Senate Banking Committee.
The Federal Housing Administration, meanwhile, is examining ways to expand its new insurance program, known as FHA Secure, to help people replace their costly subprime mortgages with federally guaranteed fixed-rate mortgages.
Mortgage industry executives have complained that the F.H.A.’s eligibility requirements are so restrictive that the new program has helped only a trickle.
Credit Suisse executives said they have held lengthy meetings with F.H.A. officials and have urged the agency to relax rules that currently disqualify many borrowers.
One idea, company officials said, was to allow borrowers who had simply made six payments during the course of their mortgage to qualify.
Representative Barney Frank, Democrat of Massachusetts and chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, has ordered his staff to come up with options for a broader rescue bill. An aide to Mr. Frank said his bill would, among other things, allow the government to buy up at least some troubled mortgages.
A more modest plan is being developed by John M. Reich, director of the Office of Thrift Supervision, the agency that regulates savings and loan companies. His plan, still in rough form, would create a voluntary system under which mortgage lenders would reduce debt and monthly payments to reflect the diminished sales value of a home.
It would take the remainder of the mortgage as a “negative amortization certificate,” a lien that the investor could recoup if the house were later sold for its original mortgage value or higher.
In an interview, Mr. Reich said he hoped that most of the old mortgages would be replaced by cheaper mortgages insured through the F.H.A.
“It isn’t a bailout,” Mr. Reich said. “It is a market-driven solution.”
For Americans caught in a mortgage trap and owing more on a home than it would sell for, consumer spending and confidence are the most immediate casualties, Mr. Curtin reports. But the damage goes deeper.
People cannot move easily to jobs in other cities if they have to sell their homes at a loss. The $168 billion federal stimulus package is likely to be less effective than intended because many homeowners may simply use their government checks to pay down their debts.
Housing prices in Memphis fell by 2.5 percent last year, only the second decline since records began to be kept in 1968, and by far the largest dip, according to Chandler Reports, which gathers this data for Greater Memphis.
The Memphis metropolitan area highlights the larger national trend, with the average first-mortgage debt, at $153,764, edging above the average home price, $152,815, for the first time. And that does not count refinancing and home equity loans, as well as closing costs.
Collie Tuttle, in her early 60s, is caught in this bind. Four years ago, she purchased a newly built four-bedroom three-bathroom house in the Memphis outer suburb of Olive Branch, Miss., for $270,000. She put nothing down, relying on her six-figure income from selling furniture to pay down the mortgage, reducing it to $248,000.
But then she lost her job, and in her next one — also selling furniture, but at lower pay — she is being forced to choose between her home and the rest of her life.
“It was a big mistake on my part to buy this house,” she said. Divorced, with two grown sons, she rattles around in it alone. She had thought the house would add to her wealth.
But now, to sell it for the $269,000 a potential buyer was recently willing to pay, “I would have to come up with $6,000 from my pocket,” Ms. Tuttle said, explaining that she cannot afford to invade her meager retirement account. “All I’m asking is for enough so that I come out even.”
Her house payments and utilities come to nearly $2,400 a month. That is affordable, she said, on her present income. But very little is left over to replace her 11-year-old car, to travel, to pay down her credit card debt, or even to buy new clothes.
“I’m stuck,” she said. “I’ve tried everything and I can’t get rid of this house.”
The reluctance to sell at a loss helps to explain why the number of homes listed for sale in the Memphis area has climbed to more than 13,000 from 9,000 a year ago.
Jane and Kevin Naus, in their mid-40s, have had their home on the market since last May; their attempts to sell for a price that covers their debts are skewing their lives.
Mr. Naus took a job in Greenville, N.C., last March, at a local bank. His wife stayed behind, putting their house up for sale, just a month before prices began to unravel.
But there were no offers at the $239,000 the couple asked for their four-bedroom brick house on a one-acre corner lot, so they gradually cut the price to $220,000, barely enough to cover the $192,000 in mortgage debt and an additional $22,000 in closing costs and broker’s fees. It still did not sell.
Mr. Naus says prices are under downward pressure because of competition from the auctioning of foreclosed homes at bargain prices. There were 5,714 foreclosures in Memphis in 2007. “In our neighborhood alone,” Mr. Naus said, “five houses were sold last September and October, and four of the five were foreclosures.”
Mrs. Naus joined her husband in Greenville in December but he lost his job in January, when his division was shut down. The couple decided to stay in Greenville, to be near the family of Mrs. Naus, who has multiple sclerosis and no longer works.
Her $1,800-a-month in disability pay, however, falls short of the $1,400 in monthly payments on the Memphis house and the $700 in rent for an apartment in Greenville. The Nauses make up the difference with his severance pay, and occasional dips into their savings, which have fallen below $100,000.
“We don’t want to lose the house or cut the price,” Mrs. Naus said, “and end up owing money.”
“Basically,” she added, “we are praying that the house sells before my husband’s severance runs out.”
The Breakstones are similarly in danger of sinking, despite their high income. After forking over $65,000 on the house they just sold, they are struggling with $670,000 in debt on their present, larger home — perhaps more than the house itself is worth.
The Breakstones, each previously divorced, married in 2006, bringing three children to their union. They needed a bigger house than the one Mr. Breakstone had built.
Mr. Breakstone thought that he could sell his other home quickly, but it sat on the market for 17 months and finally brought only $170,000. He covered the shortfall by borrowing against his present home — bringing it closer to being underwater, too.
Now the Breakstones are saddled with $4,000 a month in house payments, and $14,000 more in fixed outlays, including child support, car leases, taxes, consumer debt and utilities, using up the bulk of their income.
“I used to think,” Mr. Breakstone said, “that I would pay the piper later and enjoy life now. I’ve totally reversed that view.”
Edmund L. Andrews reported from Washington and Louis Uchitelle from Memphis and New York.

16 comments:

Anonymous said...

What exactly does the "powers to Be" Mean??

Anonymous said...

Leon,
Valerie in her article submission
states plain as day that she does not support your efforts for a town wide reval. {THANK GOODNESS}.
Who are you endorsing for the postion of selectperson? If deliberative session is any indication then it looks like you are out on a limb. I feel you should direct your efforts towards something more helpful. We all know you are passionate, intelligent, and creative to name a few. At some point the town will be in alignment with your views. The time is not now. Your energy could really be better used to effect change in this town in a different direction. The town has fallen and can't stand up. The best way to help the taxpayers is to do a top to bottom review of all depts. This will take a number of years. Perhaps after that it will become your time. Will you help all the taxpayers now by focusing on the real issues and not the one issue you have championed? Please help us now.

Anonymous said...

I would really like to see Leon take a few courses in assessing. From reading the stuff he's written, and judging by the petitioned articles he submitted, I don't think he really understands the logic behind a "fair" assessment. A few courses would (1) help him understand and (2) give him a new vocation to keep him busy.

Anonymous said...

Not to hurt feeling but when things are way over explained the explainer comes off as a Kook!

I agree that the valuation might not be fair at the moment, but when you start bringing down the valuations the tax rate goes up.

Anonymous said...

I do not believe this will do much toward solving the more significant problems in this town.

Anonymous said...

Leon,
It would be a lot easier and cheaper to call 3 or 4 local realty companies. Maybe even Valerie {if other posting is true}
and have multiple market analysis's
down on your property. I receive mailers regularly promoting this service for free. Have 3 or 4 companies do it then take an average. This will allow everyone to know true current aproximate values for their properties. If you reccomend this to all it will free you up to help with our cause.
I hope you will truly consider this. We all know the market has crashed. Most people upside down saw it coming but couldn't help themselves because spending was not inline with their income stream. The only choice was another refinance with lenders who just wanted the business. It is well documented. The NY Times is only telling an old story. Good Luck!

Anonymous said...

Leon:

I think you are sending mixed messages. A month or two ago, I thought you were originally saying the town should be re-evaluated because the assessment effort was done incorrectly/unfairly due to a lack of assessment standards and a poor job done by the assessor. Now you seem to be pointing out real estate market conditions have worsened and caused people to lose the equity in their homes. So is it the real estate market conditions that have caused homes to be over-assessed or is it because the assessors did not do their job fairly/correctly when the assessment was conducted? I'm getting confused.

In my mind, they are two completely separate and distinct scenarios that cannot be blended. In my opinion, if you start mixing in real estate market conditions as a reason for re-evaluating the town, then people are going to say that market conditions are not a valid reason for a reval since markets continuously go up and down and up and down. And it looks like you are conveniently mixing in this reason to support your case - which infers to me your case for town wide re-evaluation may be weak or is not gaining traction as much as you hoped. While the NY Times article is dripping with sad news and empathy for those struggling financially, I contend this article has nothing to do with a Fair Evaluation (assessment) of my home. The word assessment does not even appear in that article, once. It is an article about MORTGAGES and real estate values. And we all know a lot of these people are in trouble because they bought too high with little down payment and/or refinanced their homes to the hilt and took out cash to spend frivolously or paid off other debt from previous spending. The relationship between people whose investments went bad and the assessment issues you claim in Atkinson is not clear to me.

Either your case is that assessments were done wrong and need to be redone for those specific reasons, or market conditions are causing real estate investments to be "upside down" where mortgages exceed a home's value and therefore assessments are now too high as well, and somehow this justifies a re-assessment of the town. I don't think you can use both reasons to support your position and it looks to me like there is simply not enough valid reasons to support a town wide re-evaluation or you wouldn't drag in the new reason about market conditions. You almost sound like George Bush stating yet another new reason justifying the Iraq war because the last reason didn't sell.

Are properties over-assessed? If anybody thinks so, they can file for an abatement. Right?

Anonymous said...

To 2:58 pm:

I believe Leon is raising a valid point. He has found evidence of unfair assessments and is trying to draw attention to it. Unfair in that different areas of the town are assessed differently, with different criteria.

If the tax rate is raised to reflect a more accurate base then so be it. You should't fudge the numbers because you don't like the real tax rate to be known.

If you think Leon should be doing something different with his time because you don't like how he is spending it, then might I suggest some counseling for your controlling, opinionated personality.

IT'S HIS TIME TO SPEND HOW HE CHOOSES!!!!!

Why this is so hard for people to understand, and why people are protesting that which can only show them the real tax rate is beyond me.

Anonymous said...

Of course different areas of town are assessed at different rates! Would you expect the homes on Juniper Lane (where the lot size is half an acre) to be assessed the same as the homes on Atkinson Farm Road (at least 2 acre lots?)
or on Hemlock Heights (no more than a quarter of an acre)?

The Juniper Lane homes were built in the 50s, maybe, or earlier. The construction standards were different then. For one thing, electrical standards.

The homes in Hemlock Heights were all built as seasonal homes (most, anyway), with really basic requirements.

On Atkinson Farm, newer construction standards, larger homes, better quality.

If everyone was assessed on the same say "average" standards, Atkinson Farm residents would be thrilled to see their taxes go down. I, on the other hand, live
in a 100-year-old house, and I'm not so sure I want to see my standards go up to meet those of newer homes.

Anonymous said...

You are not comparing similar properites! When you look at comparable properties, they should be assessed the same...and they are not.

You missed the basic point.

Anonymous said...

What is the basic point? I lost it in all this talk about mortagages and foreclosures.

Anonymous said...

when leon wants to waste my hard earned money then it becomes my concern how he wastes his time.
talk to people about this crazy idea to reval the town and you will see 98% are against it. delib session showed it! the town just revaled a few years ago. its over.
go save the town of derry or something like that. maybe plaistow could use your help.
just my thoughts! thanks again Val
stating you are against this. I would not be able to vote for you if you supported this small minority, simplistic idea.

Anonymous said...

A few thoughts on re-val. Last night, Fred Childs said that a re-val, done in one year, would cost an estimated $220,000. Can you see the State ordering our assessors to do a "free" re-val to correct our supposed problems? And if they did, do you supposed they'd do a good job? And do you suppose the town is going to raise and appropriate that amount of money (it would have to go as a warrant article)?

Our five-year plan spreads the costs over that period, making it a whole lot easier to stomach. During four of those five years, the town is divided into 4 sections and supposedly reviewed (inside as well as out) by an assesor. If additions have been made, or improvements, those are added onto the field card. No increase in the rates, because that's not done until the last year. In effect, we are not losing tax dollars. New things are taxed at the "old" rates until the last year, when the increases are applied to all properties.
In order to keep up with (or keep down with) the economy, we'd need to re-val every year. In two years, housing prices will go up again; our equalized valuation will be down

I'm thinking that I heard Selectmen indicate the contract with the assessors is up this year, at which point I'm suspecting the Board will put the contract out to bid.

When they do, I wish they'd make provisions for data entry to be done by someone in Town Hall (Elaine Woodbury used to do it.) That way, at least someone in Town Hall will know what's happening and be able to intelligently talk to property owners.

Anonymous said...

I wish the state would order the assessors to do a full evaluation at no cost to the taxpayers. Why? because I was curious and went to town hall and go my tax cards and found that they have been raising my assessed value every two or three years, not five. I looked at a few other houses around mine, same thing. So Leon is correct, there's a problem.

To say that one can tell him how to spend HIS free time is nuts, it's his time, he's not charging people for his time. What do you care what he does unless you are the assessor or you have something to hide? When the market is low, it's actually a good time to reassess. I'm for it and I did my homework.

Anonymous said...

THANKS FOR THAT POST! WHAT A GOOD GUY YOU ARE {duh} So they reassess every couple of years already. So if that is the case, then what is the problem? Why should we pay for another one this year? You just stated they do it every couple of years already. This is pretty simple. Oh, thats right, I must be hiding a big, big, big secret because I think this idea is ludicrous. There must be a big conspiracy against this idea. Big brother might be watching? Why not have the pettioned articles voted on by secret ballot? Oh, we might have to actually research the RULES. That would take some thinking and leg work. Its better to whine, it feels good to let it out. Just my thoughts... {duh}

Anonymous said...

To 1:51 AM -

Maybe if you got some sleep you would not be so cranky and you could write about the facts rather than to be so emotional and ornery.

Don't you realize that they have been reassessing early and peoples taxes have been going up each time? They are supposed to do it in 5 years, not 2 or 3. They are cheating people.

Right now, the BOS does not require a bond on the assessing company, as they used to. If they took a bond, we would not have to pay for these corrections when mistakes were found.

Now, there are a lot of problems and they will be fixed thru the abatement process.

The BOS should require a bond, to protect the town. They have again put the town in jeopardy by not acting prudently.


ATKINSON's Vietnam HONOR ROLL as VOTED and PASSED by 2005 Town Meeting and re-approved at Special Town Meeting Sept. 12

EDITORIAL-


A voice of compassion, an example of fairness and reasonable government.

One who believes in the strength and comfort you, your children and your family can draw from good government leadership.

A person who knows Atkinson is our home -- our most important possession that must be preserved and protected through fair taxes and sound community planning and where our children must be safe to grow to become a new generation of leaders.

One who knows that the citizens of Atkinson are all neighbors with her leadership to be dedicated and responsive to all.

One who believes that when those from Atkinson have served our nation and honors are deserved, those honors must be given.

In Valerie Tobin, we now have a leader we know we can entrust with these responsibilities because they are part of her character.

It is our honor to endorse Valerie for election to Atkinson’s Board of Selectmen.

Just a note for those who wish to count the deer.

In January 08 this blog had 16,000 hits and 1,500 unique visitors (for the month).

In 2007 this blog had over 100,000 hits and 5,750 unique visitors (for the year).

EDITORIAL-


"I offer nothing more than simple facts, plain arguments, and common sense . . ." [TP, 1776]

We take no small measure of umbrage at such a hostile official act against this BLOG’s patron. Therefore, a timely Editorial comment is both appropriate and necessary.

Discussion of Atkinson’s financial direction, from any viewpoint, is fundamental and encouraged and we will always attempt to limit and correct errors.

However, Righteous indignation towards purported error of such inconsequential nature is not appropriate.

The ENTIRE car deal is problematic. If it was caused by poor judgement, improper exercise of authority, neglect or mistake or even specious reasoning, this will never trump the facts that the entire questionable transaction started and ended within a very small circle of confidants.

We find the entire circumstances surrounding the disposition of the police Cruiser highly irregular at the least and the "explanations" somewhat trifling and exhaustive of our intellect.

Mr. Consentino: It’s time to go. Being Chief of Atkinson’s Police Department is NOT a birthright. That is a fabled legend of yesteryear.

Historically in Atkinson, police chief appointments were made "under the hand of the selectmen" for terms of one year at a time, as was also the case in the beginning of Mr. Consentino’s assorted and discontinuous stream of appointments to this position.

Your only remaining credential established on a claim of indispensability has faded.

So time is neigh. Plan a graceful exit, Clean out your desk, Accept the gratitude and tearful sentiments from some. We plan no editorial recriminations. It is time. Thank you for your service, We wish you a long and happy retirement. Bon Voyage.

LETTER


"To All Atkinson Residents,

I am writing to ask for your help. A member of the Atkinson Police Department needs our help. I am here to ask for your help in Corporal John Lapham's fight for his life. As you are aware, John has been diagnosed with Leukemia. He has been once again hospitalized with an infection that is threatening his life. He is one of the bravest people that I have ever met. He has never asked of anything from the residents of the town. Now is our chance to step up and help both him and his family out. As everyone is aware John has been out of work for a few months. His family has been busy helping John to get better. He needs our help, and I am hoping that this town can step up to the plate and help. From the moment that I met John, I have admired him. He does alot, but never asks for anything in return. He has helped so many people in this town. I for one am one of those people. Please help him.

There is a fund set-up in his name at TDBanknorth in Plaistow. Any amount will help John, while he is out of work. It would be great if this town could help ease a burden off his wife.

Thank You

Also if anyone would like to send a card, please address it to:

John Lapham
c/o Dana-Farber/Brigham and Women's Cancer Ctr.
Inpatient mail
75 Francis Street
Boston, MA 02115
United States

Please show Corporal John Lapham, that this community can stand up and show our support to those in need. I for one, miss John and can not wait until he can get better and return to work. Please show him that we support him. "