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Slowing home sales could affect Northern Virginia tax
revenue
by Heather
Hayes
for Virginia Business
September 2006
Slowing home sales could affect Northern
Virginia tax revenue
Skeptics said the party wouldn’t last, and they
were right. After six years of double-digit jumps in
housing prices, Northern Virginia’s real estate
boom appears to be over. And it’s not just real
estate agents who expect to feel the pinch.
The region’s county governments enjoyed major jumps
in tax revenue as a result of rapid increases in property
values. Because of the revenue windfall, many counties
were able to cut tax rates while increasing spending.
Now, property tax revenues have flattened, and government
officials are faced with a less appealing choice: slashing
services or raising taxes.
“
We’re definitely going to have to look at the [situation]
and determine what has to be done,” says Barbara
Donnellan, Arlington County’s deputy manager. The
county receives 50 percent of its revenue from real estate
taxes. “That means we’re probably going to
have to look at finding efficiencies or making changes
to levels in service,” says Donnellan.
Residential real estate assessments in Arlington have
increased an average of 18 percent each year since
1999, but Donnellan expects only a 2 percent increase
this
year. Likewise, Fairfax County saw residential assessments
increase an average of 20.5 percent during the same
six-year period, and Alexandria enjoyed a 19.5 percent
jump in
home values last year. But officials in both localities
expect increases of only 1 to 3 percent this year.
The slowdown in property values reflects the slowing
pace of home sales in the region. A study by Fairfax
County staff found that home sales this year are down
20 percent from last year. The study also found that
the number of home sale listings has tripled since
May 2005, and houses are on the market an average of
nearly
two months, compared with just 21 days in 2005. The
average home in Fairfax County in 2005 sold for more
than $540,000.
The average annual property tax bill was $4,812.
Earlier this year, Fairfax County lowered its property
tax rate. County officials have said they do not plan
to give up the tax rate cut. Instead, they want to
rein in spending with a list of cuts in a variety of
areas,
including the school system.
The good news is that commercial property
assessments continue to grow at a 5 percent clip. “That’s
a lot more in balance with the way the picture looked
before this great six-year real estate boom occurred,” says
Donnellan.
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