Saturday, March 29, 2008

How to fix what's broken

It seems as if Long Island is losing more buyers than it is gaining. Why is this happening when we all know what a beautiful place Long Island is? The short answer can be found in our ridiculous property taxes. It seems that even if you are one of the lucky few seniors who have paid off your mortgage, so what? You still will most probably have to pay real estate taxes that may be in excess of $1000 per month and you can still count on outrageous homeowner's insurance policy costs associated w/our living on an island. Heck, those wonderful companies like Liberty Mutual and State Farm decided to arbitrarily cancel people's policies even if no claim for damage was ever filed. The insurance companies cited too great a risk to insure in a coastal area. I guess Hurricane Katrina really woke them up.

Now back to our criminally outrageous real estate taxes.......... Do you know that real estate taxes on Long Island bear no resemblance to real property value? I'll give you some actual examples. How about a 3 bedroom, 1 bath ranch home w/no basement and no garage in Mastic selling for $151,000 that has real estate taxes of $7300? How absurd is that? If you were to purchase that home and put 20% down on it your actual principal and interest payment would be less than the combined cost of your real estate taxes and homeowner's insurance. Ooh wait, I have another example for you, how about a foreclosed 4 bedroom cape in Central Islip with an asking price of $199,000 that sports real estate taxes of $12,000? Now I ask our wonderful politicians out there, who the heck is going to buy a resale home (not new construction) in Central Islip that has taxes of $12,000????? Guess what? The NYC millionaire who wishes to buy a summer home in Southampton that is three times the size of the Central Islip home will only have to pay $9000 in real estate taxes. Where is the equity in that?

The lower middle class and the middle class are gettting squeezed out of home ownership by our elected politicians who refuse to make any meaningful changes to our outmoded system of real estate taxation. There tends to be neither rhyme nor reason when it comes to assessed valuation. It's high time that changes.

People want to buy on Long Island but not at a price they can't afford. Now that our home prices have fallen to more realistic levels isn't about time our real estate taxes also decrease to realistic levels?

2 Comments:

At 3/30/08, 1:38 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

It would be interesting to look at the history of the houses you cited, in particular the foreclosure. Perhaps they were previously sold for a huge amount of money, driving the assessment up and therefore the taxes up.

 
At 3/31/08, 8:49 AM, Blogger Bethany said...

You raise a very interesting point however I do know for a fact that the Mastic home I mentioned had sold previously for $89,000 so this home would have never had the assessment driven up. It's just another case of real estate taxes on Long Island "gone wild".

 

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