Home / Georgia / Georgia’s HB581: A Property Tax Reform with Controversial Opt-Out Clause

Georgia’s HB581: A Property Tax Reform with Controversial Opt-Out Clause

  • The state of GA passed HB581 for a statewide home­stead exemp­tion. Through­out the state appraisals have increased dra­mat­i­cal­ly over the last sev­er­al years. Every 3 years your entire coun­ty has to be reap­praised. The apprais­ers have zero to do with your coun­ty’s tax struc­ture. The coun­ty com­mis­sion­er gets the appraisals of the coun­ty for the tax digest. The tax digest gives the coun­ties, cities, and school boards the prop­er­ty val­ues of the coun­ties and they set the mill­age rate. Once they set the mill­age rate they send it to the tax col­lec­tor, the tax com­mis­sion­er and you get the tax bill. By adjust­ing the mill­age rate the agency is able to bring the mon­ey in to oper­ate the coun­ty. But because the prop­er­ty appraisal is so high that the roll back of the mill­age rate still caus­es the prop­er­ty tax to increase. Law­mak­ers received so much pres­sure and they passed HB581. It puts a cap on your assess­ment to coin­cide with the CPI. The GA House of Rep­re­sen­ta­tives would not pass with­out an opt-out. The Sen­ate want­ed to cap the assess­ments. The lob­by­ist (GMA for the cities and the ACCG for the coun­ties and GSBA for the schools) pres­sured the GA state house to put in an opt-out clause. There is a rea­son they want an opt-out clause. So when it got passed and put on the bal­lot they didn’t care if the vote was 70%. 
  • The claim that the coun­ty agen­cies have is that peo­ple didn’t under­stand it. Why didn’t these orga­ni­za­tions cam­paign and fight this to the pub­lic to get you to vote no? Why didn’t the coun­ty com­mis­sion­er come out to vote NO. they will come out to get the pub­lic to vote yes on a tax increase. Or a very strong cam­paign ask­ing you not to vote for some­thing. But for this it was total silence. They didn’t have too. They were told to not wor­ry about it, the opt-out was the plan all along. They would get the talk­ing points to give to the pub­lic. 
  • HB581 and the cap. School boards are mov­ing to opt out. This will no longer shel­ter the blame in rais­ing your tax­es. School sys­tems are not able to par­tic­i­pate in FLOST, that is true. But the rev­enue will not change unless they increase mill­age rate. 
  • If you think that HB581 will hurt the chil­dren then you should imme­di­ate­ly get rid of your state house and sen­a­tor for let­ting it go through. IF you don’t think it will help with prop­er­ty tax. Ask them why they put it on the bal­lot if you think it is that bad. It is not true. 
  • Scare tac­tics fuel opt-out argu­ment. Increas­ing prop­er­ty assess­ment will not exceed the infla­tion rate. What about watch­ing what you spend? They want you to believe that they will have to cut ser­vices. 
  • Because it is a con­sti­tu­tion­al amend­ment any changes would have to have the pub­lic vote. 
  • All these asso­ci­a­tions had the oppor­tu­ni­ty to push back on the law and they didn’t. The coun­ties, cities and school boards are behold­en to the asso­ci­a­tions and not the peo­ple. These asso­ci­a­tions are a rack­et and need to be bro­ken up. 
  • Four GOP states sue to stop the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment from coun­ty ille­gals in the cen­sus. AGs from Louisiana, Kansas, Ohio and West Vir­ginia, not Geor­gia. Where is Chris Carr? 
  • Chris Carr rais­ing $2M in 40 days  in quest for GA gov­er­nor. 
  • Democ­rats face reck­on­ing on immi­gra­tion pol­i­cy dur­ing Trump’s sec­ond term. Warnock and Ossoff did vote for the Lak­en Riley Act.  

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