Pew Study Estimates Philadelphia Can Collect 30 % of Delinquent Property Taxes With More Aggressive Efforts

Philadelphia, PA (PRWEB) June 27, 2013

A new report from The Pew Charitable Trusts estimates that Philadelphia should be in a position to collect about 30 percent of the unpaid real estate taxes and late penalties owed by delinquent home owners over numerous years. Based on the $ 515.4 million that was due as of April 2012, the collectable quantity would come to roughly $ 155 million.

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To gather the funds, nevertheless, Philadelphias tax collectors would have to use all of their statutory powers, including foreclosure, much more strictly than in years past and ensure that delinquent owners stick to their catch-up installment payments when they are agreed to. The other 70 % is most likely to be uncollectable according to the study.

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Of 36 cities reviewed for the study, Delinquent Property Tax in Philadelphia: Stark Challenges and Realistic Objectives, Philadelphia had a larger delinquency rate than all but four of them in 2011, the last year for which statistics were accessible.

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In Philadelphia, 9 % of 2011 home taxes went uncollected in that year. The median delinquency rate in the 36 cities was four.1 percent. Among 14 cities (including Philadelphia) that have poverty rates more than 25 %, the median delinquency rate in 2011 was six percent. In the prior 3 years, Philadelphias rate had been virtually the same as the median for these higher-poverty cities.

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Reversing the citys history of property tax delinquency could make millions of dollars each year in added income, and even alleviate a bit of the burden on other taxpayers, mentioned Thomas Ginsberg, a researcher at Pew and author of this and other reports on city finances. But it will be a difficult political and administrative challenge to change what some city officials and other individuals have referred to as a culture of nonpayment.

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Many of the cities with reduced delinquency rates adhere to stricter timetables than Philadelphia for imposing enforcement measures against delinquent property ownerstimetables normally set by the stateand are more prepared to take properties away from owners who do not spend, the study found. At the identical time, these cities tend to have decrease percentages of poor folks, stronger real estate markets, and larger shares of property owners who pay their taxes automatically through mortgages.

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To address the delinquency issue, Mayor Michael Nutter and City Council have taken different actions in current months and years, including pushing a lot more properties to foreclosure, proposing and enacting new laws at the state and regional level, and naming a new city tax collections officer. In addition, city officials report improved overall performance in 2012 more than 2011, in terms of collecting both existing and delinquent taxes.

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The collectability analysis was performed for Pew by genuine estate economist Kevin C. Gillen, a senior analysis consultant at the University of Pennsylvania Fels Institute of Government.

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As component of that evaluation, Gillen assigned a collectability score to each of the 102,789 parcels that were listed as delinquent in April 2012. The score was based on characteristics of individual parcels that make it more or much less likely that taxes could be recovered. Among them had been the location and condition of the parcel, the age of the delinquency, the propertys worth and debt, and whether or not the home is owner-occupied. No info was readily offered about the financial scenarios of the owners themselves, an additional factor that could affect collection prices.

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The study also located:&#13

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Philadelphias delinquency rate worsened markedly because 2006 by way of the recession, as it did for all high-poverty cities. In the previous two years, the city has enhanced its record on collecting house taxes, boosting the total quantity of delinquent collections from $ 48.eight million in Fiscal 2011 to $ 70.9 million in Fiscal 2012 for city solutions (excluding the quantity for schools, which is counted separately). &#13

For every single a single percentage-point reduce in the delinquency price in Philadelphia, the city would be in a position to raise an further $ 13 million annually without having increasing the tax price. Or it could decrease the tax price by about one cent on the dollar and nevertheless raise the same quantity of revenue. &#13

Compared to laws governing delinquency collection in some other locations, the Pennsylvania statutes governing Philadelphia give city government a lot of discretion in deciding when to initiate foreclosures or what sort of catch-up payment plans to supply. In the previous, Philadelphia has tended to use this discretion to delay taking action, place up fewer properties for sale, or let delinquents repeatedly enroll and default on payment plans, all of which has caused delinquencies to accumulate over the years. (As of April 2012, owners of roughly a single in six delinquent properties have been paying on installment plans they owed $ 57.six million in taxes and penalties.)

Study a lot more and access the report PDF on our website.

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The Pew Charitable Trusts is a nonprofit organization that applies a rigorous, analytical strategy to enhance public policy, inform the public and stimulate civic life. Pews Philadelphia study initiative gives timely, impartial analysis and analysis on important problems facing Philadelphia for the advantage of the citys citizens and leaders. http://www.pewtrusts.org/philaresearch

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Federal Trade Commission Enforcements Against Illegal Robocalls Targeting Delinquent Property Mortgage Loan Owners


Eden Priaire, Minnesota (PRWEB) July 12, 2012

Yesterday the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) put out a press release providing homeowners and consumers guidelines on how to respond to robocalls and stay away from mortgage relief scammers. Fairly merely, there are 4 basic guidelines mentioned:

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1)