| 2020 Logan County Final Multiplier 
			Announced
 
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			 [April 01, 2021] 
			Logan County has been issued a final property assessment 
			equalization factor of 1.0000, according to David Harris, Director 
			of the Illinois Department of Revenue.
 The property assessment equalization factor, often called the 
			"multiplier", is the method used to achieve uniform property 
			assessments among counties, as required by law. This equalization is 
			particularly important because some of the state's 6,600 local 
			taxing districts overlap into two or more counties (e.g. school 
			districts, junior college districts, fire protection districts). If 
			there were no equalization among counties, substantial inequities 
			among taxpayers with comparable properties would result.
 
 Under a law passed in 1975, property in Illinois should be assessed 
			at one-third (1/3) of its market value. Farm property is assessed 
			differently, with farm homesites and dwellings subject to regular 
			assessing and equalization procedures, but with farmland assessed at 
			one-third of its agriculture economic value. Farmland is not subject 
			to the state equalization factor.
 
 Assessments in Logan County are at 33.10 percent of market value, 
			based on sales of properties in 2017, 2018, and 2019.
 
			
			 
			
 The equalization factor currently being assigned is for 2020 taxes, 
			payable in 2021. Last year's equalization factor for the county was 
			1.0000.
 
 The final assessment equalization factor was issued after a public 
			hearing on the tentative factor. The tentative factor issued in 
			October 2020 was 1.0000.
 
			
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The equalization factor is determined annually for each county by comparing the 
price of individual properties sold over the past three years to the assessed 
value placed on those properties by the county supervisor of assessments/county 
assessor. 
 
  
If this three-year average level of assessment is one-third of the market value, 
the equalization factor will be one (1). If the average level of assessment is 
greater than one-third of market value, the equalization factor will be less 
than one (1). And if the average level of assessment is less than one-third of 
market value, the equalization factor will be greater than one (1).
 A change in the equalization factor does not mean total property tax bills will 
increase or decrease. Tax bills are determined by local taxing bodies when they 
request money each year to provide services to local citizens. If the amount 
requested by local taxing districts is not greater than the amount received in 
the previous year, then total property taxes will not increase even if 
assessments increase.
 
 The assessed value of an individual property determines what portion of the tax 
burden a specific taxpayer will assume. That individual's portion of tax 
responsibility is not changed by the multiplier.
 
				 
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