Cook County’s chief financial officer is floating the
possibility of future property tax hikes, according to WBEZ. And a spokesman for
Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle said she expects an independent
commission “to review this matter in the near future.”
Discussion of property tax hikes should be especially concerning for Cook County
homeowners, who have yet to recover much of the home value they lost after the
2007 housing market crash.
Average home prices in Cook County are 31% lower today than in 2007, adjusted
for inflation, according to the most recent data from the Federal Housing
Finance Agency. And even though homes are worth less than they were prior to the
Great Recession, property tax bills in Cook County have on average jumped by
22%, after adjusting for inflation.
Cook County’s poor housing recovery is a national outlier:
While home prices nationwide still have yet to return to their pre-recession
peak, they are down just 5% since 2007. To put Cook County’s housing plight in
perspective, its current decline in average home values is an alarming 500%
worse than the nation as a whole.
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The biggest factor driving rising property taxes?
Unsustainable growth in pension costs for government workers.
Pension liabilities have risen faster than taxpayers’ ability to
pay, forcing state and local governments to constantly scramble for
new sources of revenue – often in the form of property tax hikes.
This diminishes homeowners’ standard of living, and potentially
their home equity, while jeopardizing government workers’ retirement
security.
With constitutional pension reform, Illinois can protect workers’
already-earned benefits while slowing the accrual of future benefits
not yet earned – and eliminate the need for endless property tax
hikes.
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