File #: R-2017-0065    Version: 1
Type: Resolution Status: Adopted
File created: 3/21/2017 In control: Advisory Committee (INACTIVE)
On agenda: 3/21/2017 Final action: 3/21/2017
Title: Resolution requesting the Wisconsin State Legislature adopt legislation which closes the current loopholes shifting Property Tax Burdens from Commercial Property Owners to Residential Homeowners.
Sponsors: Advisory Committee (INACTIVE)
Attachments: 1. R-2017-0065 signed
Title
Resolution requesting the Wisconsin State Legislature adopt legislation which closes the current loopholes shifting Property Tax Burdens from Commercial Property Owners to Residential Homeowners.

Body
WHEREAS, homeowners in Wisconsin already pay 70% of the total statewide property tax levy; and

WHEREAS, that disproportionate burden is about to get much worse unless the Legislature addresses tax avoidance strategies that national chains like Walgreens and big box retail establishments like Target and Lowe's are using across the country to gain dramatic reductions in their property tax bills at the expense of homeowners and other taxpayers; and

WHEREAS, a carefully-orchestrated wave of hundreds of lawsuits in Wisconsin is forcing assessors to slash the market value of thriving national retail stores, shifting their tax burden to local mom and pop shops and homeowners; and

WHEREAS, Walgreens and CVS stores in Wisconsin have argued in communities across the state that the assessed value of their property for property tax purposes should be less than half of their actual sale prices on the open market; and
WHEREAS, in many cases the courts have sided with Walgreens and CVS, requiring communities to refund tax revenue back to the stores; and
WHEREAS, there are over 200 Walgreens stores located in Wisconsin's cities and villages, four in the City of West Allis; two stand-alone CVS stores and one CVS store located inside a major department store; and
WHEREAS, big box chains, some of which are currently operating in West Allis, are using what is known as the "Dark Store Theory" to argue that the assessed value of a new store in a thriving location should be based on comparing their buildings to sales of vacant stores in abandoned locations from a different market segment; and
WHEREAS, the Indiana State Legislature has on two occasions in the last two years overwhelmingly passed legislation prohibiting assessors from valuing new big box stores the same a...

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