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Projecting Property Tax Revenue

Projecting Property Tax Revenue. Drew Corbett Budget Manager City of Sunnyvale. Agenda. City of Sunnyvale Overview The Basics Projection Timeline Setting the Baseline Projecting for Future Years. City of Sunnyvale Overview. City of approximately 140,000

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Projecting Property Tax Revenue

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  1. Projecting Property Tax Revenue Drew Corbett Budget Manager City of Sunnyvale

  2. Agenda • City of Sunnyvale Overview • The Basics • Projection Timeline • Setting the Baseline • Projecting for Future Years

  3. City of Sunnyvale Overview • City of approximately 140,000 • Second largest city in Santa Clara County • Full-service city • Significant technology sector presence • Home to Yahoo!, Network Appliance, Juniper Networks • Property Tax is top General Fund revenue source • 37% of total

  4. The Basics – Revenue Components

  5. Projection Timeline • July – December: • Monitor monthly AV information from County • Meet quarterly with County • Assessor’s Office, Treasurer-Controller • Receive CCPI • January – April: • Develop projections • Update current year projection • Develop short- and long-term forecasts

  6. Setting the Baseline • Update current year projection • Year-to-date remittances • Information from Treasurer-Controller • Provides estimate for all Property Tax sources • Estimates roll corrections impacting totals • Collaborative effort between cities and County • Sets baseline for future years’ projections

  7. Projecting Future Revenues • Focus on largest sources • Secured, VLF in lieu, Unsecured, Supplemental • Consider the following factors: • Current Assessor’s AV growth (or decline) estimate • Factoring in CCPI • Mix of residential vs. non-residential • Economic conditions • Pending appeals valuation

  8. Projecting Future Revenues • Current Assessor’s AV estimates are valuable starting point

  9. Projecting Future Revenues • Separate residential vs. non-residential • Different trends • Different factors impacting valuations • Different timing of changes to assessment roll

  10. Current AV Distribution

  11. Residential vs. Non-Residential

  12. Residential vs. Non-Residential • Residential • Stable historical AV growth • High % of pre-Prop 13 properties • Desirable high school district • Prop 8 reductions incorporated in current roll • Non-residential • Historical AV growth but more volatile • Quick rebounds from drops in AV • Lag in assessment appeals • Impact of recession has not fully hit yet

  13. Residential vs. Non-Residential

  14. Residential vs. Non-Residential

  15. Economic Conditions • General economic indicators • Unemployment, GDP growth, consumer confidence • Local economic conditions • Foreclosures, commercial vacancies, development activity, business conditions • May impact segments differently • Need to consider conditions beyond jurisdiction • Supplemental Tax

  16. Pending Assessment Appeals • Understanding potential exposure important • Total valuation of pending appeals • Appeal years • Past appeals = County pool • Reduced valuation = City responsibility • Historical success rate • Use with caution; recent recession may reset baseline • Most difficult to incorporate into projections

  17. Other Considerations • Sunnyvale projects for 20 years • Methodology past years 3 or 4 more broad • Utilize long-term historical AV growth • Still segregate commercial and residential • Do not attempt to project future downturns • Instead temper growth projections • Utilize for planning purposes

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