Property reassessment encouraged at Allegheny County public hearing
Nine Allegheny County council members hosted a public hearing this week to gather input on what a reassessment might entail.
Nine Allegheny County council members hosted a public hearing this week to gather input on what a reassessment might entail.
Allegheny County could be on a collision course with a countywide property reassessment, and experts at a Wednesday public hearing encouraged the county to take that step.
Several public school districts across Allegheny County have voiced support of a countywide reassessment, and Pittsburgh Public School district has actually sued to force the county to trigger a reassessment.
On Wednesday, nine Allegheny County Council members hosted a public hearing to gather input on what a reassessment might entail.
Wayde Fargotstein, chair of the county’s Property Assessment Appeals and Review Board, said the county’s common level ratio is causing school districts to lose revenue, particularly because of declining property values in Downtown Pittsburgh and other commercial districts in the suburbs.
“I absolutely believe that there should be a reassessment,” Fargotstein said.
Allegheny County lost $1.4 billion in commercial, residential and agricultural property value after appeals of assessments in 2022 and 2023, according to data compiled by TribLive from the Western Pennsylvania Regional Data Center.
He said the current system causes confusion among property owners in the county. Fargotstein also said real estate agents should do a better job of explaining that property taxes will likely increase for new homeowners because school districts often appeal new properties to ensure they are accurately assessed.
Pennsylvania counties use the common level ratio to value properties for tax purposes after assessment appeals.
Allegheny County hasn’t reassessed since 2012, meaning that properties are taxed at that 12-yearold value — unless an appeal sets the property at a new fair market value, or the price at which it might change hands today. That price might be higher or lower than the 2012 value.
The county’s current common level ratio is 54.5%. So a property that wins an appeal will have its assessment for tax purposes adjusted to almost half of its new fair market value.
For example, take a homeowner who wins an assessment appeal. The appeals board agrees that the property is worth only $100,000 on the open market. The owner’s new tax bill won’t be based on $100,000. Rather the value for tax purposes will be set at $54,500 — or 54.5% of the new fair market value.
About 20 members of the public attended the over three-hour hearing, which functioned more as an information session for council members than a forum.
Several council members asked property assessment experts questions to feel out their support or opposition to a countywide reassessment. Democratic County Councilmember at-large Bethany Hallam introduced a bill last month seeking to move Allegheny County to regular reassessments, triggered anytime the common level ratio dips below 85%.
Fargotstein said he supports moving to regular reassessments, instead of waiting on litigation from school districts or property owners to force reassessments, which is the typical process in Southwestern Pennsylvania.