About the Property Tax Expert

By Valerie Faltas

I applied with the Los Angeles County Assessor early 2003, I was one of 900 applicants for 25 positions as a Real Estate Appraiser Trainee. I was one of the 25 chosen for the class they hired that year. As a trainee I went through an 18 month probation period and a 12 month training with them including classroom training, many exams, field training in all aspects of real estate appraisal, property tax law and the processes within the Assessor's Office. If had I failed any one of my series of exams or gotten a bad performance review I would have been kicked out of the program.

At the end of the year long training I took an exam with the State Board of Equalization to be Certified as a Property Tax Appraiser. I was promoted from Trainee to Appraiser. Independently, I chose to become a licensed Residential Appraiser through the Office of Real Estate Appraisers meaning I could do private appraisals also, ones used by banks. I personally purchased my first home at the age of 23, my second at the age of 24, my third at the age of 25. While I was learning appraisal and assessments I was also buying, selling and repairing homes so I saw all aspects of real estate. Additionally, I was the administrator of a family estate while in college so I had already had a background in trusts and estates and my experience working for the Assessor and in real estate had shed light on what I had done years earlier with my family.

Working for the Assessor's Office is considered to be important as a result of the nature of the job. Establishing assessments, taxpayers paid property taxes based on the values I saw fit. I have affected over 6,000 properties in Los Angeles County. The prestige comes from the nature of the position and the insight given through it. There is absolutely an artificial sense of power that goes along with the job; if homeowners really saw the other side and fully understood the law and how it is, the prestige would be gone. The bottom line is always the numbers.

My position changed with the real estate industry: different types of work during different types of markets. I had an excellent reputation within the Office of the Assessor, was known for being fast, proficient and thorough. I was chosen by higher level management several times to work on different projects and help with other departments within the Office. When I left the Assessor to go to law school (which I dropped out of), months even up to a year after I left, homeowners would ask for me since I would help them more than others who worked there. Even the clerks in the office would come to me with problems since they knew I would assist them. I had a bright future with the Assessor and would have risen through the ranks had I chosen to stay there.

NATIONALLY: In just about every state in the US property taxes are a percentage of market value. Market value is the critical factor. The greatest issue is that every Assessor's Office in every county in all states is a massive assessment government entity. They have hundreds of thousands of valuations to complete year after year and usually don't have enough man power to do the work based on quality instead of quantity. The Assessors exists to serve, to do their jobs to follow the law and to be as fair as they can be. Frequently values aren't what they should be simply because they don't have the time or the man power to be more thorough.

CALIFORNIA: California Property Tax law is unique and much different than most of the rest of the country. When the market started to really tank people start calling the office and coming in looking for help, looking for breaks. I was helping homeowners get the temporary tax break and I knew a better way. I know a way for homeowners in California to get a PERMANENT break in their property taxes. Completely legal, just sort of out of the box that wasnt kosher for me to share. Day after day, tax payer after tax payer...I knew a better way. Often they wouldn't even qualify for the temporary break because of the way it is set up. Honestly, I felt compelled. I felt compelled to make the information known so that I could help homeowners in a substantial way through this housing and mortgage crisis. So, I left, created my program and am making it known.

A homeowner can get their loan modified to permanently lower how much they owe the bank for their home why shouldn't the same apply to their property taxes? The law is ALWAYS on the taxpayer's side...they just don't realize it!

While I worked for the Assessor I processed single family home values at 3 or 4 an HOUR... some were higher than they should have been since I didn't have the time to make sure they were right and some were lower also. Only if the homeowner complained was the assessed value researched. All taxpayers need to learn some basic appraisal and assessment to ensure they are aren't overpaying property taxes. Understanding is the key. Every homeowner can understand and handle this process to feel in control of what they are being taxed on their house.

The Assessor is afraid the people because the taxpayer are the ones who keep them in office. No one in the Assessor's Office wants to deal with a disgruntled taxpayer!

This is the bottom line: its not us against them or them against us. Its just understanding and dispelling fear in times like today. This is the GREAT news about this low real estate market! Its a time for taxpayers to save and educate themselves so that they can be proud of their home ownership and know that they can save. Low real estate market means: modified loans, lower property taxes! Yes, the real estate market is down and this is how it can help you! This is one of the many reasons the housing crisis is good!

My vision, my goal is to empower the homeowner! No more fear. Fear comes from ignorance and my goal is to educate and ultimately dispel fear. In a time of turbulence and change, it is more true than ever that knowledge is power. - JFK Feel free to contact me! I look forward to hearing from you.

About the author: Valerie Faltas, Property Tax Expert has been involved in all facets of real estate for over ten years including assessments, appraisals, estates and trusts, investing and much more.

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