Sunday, March 17, 2013

NWI Reports Porter County auditor hoping to recoup funding for tax scofflaw crackdown

From the Northwest Indiana Times:

Porter County Auditor Bob Wichlinski hopes a decision last week by the County Council to deny him direct access to the $606,000 generated by a crackdown on homestead violators will not stand in his way of proceeding with that effort.

Wichlinski said he intends to ask the council for $200,000 to $250,000 of the funding to pursue the next level of offenders, who are owners of multi-unit residential buildings.

He has identified 800 such properties and had only just began the job of investigating the individual cases and contacting property owners when the funding was cut off.

If the council does not approve the additional funding, Wichlinski said he will just send out the bills and let the county treasurer and Porter County Property Tax Assessment Board of Appeals handle the response.
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Wichlinski said the first part of the crackdown, which focused on single-family homes, generated $1.6 million.

The success of the effort has allowed Wichlinski to team up with Porter County assessor, treasurer and recorder's offices to collect nearly $1 million in back taxes, usher in e-government, help assure tax bills are in compliance with the recently adopted tax caps and reduce the backlog of tax assessment appeals.

The proceeds also were shared with the commissioners to help fund an economic study of the county, Wichlinski said.

Local units of government also benefit from the crackdown by receiving additional revenue as the homestead violations are removed, he said.
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http://www.nwitimes.com/news/local/porter/duneland/porter-county-auditor-hoping-to-recoup-funding-for-tax-scofflaw/article_b7b2cb0d-29b5-5c49-bbe1-468cf4a3bf0e.html