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Let a professional determine if you have the grounds for a successful appeal. Let someone else worry about filing
deadlines . Then let a professional present your evidence of overvaluation.
Obviously the playing field between taxpayer and assessor is not very level. The assessor has at
his fingertips sale reports, ratio studies, and legal advice. He can click his mouse and look at system generated comparable
sales.
The assessor is a trained professional who took hours of classes and attended many workshops to get his certification.
The assessor has his "assessing spin" down to a science. In short, the average property owner has met their match.
Add to that the resources available to the assessor that are NOT available to the taxpayer. And then add to that a procedure
so complicated there are assessors that sometimes don't get it correct and it is no wonder many taxpayers just pay the bill
without a challenge.
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