Some centers are apparently still paying based on irrationally high valuations. The median amount of property tax jumped from $1.01 per s/f to $1.60 per s/f in the go-go years from 2003 to 2007, according to the Institute of Real Estate Management. But even as the retail economy contracted, that rose again to $1.87 per s/f last year, the organization says. Widespread property tax protests, coupled with substantial sales tax revenue losses, "are causing cities to change the way they look at everything they do," said Christiana McFarland, director of finance and economic development for the National League of Cities. "They are freezing hiring, cutting staff and re-evaluating the extent of their vital services." Some areas are adjusting more quickly than others. In Los Angeles County, average assessments dropped this year for the first time in 12 years, ranging from a 15% decrease in the cities of Lancaster and Palmdale to a barely discernible 0.1% in Los Angeles. By contrast, Malibu and Beverly Hills saw assessment increases. Meanwhile some tax authorities are pre-emptively lowering property taxes to avoid a crush of challenges.
The shopping center industry is still in the early stages of addressing the valuation question, according to Reza Etedali, CEO of Irvine, Calif.-based Reza Investment Group. "No one has an absolute feel for where rents and occupancy will settle," he said. "So it is going to take us at least another year to get a good solid feel for where prices are going to shake out."
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