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ASSYRIA TOWNSHIP

Barry County, Michigan

 

    HOURS OF OPERATION

                                            ASSYRIA TOWNSHIP

                                      BARRY COUNTY, MICHIGAN

 

BACKGROUND:  Assyria Township does not maintain a staffed office.  The Township Board meets on the first Monday of each month (if Monday is a holiday we meet the following day) at 7:30 p.m. 

 

BUSINESS HOURS:  Pursuant to MCL 211.10a and Township resolution of 3 July 2006, all property assessment rolls and property appraisal cards (as well as other FOIA material) are available for viewing and copying during customary business hours by appointment.  Appointments can be made during a regular monthly meeting or by contacting a Township official.  

 

BOARD OF REVIEW:  Pursuant to Michigan Compiled Law, will:

  1. Meet at 7 p.m. on Tuesday following the first Monday in March to receive the roll.  MCL 211.29(1)
  2. Meet at 9 a.m. for 6 hours on the second Monday in March to receive/review petitions.  MCL 211.30(1)
  3. Meet from 6 to 9 p.m. on Tuesday following the second Monday in March  to receive/review petitions. MCL 211.30(4)
  4. Meet from 6 to 9 p.m. on Thursday following the second Monday in March to receive/review petitions. MCL 211.30(4)
  5. Meet at 6 p.m. on Tuesday following the third Monday in July, if called to sit, to correct error and otherwise address MCL 211.7 issues. MCL 211.53b
  6. Meet at 6 p.m. on Tuesday following the second Monday in December, if called to sit, to correct error and otherwise address MCL 211.7 issues. MCL 211.53b

 

                         The 2012  Board of Review schedule is:

 

March  06 (Tuesday)  at 7 p.m. to receive the roll.

March  12 (Monday)    9 a.m. to 12 & 2 to 5 p.m.  to receive and review petitions.

March  13 (Tuesday)   6 p.m. to 9 p.m. to receive and review petitions.

March  15 (Thursday) 6 to 9 p.m. to receive and review petitions.

March  22  Thursday   at 6 p.m. to finish work (no petitions received).

July 16 (Tuesday)  at 6 p.m. if required to sit.

December  11 (Tuesday) at 6 p.m. if required to sit.

 

The Board of Review (BOR) will not sit in July or December unless the Assyria Township board is presented with cause.  Cause must be presented in writing to the Township Supervisor or Clerk in sufficient time to call and sit the BOR.  Sufficient time is defined to be at least 60 days prior to the appropriate July or December meeting dates.

Basic Guide To Taxable Value

Until 1994, property was valued, for tax purposes, at half its market value. This was called its State Equalized Value, or SEV. In 1994, Michigan voters passed Proposal A. That shifted some of the tax burden off property and onto the sales tax, which rose from four cents on the dollar to six.

Proposal A also limited the growth of property tax assessments. Now, we don't use SEV. We use ``taxable value.'' It limits the growth in taxable value to 5 percent a year or less. The gap between property value and taxable value will continue to spread, as long as inflation drives up property values.

This limit on taxable value assumes no significant change to the property: no new family room, no major fire.

The lid comes off when a parcel is sold. In the year after the sale, taxable value kicks up to the SEV, but just for that year. Then the limit applies to future increases, until there is another sale. A parcel's taxable value is printed on the annual tax bill.

Tax Rates

Property owners can calculate their tax bill by multiplying that taxable value by the tax rate. In Michigan, the property tax rate is called a millage, and it is figured in mills. A mill equals $1 in taxation for every $1,000 in taxable value.

A parcel may have several millages in its tax rate. There is likely to be a millage to operate local government, and another for the county. Part of the millage rate may include mills for libraries, police and fire or schools.

Millage rates are not shown on assessment notices. Property owners can find out their millage rates by looking at their tax bills, or calling their local assessor, or their mortgage company. With the taxable value alone, a property owner can tell how much a tax proposal will cost, just by multiplying the millage rate of the proposal by taxable value. The owner of a parcel with a taxable value of $50,000 who votes on a 2-mill issue would be voting on an additional $100 a year in taxes.

For more information, click on the site shown below.

http://www.statetaxcentral.com/Michigan/Property_Taxes/