Cook County Treasurer Says Vacant And Abandoned Properties Are Sucking Up Tax Revenue – CBS2 (Chicago)

Vacant, sometimes dilapidated properties that have been abandoned, or empty lots where the structures were cleared away have unpaid taxes attached to them, and according to Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas. It adds up to $5 billion in lost property tax revenue - more than a fifth of the current Cook County budget. “If you look at these numbers, they’re frightening."
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Streeterville
2 years ago

Cook County’s consolidated listing-book of tax-sale properties is size of old Sears mail-order catalogues. Truly frightening prospect for Cook County’s taxpayers, only partially-disclosed here in article. Cook County’s politicians and its many government agencies operate as if there’s endless bountiful cashflow for their reckless spending and their guaranteed huge pensions.

Last edited 2 years ago by Streeterville
BB
2 years ago

Cook county democrats go figure!!

Riverbender
2 years ago

Looks like the Democrats invented another problem but ny guess is they have a plan…namely more taxes.

Rick
2 years ago

Who in their right mind would buy one of these decaying properties in a decaying city in a decaying state only to be treated like dirt by the taxing body that courted you a year ago? It’d be like jumping into a wood chipper, or walking into an airplane propeller.

Freddy
2 years ago

What exactly is the $5B in lost revenue based on? If it is based on the property taxes at it’s highest value when occupied that is not correct now. Most vacant or abandoned/tear down properties values are for land only. The land has a taxable value but nowhere close to $5B. The structures on the land most likely have little to no value and will need extensive rehab or just be torn down. In a high crime area even the land has little value. Do you want to drop off building supplies to an empty lot in a high crime… Read more »

Chest Rockwell
2 years ago
Reply to  Freddy

They want you to buy into the delusion there’s a government driven answer to this government created problem.

Last edited 2 years ago by Chest Rockwell
The Paraclete
2 years ago

Hmmm….Need the obvious be stated?

Curious Observer
2 years ago

That’s what happens in a crumbling city. People get so fed up they just walk away and drive off to greener pastures. They can see that there is no future in city that is coming apart at the seams. They are ceding the territory to the criminals and running to safety.

IllinoisHomeOfTheSwamp
2 years ago

That’s the true problem. It would be unexpected, but refreshing, if Maria would have stated that for all to hear.

P. T. Bombast
2 years ago

As Detroiters know, it never stops. Abandoned buildings invite the homeless and the dope dealers; neighbors move leaving more abandoned places; the city tears them down; acres of vacant land with crumbling sidewalks and abandoned cars; mow the weeds monthly; drive by journalists record this on video; people view the video. Places that are viable, like Berlin, get rebuilt in a few years. What makes places viable? The people who lived there and want to live there together again. What makes places non-viable? The people who live there or used to live there (but whom nobody wants to live with).… Read more »

Wolfnight
2 years ago
Reply to  P. T. Bombast

Very good post.
Nail hit on head.

debtsor
2 years ago
Reply to  P. T. Bombast

The 2008 foreclosure crisis really exacerbated the tax problems. The community decided, as a whole, to suck every last penny of equity out of the only assets of any value in the neighborhood, through mortgage fraud and home equity scams, and left destruction in its wake. The amount of fraud – straw buyers, forged quitclaim deeds, fake transactions, etc – in the community during those years would blow your mind if you really knew how bad it was. Tens of thousands of properties went into foreclosure or were abandoned before the foreclosure process even started. There was so much mortgage… Read more »

Last edited 2 years ago by debtsor

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