JOHN
TUTEUR
NAPA COUNTY ASSESSOR-RECORDER/COUNTY CLERK
PROPERTY OWNER TIPS
VALUING CONTAMINATED PROPERTY
Properties that suffer from environmental contamination
present a special challenge to appraisers in an Assessor's office when trying to
establish a fair value for property tax purposes. The most common form of
environmental contamination occurs from hazardous materials, such as petroleum
products, chemicals or pesticides, which are manufactured, stored or applied on
a site. Less common is a contaminant that is deposited onto property from an
offsite source such as occurred in a neighboring county when the plume from the
tall smokestack of a smelter deposited measurable levels of lead on downwind
pasture land affecting livestock and people. In another case in an adjoining
county, a developer built homes on top of an old landfill. When black ooze and
methane gas began seeping up in those backyards, the developer actually had to
buy those homes back and remove them.
In determining the value of a contaminated site the appraiser
must consider these issues: 1) can the problem be mitigated through removal or
onsite decontamination; 2) if mitigation is possible, how long will it take and
how much will it cost; 3) does the contamination prevent the property from being
used to its maximum potential or even not used at all. Based on the outcome of
this research, the appraiser then decides if the "contaminated" value is less
than the current Proposition 13 base year value in which case a reduction is
made until the property is cleaned up. If property has been purchased in a
contaminated state, the appraiser must decide if the purchase price needs to be
adjusted to reflect the severity and duration of the contamination.
A couple bought a single-family residence in the City of Napa
for $150,000. They discovered that the prior owner had been pouring waste oil
down a shallow well in the backyard for many years. The oil plume extended under
the whole yard and was approaching other properties. The cleanup cost was
projected to be $350,000, would take several months and would be covered by the
prior owner's insurance company. Since the current owners could continue to
occupy the home during cleanup without any health risk, we lowered only their
land value from $80,000 to $500 until cleanup was completed at which time the
land value was restored since the property was again in a fully clean condition.
In an example with a different outcome, a large corporation
bought several service stations in Napa County all of which had varying degrees
of petroleum contamination from leaking tanks. While the cleanup of each station
would cost between $100,000 and $300,000, each station would only need to close
for a 60-90 day period as new tanks were installed with ongoing monitoring costs
after cleanup of several thousand dollars a year. The buyer argued that the
value of the stations was reduced by the contamination and that the value should
be lowered. However, pending cleanup, the stations continued to operate at their
"highest and best use", i.e. pumping gas and selling snacks; the revenue lost
from being closed was not substantial and their income stream more than covered
the amortized cost of the cleanup and monitoring over a reasonable period of
time. Our office felt that no reduction in value was warranted.
Should you have any questions please contact Napa County
Assessor-Recorder John Tuteur
at 707.253.4459 or by e-mail
jtuteur@co.napa.ca.us
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