Slutzky eyes land use tax restriction
The chairman of the Albemarle County Board of Supervisors may propose major reforms to a county program that gives tax breaks to owners of rural undeveloped land.
Under David L. Slutzky’s idea, rural landowners would be given a choice: They could pay real-estate taxes based on the land’s fair market value just like the vast majority of county landowners, or they could get massive land use tax breaks by agreeing to keep their land permanently undeveloped through conservation easements.
That change would mean some rural landowners would no longer receive land use tax breaks and would pay thousands or even tens of thousands of dollars more in taxes each year, money that could be used by the county for education, transportation and other services, or to reduce the tax burden on the vast majority of county taxpayers.
“I came to the conclusion that it may make sense for the county to say: ‘We’re going to reserve land use tax for people who truly preserve the land,’” Slutzky said in a recent interview.
Albemarle operates under a system in which many rural residents get tax breaks for keeping agricultural, horticultural, forestry or open space land undeveloped for a limited period of time, as opposed to being taxed on fair market value.
The land use program is designed in part to encourage landowners to preserve the scenic beauty of their property, a key strategic goal for county leaders. It also lowers taxes for farmers.
Benefits only a few
Though about 60 percent of the county’s land is in the land use tax program, those parcels — fewer than 5,000 — are owned by a small percentage of the county’s residents.
Under the county’s existing program, residents only have to commit to keeping their land undeveloped for a few years at a time, and they can get out of the program anytime and pay rollback taxes, plus interest. But Slutzky’s idea would force rural landowners to choose between permanently extinguishing their development rights, through conservation easements, or paying taxes based on fair market value for their land. Under Slutzky’s idea, rural landowners would still have the right to create family subdivisions even if they put their land in conservation easements.
Placing land in a conservation easement gives the landowner a tax break, but it also permanently protects the property from development.
Slutzky said many rural property owners have no intentions of developing their land but others, whom he calls “speculators,” are receiving tax breaks while waiting for opportunities to sell their land to developers “for a big bag of money.”
“Guess who’s paying the bill: the 95 percent of the county property owners who own the other 40 percent of the county’s land,” Slutzky said.
Slutzky, a Democrat who is vying for a second term as Rio District supervisor, is being challenged by Republican Rodney S. Thomas, a former member of the county’s Planning Commission who has made protection of property rights one of his key campaign issues.
Thomas opposes Slutzky’s idea.
“I think it’s just taking the rights away from the individuals that own the land,” Thomas said. “I don’t think they [should] have to put their land into conservation easement just to prove that they aren’t going to develop some property. It’s their property. It belongs to them.”
But Slutzky said what he calls “land use tax reform” might generate more than $10 million in revenue per year and possibly closer to $20 million — revenue that might look good for a county that is currently grappling with a budget shortfall and foresees difficult years ahead.
Officials say the county gives about $18 million in tax breaks annually to rural landowners who keep their land at least temporarily undeveloped, and the county began a revalidation program this year requiring rural landowners in the land use tax program to prove they actually qualify for the tax benefits.
However, some property owners eventually sell their land to a developer or subdivide their land and sell the pieces.
“They pay off the last five-year tax break [in rollback taxes] out of the proceeds of the sale, and they’re laughing all the way to the bank,” Slutzky said earlier this year. “What we are in fact doing with land use taxation in Albemarle County is subsidizing speculative investors. Now the one person who in my view deserves to be in land use tax is the person who says, ‘I’m going to extinguish all of my development rights. I’ll put my land in conservation easement.’”
Slutzky said land use tax reform is only “an idea in development,” adding that much more research would be needed.
“I’m not even sure that I would vote for it,” Slutzky said. “I don’t even know what ‘it’ is exactly.”
But the idea is something Slutzky has long considered. Slutzky is an adjunct professor at the University of Virginia in the Urban and Environmental Planning Department.
In late 2008, Slutzky floated the idea to other supervisors, but he says there didn’t appear to be majority support for the idea, so supervisors didn’t ask county staff to examine it.
Slutzky says many technical issues remain unresolved and it’s unclear whether there would be enough support from other supervisors to make it worth the county spending the time and money researching the idea.
Supervisor Dennis S. Rooker says that when the idea was raised last year he wanted the county to examine it, but now isn’t the time.
“We’ll see where the board is in January and who’s on the board [after the November elections] and whether or not there’s any thought among board members that there might be some support for that kind of proposal,” Rooker said.
Though Rooker said it’s premature to say whether he’d support land use tax reform, he does see some benefits.
“If you eliminated the land use program entirely … technically your revenue from the land that is in land use would increase by $18 million, which would reduce the tax burden on other taxpayers,” Rooker said.
Tax revenue to be had
If land use tax reform were implemented, Slutzky said he suspects many residents would decide to put their land in conservation easements — in which case the land would be taxed at the same rate as under the land use tax program — and others would decide to pay taxes based on fair market value, to leave their development options open.
If half of the property in the land use tax program was taxed at fair market value, that could generate about $9 million in new revenue annually, Slutzky estimated. In that scenario, the county would also pay millions of dollars less to Charlottesville under a revenue sharing agreement, he said, because the amount the county pays the city each year is based on fair market values, which are much lower if the land is under a conservation easement.
The additional revenue could pay for services such as transportation projects, better pay for teachers and more police protection, without increasing — and possibly even lowering — the county’s real-estate tax rate, Slutzky said.
The county loses tax dollars on the approximately 60 percent of the county currently under land use, Slutzky said, because the amount paid to the city under the revenue sharing agreement is greater than what the county collects under land use.
Slutzky said he suspects land use tax reform would also increase the value of many homes in Albemarle, because rural homeowners value the scenic view and privacy of rural land. Permanent conservation would give neighbors a guarantee that the nearby land would remain undeveloped.
Support questioned
Neil Williamson, executive director of the Free Enterprise Forum, a business advocacy and government watchdog organization, said he doesn’t think there’s enough support from members of the Board of Supervisors for land use tax reform to pass. He added that Slutzky is a powerful force on the board but would face strong public opposition to the idea.
“I know better than to underestimate David Slutzky and his ability to persuade board members,” Williamson said. “However, if David Slutzky chooses to bring this forward, I would anticipate a significant outcry from the landowners in Albemarle.”
Whether such an idea has any chance of catching the interest of the Board of Supervisors depends partially on the outcome of the November elections.
In addition to there being a competitive race for the Rio District seat held by Slutzky, three candidates are running for the Samuel Miller District seat being vacated by retiring Supervisor Sally H. Thomas. Rooker is unopposed for his re-election bid in the Jack Jouett District. The other three board seats aren’t up for election this year.
“I’m going to wait until after the election,” Slutzky said, adding that if he wins, “this will be one of the topics that I’m going to try to learn more about.”
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Reader Reactions
The twice the tax burden for you urban dwellers is not quite accurate. Case in point, the new Stony Point Vol. Fire Dept. new building, which is a very modest building and was sorely needed, was only half funded by the county. The basically told us country folk out here to figure out the rest of it. We did. The road maintanance out here happens about twice a year. I’m talking about gravel roads, something the city dwellers dont have to deal with. No, I would not say that the funds are always dispersed in an equitable manner.
I guess the point here is cut down all of those trees, pave those fields and sell any and all property also make sure it is to someone that can put a Popeye’s, mobile home park, one of those beautiful storage facilities or maybe even a large pornographic movie theater and store. The democrats want to have your money and control your land.
Next stop New Jersey (highest property taxes in country), increases in property taxes for everyone, is everyone enjoying the Obama election wave or maybe it’s a typhoon? Maybe the dems should try and run the government on a leaner budget first. Spend & tax, tax & spend, spend it all as fast as you can! b/c the dem. election cycle won’t last. Also make sure you lock it in with entitlement programs too so they can’t stop your overspending later. Spend, spend, spend!! Waste it all.
The debate on the land use program deserves a focus on the facts.
In 1973 Albemarle County instituted the land use program to encourage the maintenance of farming and agriculture, and to preserve the natural beauty of Albermarle County. The did so with the full knowledge that this tax abatement would benefit to some extent the landowner, but also the urban Albemarle Country resident who both enjoys the scenery and reaps a reward on his/her own property by being located in a County which preserves its agricultural roots. In 1980, in order to continue this overall theme, the County sharply limited property subdivision rights in the rural areas. We can thoughtfully say, then, that rural landowners were both helped and harmed by being the third parties involved in the County’s efforts to achieve their objectives.
The debate today needs to be understood in economic terms, so let’s look at a few facts: Albemarle County is approximately 465,000 acres. According to published reports, 60% of those acres are in land use, let’s say 280,000. Mr. Slutsky wants the $18 million in land use tax abatements (annually) to be paid over to the County. A little division means that $64/acre (extra) needs to paid from the land owners to the County. According to the USDA, in 2008, average farm income per acre in all of Virginia was $69/acre.
I am no great professor, only a modest Bachelor’s degreed person, but the shallowness and lack of foundation of Mr. Slutsky’s musings now starts coming in to full view.
Next, I congratulate the person who can accurately predict BOTH (1) which landowners are developers and which are farmers AND (2) what those person(s) are planning to do with their land in the future. Indeed, many “developers” probably wish they had such a prophetic ability a few years ago, as they too have watched the value of their investments plummet along with the rest of our County residents.
I know it’s hard to do, this thinking ahead business (but with real thinking and not just fanciful suppositions), but think about this. Assuming Mr. Slutsky gets his way, all landowners will likely seek to rid themselves at the same time of the “by right” development rules. In any event, since farm income is consumed entirely by taxation, all landowners are NOW developers, and the explosion of lots, homes, and higher density housing will be the most assured result. And the biggest losers? The owners of non rural properties - as the supply of homes and properties skyrockets - at precisely the same moment the County becomes a materially less attractive place to live (see Loudon County as Exhibit A).
Uh oh Mr. Slutsky. You may want to reconsider. I think that might be your house that’s now underwater!
It’s a simple issue of fairness, that merits further research and discussion. Even Slutzky—who some are trying to hang for trying to actually solve problems for a change (unlike Boyd, who neer met a problem he could not either ignore indefinately, or waffle on when pressed)—acknowledges it may not be workable.
But for sure, me paying twice the tax burden for county services, by virtue of owning a postage stamp lot in the urban ring, and operating a consulting business based there (though providing services to clients in seven counties), over some real estate opportunist waiting for his or her big payady, yeah, that has my attention.
There are a handful of large, large landowners in this county who have benefited greatly from current tax policies, shifting their fair share to others. I’ve met some of these crybabies, who sit on impressive estates—feigning poverty—and it just doesn’t wash. It’s a faux hypothetical that is posed—poor ‘ol gramps forced to sell the family homestead for a tax bill. Well, ‘gramps’ needs to get with his estate planner, family attorney, etal and come up with Plan B.
I very much doubt Slutzky would end up happy with the results in the unlikely event his proposal becomes law. The perpetual nature of conservation easements has big downsides as well as benefits.
Betty,
You hit the nail on the head!
Gordie, to get from 29/250 in C’ville to 29/33 Ruckersville in 12 minutes, you would have to be traveling at 73 miles per hour, but I guess that is hard to do because all those stupid VA drivers are in your way doing the speed limit. Keep em’ commin’ Gordie, the simple minded people on this post find you to be very entertaining!!
Where is the justice in this scenario.
A farmer has 500 acres. Of that 500 acres 190 acres are not good for farming. But that land has trees on it so the farmer gets a land use forest tax break. After Thirty years of tax breaks, the farmer harvests the timber, then decides to sell the 190 acres, Dividing the land into ten 19 acres plots. Of course the farmer pays the past 5 years taxes and the other 25 are written off.
Ten homes are built on that land. Usually using around 2 acres as the homestead. While these homes are being built the forest begins to grow again.
Before long Slatydog drives by and is very proud because there are only 10 homes and 180 acres of trees.
He thinks good for those people and their land use program.
Wrong salty. They each own less then 20 areas so they do not qualify for the program. So here was a farmer getting tax breaks for his land, but the same land is not worthy for others to get a tax break.
That is what is called the good old American way. I got mine and the heck with you.
And of course never allow the BOS to adjust or make improvements to a bad program.
Some simple minded people do not understand a broad statement or choose to attack ever word that is written. I suppose they are some type of literary lawyer.
BETWEEN the hours of 4 o’clock to 6 o’clock I have to wait in heavy traffic in C-ville/Albemarle. A drive that normally takes about 12/15 minutes to get from rte 250/29 entrance to rte 29 to the Ruckersville area takes from 45 minutes to over an hour during the 4-6 time period. Some times in the area of Best Buy to Hydraulic Rd. there is a wait and traffic lights change 3 times before getting thru that section. Of course some of that happens because Virginia has some of the stupidest driver in the country.
I can watch drivers from a distance. Will see a car pull out to pass, but sit on the left bumper for a mile before they finally pass. When I finally catch up to them the car always has a Virginia plate.
The best one is to try and pass a Virginia driver. As soon as car is pulled to left bumper they increase their speed and will not let another car pass. Of course most of the time the cell phone is stuck to their ear.
REAL Farmers are not the problem. Faux farmers, hobby farmers, landed gentry and developers are.
Most counties ONLY offer Agricultural Land Use and ONLY to LEGITIMATE farmers. If Albemarle did that, we would be OK.
If Albemarle really cared about the LEGITIMACY of Land Users, why did it take them so long to perform a revalidation? Because Land Use here is a giveaway for the well-connected, rich and famous, and not for the REAL farmers. The illegitimate Land Users use scare tactics to get the REAL farmers to fight their fight for them. You have to give them credit for that.
But that’s how things work in Albemarle County. The interests of the wealthy FEW always trump the needs of the many. Mr. Jefferson would not be amused. He’d be leading another Revolution.


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