I’ve been thinking about installments. Actually I’ve been thinking about the housing bubble, property taxes, pecking orders, escrow payments, deficits, and cash flow. The housing bubble continues to pass its gas. While this is a huge problem that refuses to go away and continues to grow in magnitude, the stories on page one and newscasts have devoted little if any time, space, and ink to it. Fuel prices, food prices, election 2008 and “the flood” of natural disasters; have pushed it to the back burner.
You see last Friday the first installment of our property tax bills for Calendar 2007 billings came due for those of us in Ogle County, Illinois. This was particularly fitting that this time it fell on Friday the 13th. In my case, the two RE tax payments are the hands-down largest checks I write every year. The insurance premiums on my home, auto, and life policies are in distant third, fourth, and fifth place. I suspect this order of magnitude ranking is also true for a great many American households.
It will be interesting to see a few weeks down the road how
many households were late (or delinquent) in meeting this critical
deadline. While there might be a press release detailing the parcels
which failed to get the first installment paid, it is more common to
publicize the specific delinquencies about a month or so after the
second installment comes due and was not paid. This usually precedes
the “tax sales” publicized by the county officials responsible for the
collection of the real estate taxes. The dates of these events vary
from county to county - and from state to state. Still… the system of
“selling” the unpaid taxes to third parties will occur on a prescribed
timetable everywhere across America.
Amounts owed to the respective property tax collectors stand in the
FIRST position of the pecking order of who gets their money when a
homeowner falls behind in their payments. Virtually every local and
regional governmental (and quasi-governmental) entity depends upon the
proceeds from real estate tax revenues to underwrite the lion’s share
of their expenses, salaries, and pensions. These include the county,
township, and municipal governments; and the school, fire, library, and
park districts as well.
Late payment or non-payment of these taxes could prove costly for the
property “owners.” At the very least, there will be fines and penalties
accessed. If the unpaid balances are “auctioned” off to third party
investors, these investors are entitled to rates of interest that far
exceed the going rates paid elsewhere right now. Annualized rates of
10%, 12%, 14%, or more are not uncommon. After a varying prescribed
period of time - should the property “owner” not make full restitution
for the taxes, penalties, AND interest – the third party investor could
take full title to the property.
Most property occupants make supplemental monthly payments to the
holders of their mortgages for the payment of the respective property
taxes. These are held in escrow and tendered to the RE tax collectors
by the “lenders” when the installments come due. If the mortgage escrow
payments are not being made timely by the borrowers, the lenders must
advance their own money to cover the taxes to “perfect” or secure their
liens on the properties. Or… they simply do not make the payments on
behalf of the occupants. I would suspect that since arrears in mortgage
payments are escalating to record levels on a month by month basis,
escrow payments are growing increasingly in arrears as well.
I would be hard pressed to cite ONE local (or regional) governmental or
quasi-governmental entity that isn’t facing deficits, budgetary
mismatches, and/ or cash flow problems now. Costs of this past winter
far exceeded estimates/ projections. Current costs of fueling their
fleets of vehicles are thru the roof. Since most of these entities have
June 30th year ends, the public will not be made fully aware of these
deficiencies and deficits until financial statements are made public
sometime later this Summer, or Fall. These entities are counting on the
RE tax proceeds right now!
Even if your household is lucky enough to be mortgage free, you are
still “renting” from the local taxing bodies which appear as line items
on your real estate tax bill. If you don’t believe me, just try NOT
paying your property tax bills for a couple taxing cycles and see how
long you are allowed to stay in your “own/ owned” home. I’m Fred
Cederholm and I’ve been thinking. You should be thinking, too.