Cook County Commissioner Sean Morrison | Cook County Commissioner Sean Morrison/Facebook
Cook County Commissioner Sean Morrison | Cook County Commissioner Sean Morrison/Facebook
Chicago City Wire recently interviewed Cook County Commissioner Sean Morrison for his opinion on the latest property tax issues in Cook County.
In July, County Board President Toni Preckwinkle announced that the second installment of Cook County property tax bills would be delayed, and there are still multiple steps that need to be completed before the bills can be sent out, the Sun-Times reported. Preckwinkle spokesman Nick Shields said recently that the process should be complete by “the end of 2022." The delay is causing trouble for some homeowners who might be looking to claim an IRS deduction on their 2022 federal tax returns, and it has also hurt some homeowners who have received mortgage bills to add money to escrow accounts for paying tax bills.
“The (banks) are having to use estimates because they don’t have an actual bill, and the banks have been used to getting that bill in July for the last 10 years or so,” Oak Park Township Assessor Ali ElSaffar said, Sun-Times reported. “So we’re getting calls from folks who are dealing with that, and we’re getting calls from folks who are just wondering where their tax bills are.”
The Cook County Assessor’s Office is blaming the delay on a new data system, according to Ryan. This new system apparently delayed the transmission of the final 2021 real estate value assessment data from the Assessor's Office to the Cook County Board of Review by several months. Typically, the second-installment property tax bills are sent out in June and due by Aug. 1.
"They were just indicators of when they think they will be ready. A few different layers to this being late, as some of these government entities are fighting to have revenue to have operations to work. As it is, we don't know what the reassessments are or what any increases may be," Morrison said regarding the delay.
Morrison described the impact the delay has had on his constituents.
"People are having problems getting mortgages and people that have mortgages are seeing them go up because the banks are being overly aggressive with all the uncertainty," Morrison said. "A lot of this stems from horrible management and a lack of leadership coming from the president's office. I've been talking about this for a while and it's all been ignored. It's been easy to see this train coming because all the steps we should have taken were not being done."
When asked to characterize Toni Preckwinkle's leadership as County Board President, Morrison said, "On this topic, it's been vacant, as in it hasn't been there at all. I think in this particular area she gets an F. They're saying that they will have this done by now by November, but we'll see. I hope it will get done, we've been monitoring it and calling a lot of hearings on it, but we'll have to see."
Cook County has been able to meet the Aug. 1 deadline every year since 2011, with the exception of a two-month delay last year, which was blamed on COVID, according to the Sun-Times. Some officials, including Board of Review Commissioner Larry Rogers Jr., are blaming first-term Assessor Fritz Kaegi for implementing the new data system.
"This is squarely in Fritz Kaegi’s lap. This is purely an implementation failure," Rogers said, according to Sun-Times. "He is the reason tax bills will go out late. He has failed to get his work done timely. He needs to own it."
A spokesperson for Kaegi stated, "These are unavoidable delays. The county was very aware of it."