The Car Tax Driving Force The Citys old software has reached the - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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The Car Tax Driving Force The Citys old software has reached the - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Vehicular Personal Property Tax Billing The Car Tax Driving Force The Citys old software has reached the end of its useful lifetime. New technology will meet the Citys needs and our citizens requests but cannot handle our


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Vehicular Personal Property Tax Billing

“The Car Tax”

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SLIDE 2

Driving Force

The City’s old software has reached the end

  • f its useful lifetime.

New technology will meet the City’s needs and our citizens’ requests but cannot handle

  • ur unique billing methodology.
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SLIDE 3

Goals

  • Provide information to the public on

transitioning from the City’s unique Annual Cycle Billing to Standard Billing in preparation for new technology

  • Prepare citizens to take an active role in

providing feedback to City Council

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Topics

  • Background
  • Where we are now
  • Where we wish to be
  • How we get there with the least negative

impact on our taxpayers

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Background

  • All Virginia localities

have personal property taxation: Includes cars, trucks, motorcycles, RVs and such

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Who Does What

  • City Council: Sets the annual billing cycles

and due dates

  • Commissioner of the Revenue: Assesses

the value and maintains the tax roll

  • Treasurer: Collects the revenue
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Where We Are Now

  • In 1993, City Council adopted unique

Annual Cycles, in which each vehicle has its own 12-month tax cycle

  • Vehicle is assessed as beginning of cycle,

billed at the end of its cycle

  • The City had to write custom

software to handle this billing

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SLIDE 8

Where We Are Now

  • The software has had no new

development in recent years

  • The City has wanted to spend as little

money as possible on an old product

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Where We Are Now

  • The software is increasingly showing signs
  • f failure
  • There is no known commercial software

capable of handling our unique process

  • Creating new custom in-house

software is not feasible

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SLIDE 10

Where We Want to Be

  • Uniform, known billing dates
  • Option to pay in semi-annual installments
  • Comprehensive billing statement with all

vehicles & amounts due

  • Online services
  • Ongoing development to carry us

into the future

  • Reliable technology
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How We Get There

  • Major software conversion takes 2-3 years

(funding, review & selection, configuration, final conversion)

  • This gives us time to help minimize the

negative impact to taxpayers in converting to standard billing cycles

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Standard Billing Cycle

  • All vehicles fall under a uniform Tax Year

cycle, with the same starting and ending date to the tax year

  • Standard billing cycle may follow the

calendar year (Jan 01 – Dec 31) or may follow the fiscal year (Jul 01 – Jun 30)

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Standard Billing Cycles Across Virginia

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Our Non-standard Cycle Billing

  • Vehicles fall in one of thirteen annual

billing cycles based upon when the vehicle first became taxable in the City

  • Twelve cycles correspond to each month
  • “Grandfather” standard cycle
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Our Non-standard Cycle Billing

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Impact of an all-at-once conversion to standard billing

  • “Catch up” billing per vehicle of anywhere

from 1 to 12 months additional billing (Overall one-time one-year 53% tax payment increase)

  • Windfall to the City but devastating to
  • taxpayers. Estimate of over $3.5 million
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Confused?

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How many vehicles do we have?

We have about as many vehicles as we do citizens (~ 27,000)

  • Almost 70% of our accounts have
  • ne vehicle
  • About 20% of our accounts have two

vehicles

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How many vehicles do we have?

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How often do we buy/sell/move?

  • Almost 60% of our vehicles have been

added within the past three years

  • Beyond that the turnover rate slows
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The Average Taxpayer

  • One vehicle
  • Assessed at about

$7,000

  • Pays about $200

annually

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Transition Options

  • 1. Do nothing
  • 2. Perform a one-time all-at-once conversion

from Annual Cyclical to Standard Annual

  • 3. Perform a gradual transition over a three-

year period. Four variations (A, B, C, D)

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Option 1

  • Do nothing: Not feasible for the long run

as our aging software slips toward increased failure and farther away from the features our taxpayer reasonably expect

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Option 2

  • Perform a one-time all-at-once transition

upon conversion to new software:

– Challenging to implement – Provide a one-time one-year revenue windfall to City, but a devastating burden on our taxpayers

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Option 3

Perform a gradual transition from Annual Cyclical to Standard Annual billing cycles:

  • Add a new 14th billing cycle
  • Vehicles removed from the tax roll cycle off

the non-standard billing

  • Vehicles added to the tax roll enter

standard billing

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Option 3

Perform a gradual transition from Annual Cyclical to Standard Annual billing cycles:

  • Vehicles could also transition by owner

request

  • Upon final conversion to new software,

remaining vehicles incur one-time transition to Standard Annual

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Option 3A & 3B

Standard Annual Billing with one annual payment date

  • Requires least amount of programming

expense on old software

  • Desirable really just for the 3-year

transition period

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Option 3A – “Annual December”

Standard Annual Billing with one annual payment date of December 05

  • As in 41% of Virginia localities
  • Bills generate in mid-October
  • Least costly option ($20K in

current FY budget)

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Option 3B – “Annual October”

Standard Annual Billing with one annual payment date of October 05

  • As in 8% of Virginia localities
  • Bills generate in mid-August
  • Modest cost ($35K to be

budgeted)

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Option 3C-3D

Standard Annual Billing with semi-annual payment dates

  • As in 31% of Virginia localities
  • One-time Council decision for the long-

term

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Option 3C-3D

Standard Annual Billing with semi-annual payment dates

  • 69% with 1 vehicle: eases payment

burden

  • 20% with 2 vehicles: payments

comparable

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Option 3C-3D

Standard Annual Billing with semi-annual payment dates

  • Most expensive option ($75K to be

budgeted)

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Option 3C – “Semi April”

Standard Annual Billing with semi-annual payment dates of April 05 and October 05

  • As in 8% of Virginia localities
  • Bills generate in mid-February and

mid-August

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Option 3D – “Semi June”

Standard Annual Billing with semi-annual payment dates of June 05 and December 05

  • As in 25% of Virginia localities (including

Frederick County)

  • Bills generate in mid-April and

mid-October

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Questions & Comments