On 12/13/06 06:27 pm K8RI on TowerTalk wrote:
>> It just occurred to me to look at this issue differently.
>>
>> I have read that one reason municipalities demand building permits is
>> that they can up the value of a property based on the improvements and
>> then collect more property tax.
>>
>> Are there cases where people have been granted a permit for a tower on a
>> residential property and had the value raised as a result?
>>
>> (Neither of these applies here: (a) Michigan property values can be
>> raised by more than the CPI only when the property changes hands; (b) in
>> this municipality -- and many surrounding ones -- permits are not
>> required for towers and antennas used by FCC-licensed amateurs.)
> Here in the Midland (MI) area it varies by township. In Homer township where
> I live a building permit is required only if the tower will be taller than
> 80 feet. They will accept the engineering specs in the ROHN catalog.
>
> The county board told me they do not consider non-commercial towers in
> evaluation.
>
> As to property values and the CPI in Michigan, I think I'd talk to tax
> attorney as my take is that applies to your property "as is". I think making
> improvements such as finishing the basement, adding a room, or remodeling
> *will* raise the property value.
I was just asking out of curiosity. People sometimes complain that a
tower will lower their property values, so I was wondering whether there
were any cases of towers doing the opposite.
73
Alan NV8A
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