a) Section 4-20
of the Property Tax Code [35 ILCS
200/4-20] provides a $3,000 bonus for township and
multi-township district assessors, including supervisors of assessments, who
meet specified uniformity criteria in counties with fewer than 3,000,000
inhabitants. Application for the bonus shall be made to the Department on Form
No. PTAX-205. In all cases, it is incumbent upon the applicant to provide all
data and information necessary to substantiate eligibility for the bonus. The
information requested on Form No. PTAX-205 is mandatory and failure to provide
accurate and complete data as specified shall result in rejection of the
application. Additional information may be requested by the Department to aid
in the determination of whether or not the coefficient of dispersion and level
of assessment meet the legal requirements. Beginning with the 2010 federal
decennial census, however, if the population in an assessment jurisdiction has
increased to over 50,000 inhabitants or decreased to 50,000 or fewer
inhabitants, then the Department will continue to determine bonus eligibility
of any affected assessor on the basis of the uniformity criteria originally
applicable to the assessment jurisdiction before the reported population change
for all applications submitted in the year during which the official federal
decennial census population count is released (e.g., if data is released in
2011 showing a population change for a county, then, on the 2011 bonus
application, the assessor must meet the uniformity criteria applicable to the
assessment jurisdiction in 2010 and only satisfy the new requirements for the
county with the bonus application submitted in 2012). The need for additional
information, as well as the type of supporting documentation that may be
required, is dependent upon the approach and methodology selected by the
applicant to document their eligibility for the bonus. The filing time frame
for submitting the application and supporting documentation shall begin April
15 and continue until 60 days after the original hearing date in the county for
the tentative equalization factor. Applications for the $3,000 bonus and all
necessary documentation must be received within the specified time frame for
the assessment year in question.
b)
In determining the current level of assessments for the jurisdiction, the
Department shall use the most recent three-year adjusted median as determined
by the assessment/sales ratio study, e.g., for the 2004 bonus, the Department
shall use the 2001, 2002, and 2003 levels of assessment. Adjustments to the
study data may be made on the basis of changes reported by the assessor on the
application form and on any alternative sales ratio data submitted. For an
application by a township or multi-township assessor, the average of the most
recent three-year levels shall be adjusted only to reflect action by the
township or multi-township assessor. Adjustments to the Department's most
recent urban weighted three-year average county level for an application
submitted by a Supervisor of Assessments shall be made on the basis of
assessment information provided on Form Nos. PTAX-280-A (Tentative Abstract of
Assessments), PTAX-280-R (Reclassification Table) and PTAX-204-S/A (Report on
Equalization of Local Assessment by Supervisor of Assessments). Decisions
relating to the coefficient of dispersion for purposes of qualifying for the
bonus shall be made using the Department's most recent single year
assessment/sales ratio data, e.g., for the 2004 bonus award, the Department
shall use the 2003 single-year sales ratio study. More recent or supplemental
data shall be accepted from the applicant to aid in determining whether or not
the uniformity criteria for the assessment year being applied for meets the
legal requirement. Alternate or supplemental data may take the form of current
year sales from the jurisdiction matched with prior year assessments. If there
is an insufficient number of sales in an assessment jurisdiction, appraisals
may also be used when provided by an objective source having no personal,
business, or monetary interest in the Department's decision to award or
withhold the bonus. If appraisals are submitted, the properties involved must
be shown to have been selected in a random manner that adequately represents
the jurisdiction or assessment district. As an alternate to appraisals in cases
where there is an insufficient number of sales for any of the applicable years
in the assessment/sales ratio study, a trending technique may be used to adjust
the sale price for time. To trend, the study year at issue is first augmented
with sales from the most recent year in comparison before adding any other
sales from the remaining year in the three-year period. For the 2004 bonus
award:
1) if sales are needed for 2001, first
trend 2002 sales back, then trend 2003 sales back if necessary;
2) if sales are need for 2002 first trend
2003 sales back, then trend 2001 sales forward if necessary; and
3) if sales are needed for 2003, first trend
2002 sales forward, then trend 2001 sales forward if necessary.
Whenever alternate sales ratio study data are submitted, the
sales used must conform to those edit standards commonly accepted in the
appraisal field for determining "arms length" transactions, as detailed in the
publication "Standard on Ratio Studies" (International Association of Assessing
Officers - 1999 edition). This incorporates no later amendment or
edition.
c)
Department Audits
1) The Department may
conduct field audits to determine the validity and accuracy of information and
data provided on or with the application. Field audits shall be conducted under
two circumstances:
A) on a random
basis;
B) whenever the petitioner's
study data qualifies for the bonus but Department sales data do not indicate
compliance with bonus requirements.
2) The audit may include but not be limited
to the assessor's books, abstracts, and property record cards. Failure to
provide or have available information deemed necessary for the audit shall
result in denial of the bonus application.
d) The Department may utilize
assessment/sales ratio data from its annual study to evaluate the need for an
in-depth review, pursuant to subsections (a), (b) and (c), of a bonus
application and supporting data. In situations where Department data are
sufficient in quantity (i.e., 25 useable sales per township, other than
townships for which 25 sales are not normally available), representative of the
district (i.e., sufficient sales by geography and class of property), and clear
as to both the current level and uniformity of assessments within the
jurisdiction as required by Section 4-20 of the Property Tax Code, decisions
regarding eligibility for the bonus may be made without review or audit of data
presented with the application. Unless the petitioner can provide additional
information which changes the Department of Revenue study so as to qualify the
applicant for the bonus or information that reveals an error or omission in the
Department's study, the petition shall be denied (assuming the Department's
study does not indicate eligibility for the bonus).
e) Decisions by the Department of Revenue
shall be made in writing to the applicant within the latest of the following
time periods:
1) for applications based on
prior year sales, within 120 days after the Department's certification of the
results of the hearing on the tentative multiplier; or
2) for applications based on prior year
sales, within 120 days after receipt of all supporting documentation, including
any additional information required by the Department under the preceding
provisions of this Section; or
3)
for applications based on current year sales, within 120 days after the
Department's completion of the assessment/sales ratio study for the current
year; or
4) for applications based
on current year sales, within 120 days after receipt of all supporting
documentation, including any additional information required by the Department
under this Section.
Decisions affecting levels of assessment or coefficients of
dispersion made in consideration of eligibility for the $3,000 bonus are
non-binding upon the Department's equalization factor computation process. All
Department decisions regarding eligibility for the bonus shall be final for the
assessment year involved.
f) Federal and State income taxes, the
employee's share of Social Security taxes and, if applicable, the employee's
share of contributions to the Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund shall be
withheld from such $3,000 bonus. An employee's withheld Social Security tax and
Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund contribution shall be forwarded to the
township, multi-township or county that employs the assessor for proper
accounting and forwarding to the appropriate authorities. The township,
multi-township or county that employs the assessor shall pay the employer's
share of Social Security taxes and, if applicable, contributions to the
Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund.