Walgreen's
appealing property assessments
in city, state
Oct.
30 -- The Walgreen Co. is appealing the property
assessments of 17 stores in the city and others throughout
the state, according to City Assessment Commissioner Mary
Reavey.
"They
don't want to pay the taxes," she said.
Some
of the appeals of city assessments pending in Circuit Court
date back to 2002, Reavey said.
The
company also has disputed City of Madison assessments, Reavey
said. That case is in the State Court of Appeals, and the
Milwaukee city attorney's office will file a friend of the
court brief, Reavey said.
“We
want to make sure they make a good record in Madison because
it could affect our (cases),” she told the Common
Council's Finance and Personnel Committee earlier this month.
Reavey
said in an interview that the Madison case was being watched
carefully by municipal and professional organizations.
"I
understand it’s not just Madison and Milwaukee,"
she told the committee. "They’re appealing all
over the state.”
Reavey
said Walgreen's leases the stores from their owners, and
the agreements call for Walgreen's to cover all the associated
costs of the store, including the taxes.
The
amount in dispute in Milwaukee grew substantially this year.
Walgreen's objected to the assessments of 11 stores in 2005,
according to information provided by Reavey's office. The
city assessed those stores at $25.7 million, or $8.2 million
more than the corporation said they were worth.
This
year, Walgreen's is objecting to the assessments of 17 stores,
contending they are worth $22.9 million less than the $52.8
million value assigned by the city.
The
city's overall tax rate was $24.50 per $1,000 valuation
last year. If Walgreen's wins all its appeals, its property
tax liability for 2005 would be reduced by $184,657.
The
tax rate for 2006 has not yet been set, but it already is
clear that substantially more money is at stake. If the
rate were to decrease by a dime, for example, to $24.40,
Walgreen's stands to save $558,882 on its property tax bill
by winning the appeals. Other taxpayers would have to pony
up instead.

Reavey
"Good
corporate citizen, Walgreen's," Ald. Michael D'Amato
said. "We should certainly go out of our way to give
them whatever they need to build in the neighborhoods.”

D'Amato
The
Madison city attorney's office did not return a phone call
seeking comment. A Walgreen's representative said last week
that no information would be available until this week,
after officials had time to look into the matter.
Walgreen's
objected to assessments at these Milwaukee stores:
-
8484 W Brown Deer Rd.
-
9040 W. Good Hope Rd.
-
7171-7181 N. Teutonia Ave.
-
6442 N. 76th St.
-
5183 N. 91st St.
-
6727 W. Hampton Ave.
-
2200-2212 W. Capitol Dr.
-
5101 W. Capitol Dr.
-
2727 W. North Ave.
-
3522 W. Wisconsin Ave.
-
2424 W. Forest Home Ave.
-
618 W. Oklahoma Ave.
-
6000 W. Oklahoma Ave.
-
3233 S. 27th St.
-
107 W. Wilbur Ave.
-
4730 S. 27th St.
-
6292 S. 27th St.
For a more detailed
list that includes the amounts in dispute, click here.
Printer-friendly
version