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Reappraisal plan comes to the fore as Tarrant Appraisal District board members are elected
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Reappraisal plan comes to the fore as Tarrant Appraisal District board members are elected

Fourteen people are running for a seat on the Tarrant Appraisal District’s board of directors. There will be only five people at the table.

The filled slot is symbolic of how high-risk a once modest position has become, largely due to the board’s most controversial decision last year: changing the reassessment plan.

Leading this charge are board members Matt Bryant, Eric Morris and Callie Rigney. Elected by residents in May. They were the first board members elected by nationwide ballot, thanks to a constitutional amendment aimed at giving ordinary people a greater say on rating district boards.

Traditionally, these boards consist only of individuals appointed by taxing agencies such as cities and school districts. The May elections expanded the board, which previously had five people appointed, to nine members, including three elected officials and the tax assessor-collector.

What does a Tarrant Appraisal District board member do?

The primary duties of the board are to select the chief assessor, adopt the annual budget, and ensure that the district complies with policies and procedures established by law. The board does not value property or make decisions that affect the valuation records of particular properties. Board members are not paid.

A few months after the newly expanded board gave final approval In the face of a series of reassessment changes aimed at slowing real estate value increases, some tax agency appointees who vote alongside their elected counterparts may find themselves on the outside looking in.

School districts in particular expressed outrage over the changes. They warned that a value recession could occur hurting school budgets Because of Texas’ complicated school funding formula.

Now, with all five appointed positions on the board up for grabs, how incumbent board members vote on the reconsideration plan changes could determine whether they return for another term.

Four of the five current board members have secured the nomination. Rich DeOtte is the only incumbent not nominated by a tax agency. The deadline for tax authorities to nominate candidates was October 15. Among the candidates chosen by tax authorities are:

  • Mike Alfred
    • Current lawyer. He previously ran for a seat on the Grapevine-Colleyville ISD school board.
    • Nominated by Colleyville, Keller, Keller ISD, Southlake.
    • Find the full biography provided by Alfred here Here.
  • Alan Blaylock
    • Current board member and council member for Fort Worth’s District 10. The re-evaluation plan was voted in favor.
    • Nominated by the city of Fort Worth.
    • Find the full bio provided by Blaylock here Here.
  • Wendy Burgess
    • Current Tarrant County tax assessor collector. He will leave office at the end of this year after losing the Republican primary in March.
    • Nominated by Castleberry ISD, Northwest ISD, River Oaks.
    • Find the full biography provided by Burgess here Here.
  • Fred Campos
    • Current Hurst-Euless-Bedford ISD school board trustee. We have previously spoken out against the impact of the reassessment plan on schools.
    • Nominated by Bedford, Godley ISD, HEB ISD, Hurst, Kennedale.
    • Find the full biography provided by Campos here Here.
  • Mattie Peterson Compton
    • Former assistant U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Texas, Fort Worth Division.
    • He was nominated by the Tarrant County Commissioners Court.
    • Find the full biography provided by Compton here Here.
  • Eric Crile
    • Former candidate for an elected seat on the evaluation district board. He expressed reservations about the reassessment plan.
    • Nominated by Haltom City, Eagle Mountain-Saginaw ISD, Lake Worth ISD, Tarrant County College, Watauga.
    • Find the full bio provided by Crile here Here.
  • Daryl Davis
    • Current Crowley ISD school board trustee member.
    • Nominated by Bedford, Godley ISD, Hurst, Kennedale.
    • Find the full biography provided by Davis here Here.
  • Phyllis Grissom
    • He previously served on various Northwest ISD committees and the Fort Worth Library Advisory Board.
    • Nominated by Bedford, EMS ISD, Godley ISD, Hurst, Northwest ISD.
    • Find the full biography provided by Grissom here Here.
  • Lee Henderson
    • Former candidate for an elected seat on the evaluation district board. ​Public policy strategist and former software engineer. He expressed concerns about the reassessment plan.
    • Nominated by Crowley ISD and Tarrant County Commissioners Court.
    • Find the full biography provided by Henderson here Here.
  • Scott Lindgren
    • Former field operations manager for AT&T. He expressed concern about the impact of the reassessment plan.
    • Nominated by Haltom City.
    • Find the full biography provided by Lindgren here Here.
  • Gary Losada
    • Current board member. He previously served on the Tarrant Appraisal Review Board. The re-evaluation plan was voted in favor.
    • Nominated by Burleson, Keller ISD, Lakeside, North Richland Hills, Southlake.
    • You can find the full biography provided by Losada here Here.
  • Gloria Peña
    • Current board member. Former Arlington ISD board member and president. Voted against final reassessment plan.
    • Nominated by Arlington ISD, Bedford, Fort Worth ISD, Godley ISD, Hurst, Kennedale.
    • Find the full biography provided by Peña here Here.
  • Vince Puente
    • Current board member. Co-owner and president of marketing and sales for Southwest Office Systems Inc. He voted in favor of the reassessment plan.
    • Haslet was nominated by Keller ISD, North Richland Hills.
    • Find the full biography provided by Puente here Here.
  • Sayeda Syed
    • Former candidate for an elected seat on the evaluation district board. He expressed concerns about the legality of the reassessment plan.
    • Nominated by Bedford, Colleyville, Crowley ISD, Fort Worth ISD, Godley ISD, Haslet, Haltom City, Hurst, Kennedale, Lakeside, Tarrant County Commissioners Court, Tarrant County College, White Settlement.
    • You can find the full biography provided by Syed here Here.

Each unit has a set number of votes, and they don’t have to give them all to a single candidate; It is not unusual for a taxpayer entity to split its vote total among several candidates.

The city of Fort Worth was the first to vote, casting all 660 votes for District 10 council member Alan Blaylock, who currently serves on the assessment district board.

Fort Worth has the most votes among all taxpayers, followed by Fort Worth ISD, Tarrant County College and Tarrant County.

School districts as a whole have 2,644 votes, while other taxing units have 2,354 votes.

“We need people who understand, or at least have a basic understanding, of how the school funding formula works and how the valuations considered ultimately impact the organizations that vote to have these individuals on the board,” Carmen Arrieta-Candelaria said. said Fort Worth ISD’s chief financial officer.

But the incumbent board members who voted for the reassessment plan remain confident that their choices were correct. Gary Losada, the incumbent who has been the most critical of the tax agencies’ protest of the reassessment plan, said he has no concerns about his decision affecting his future on the board.

“There are larger forces that will determine whether or not I get on the board, and frankly, if the institutions as a whole think I shouldn’t be on the board just because of this plan, and they’re not listening to the bigger picture, then I shouldn’t be on the board,” he said. “But if they make that decision based solely on that and not everything that happened last year, then they might be a little short-sighted.”

Existing tensions were ratcheted up a notch on Oct. 22 when candidates received a Google Forms survey asking a series of questions designed to assess how candidates felt about the reevaluation plan. According to the survey, the answers to the questions will be shared with tax authorities during the vote allocation process.

But many candidates were confused about who was behind the poll. Less than 24 hours after the email was sent, candidates received a second email, this time from Julie Wooddell, executive assistant to Chief Appraiser Joe Don Bobbitt.

“You probably received a survey by email today. Please feel free to decline this request,” Wooddell said. “Many members of the board thought this might be an official communication from the district (but) it is not. Mayor Puente asked us to contact you and strongly recommends that you do not participate in the survey.”

The Fort Worth Report received the email address that sent the survey. The group later described itself as Tarrant Citizens for Responsible Government and said it was inappropriate for Puente to discourage participation in the survey, but did not provide any details about its membership. Bobbitt also confirmed that he did not know who was running the group.

Tax authorities have until December 15 to vote for the candidates. The Tarrant Appraisal District keeps a running tally of vote allocations. Here.

This article appeared for the first time Fort Worth Report and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.