News
Flyover debate: For property tax assessments, aerial photography could be the future - Baltimore Sun
Anne Arundel County’s property tax base could expand by more than $168 million in the span of three years if assessors are allowed to use aerial photographs to inspect homes and businesses ...
PRESCOTT - Yavapai County Assessor Pamela J. Pearsall wants to buy a high-tech oblique aerial digital photography system, called Pictometry, to help her assess county properties.
A high-tech aerial photography system that can spot an illegal porch from 5,000 feet is being marketed to tax assessors in New Jersey as a way to grow revenue, according to a report in the Press ...
The county’s tax assessor’s office will begin aerial flyovers this fall to update tax records with new imagery of homes and businesses. And the county’s annual tax digest was signed on ...
Spokane County commissioners can only hope that Assessor Ralph Baker is a trendsetter in budget discussions as well ... Assessor’s budget includes cost of aerial photography of buildings ...
“We want fresh photography of that ¼ area they’re going to be reappraising,” said GIS Manager Ronald Davis. They’ve been doing aerial photography every four years or so for the last 40 years.
LIVINGSTON - Livingston Parish Assessor Jeff Taylor wants to use aerial photography to verify the sizes of homes and businesses for the parish’s property tax rolls.
Tax assessors scope out property with Cessnas, ... Pictometry's 80 Cessnas have shot high-resolution aerial photography in counties that include about 90% to 95% of the U.S. population, ...
Anne Arundel County’s property tax base could expand by more than $168 million in the span of three years if assessors are allowed to use aerial photographs to inspect homes and businesses ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results