Baltimore City Council
File #: 10-0209R    Version: 0 Name: Informational Hearing - Recordation of Tax Sale Properties
Type: City Council Resolution Status: Adopted
File created: 5/24/2010 In control: Taxation, Finance and Economic Development Committee
On agenda: Final action: 5/9/2011
Enactment #:
Title: Informational Hearing - Recordation of Tax Sale Properties FOR the purpose of requesting that representatives from the Departments of Finance and Housing appear before the Council to report on the number of properties foreclosed on through the tax sale process for which no deed has been recorded and to discuss the fiscal impact of these transactions on the City.
Sponsors: Belinda Conaway, Mary Pat Clarke, Bill Henry, Nicholas C. D'Adamo, Carl Stokes, Warren Branch, Robert Curran, President Young, Sharon Green Middleton, Agnes Welch, James B. Kraft
Indexes: Resolution, Tax Sales
Attachments: 1. 10-0209R - 1st Reader.pdf, 2. HCD - 10-0209R.pdf, 3. Finance - 10-0209R.pdf, 4. 10-0209R - Adopted.pdf
* WARNING: THIS IS AN UNOFFICIAL, INTRODUCTORY COPY OF THE BILL.
THE OFFICIAL COPY CONSIDERED BY THE CITY COUNCIL IS THE FIRST READER COPY.
INTRODUCTORY*

CITY OF BALTIMORE
COUNCIL BILL R
(Resolution)

Introduced by: Councilmember Conaway

A RESOLUTION ENTITLED

A COUNCIL RESOLUTION concerning
title
Informational Hearing - Recordation of Tax Sale Properties

FOR the purpose of requesting that representatives from the Departments of Finance and Housing appear before the Council to report on the number of properties foreclosed on through the tax sale process for which no deed has been recorded and to discuss the fiscal impact of these transactions on the City.
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Recitals

When the City initiates the tax sale process on a property it generally has two goals. The first, and most obvious, is the desire to collect the money owed to the City by the property owner. The second, and perhaps more important, goal is to move the property out of the hands of a party that is not using it productively or adding to the City’s tax base and into the hands of a party that will use the property in a way that provides a steady stream of tax revenue.

This second goal can only be achieved if the purchasers of a tax lien certificate follow through with a foreclosure proceeding on the property and complete that process by recording a deed to the property in their name. If, instead, the property is foreclosed on but no deed is recorded the property can fall into a kind of legal limbo that prevents the City from collecting recordation and property taxes from the property in a timely manner.

It has...

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