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03-28-2007, 09:26 AM
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Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Austin
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If you do not own a site now you point of view is skewed
If your fraternity no long owns property or you are trying to buy property near campus your issues are not the same as those of us who now own property.
I think this is the Beta's situation and will be yours if you sell your property.
You won't be able to afford the purchase or the taxes that go with it.
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03-28-2007, 10:14 AM
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Join Date: Aug 2006
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I am not going to discuss our current situation on a message board, but the property tax issue affects us all.
As you surely have sorted out- it makes occupancy more expensive and diverts rent revenues towards taxes that need to be saved for repairs and renovations over time.
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03-28-2007, 04:28 PM
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Location: Kansas City, Kansas USA
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Texas Sig
If your fraternity no long owns property or you are trying to buy property near campus your issues are not the same as those of us who now own property.
I think this is the Beta's situation and will be yours if you sell your property.
You won't be able to afford the purchase or the taxes that go with it.
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Well, the thing is as EE-OB said The owning of a house paying all of the bills falls on the House Corporation, of course it also falls on the chapter. They have to pay the bills to the HC?
If the House is owned, the appraisesel will still go up!
But, taxes are a small part of the toatal outlay. While it may seem small, it is still a cost.
The costs of repairs or fix ups that are need are extreemly expensive.
If you have a H C they get bunt out. They then get tired of seeing Chapters act silly and tear things up! They then leave and then the chapter wonders why?
Too will offer you to PM me!
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Last edited by Tom Earp; 03-28-2007 at 04:35 PM.
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03-28-2007, 05:37 PM
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Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Austin
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Cost of taxes per member
Divide $61,000 by your active bill payers over 9 months.
What do you get for your APO chapter?
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03-28-2007, 06:43 PM
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No doubt- it is a scary cost.
For any non-UT folks reading this- it is important to note that West Campus has always been very expensive. When a fraternity buys a large house on a decent sized piece of land, it is almost always necessary to raise the entire purchase price since it is not economically feasible to carry a mortgage. This is not only true now- but it was true 20 years ago.
Guys living in the house paying rent are not paying off a mortgage- they are paying property taxes, maintenance, utilities and- sometimes- money towards a fund for periodic major renovations.
So a 400% jump in property taxes can easily double or triple the rent you would have to charge residents in a Greek house in West Campus. And good luck getting guys to pay $500-600 a month to share a bedroom and be in the house when that would be the going rate for your own room in a 2 bedroom apartment. This is what makes this whole situation scary.
Looking over your earlier posts Texas Sig- I like the idea of somehow aiming for relief under a different IRS tax setup if possible as you noted. There is legislation somewhere in Congress that could potentially allow capital donations to Greek organizations to be tax deductible. Do you see a way a positive outcome there could be used to our advantage in dealing with property tax?
I am a CPA, but not a tax expert- so I am not sure what kinds of property tax concessions, if any, are available to IRS-exempt organizations.
Last edited by EE-BO; 03-28-2007 at 09:59 PM.
Reason: To fix one of my numbers which was missing a zero
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10-24-2007, 10:04 PM
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Join Date: Oct 2007
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Quote:
Originally Posted by EE-BO
So a 400% jump in property taxes can easily double or triple the rent you would have to charge residents in a Greek house in West Campus. And good luck getting guys to pay $500-600 a month to share a bedroom and be in the house when that would be the going rate for your own room in a 2 bedroom apartment. This is what makes this whole situation scary.
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I am not so sure about that. If you divide our housing bill up over 9 months in the SAE house at SMU, we pay about 800 a month, not including meal plan. I wish we could own our own property, but as it is the school owns 51% and we own 49%, which means it is technically theirs. Police can come & go as they please, etc. etc. However, the school does take care of all the maintenance.
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03-28-2007, 07:23 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Texas Sig
Divide $61,000 by your active bill payers over 9 months.
What do you get for your APO chapter? 
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You cannot figure over a 9 month period as the cost of the house runs for 12 months.
Yes, the payment still continues and the bed cost still goes on , along with utilities, along with insurance, taxes, rent or house payments!
But, the members forget about the summer months.  Do the H Corp. not have to worry about that? Hell Yes!
$$$ Oh Yes!
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03-28-2007, 10:24 PM
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Tom,
Just to clarify- he is talking about something most of us do here. People living in the house get the room for 12 months, but the total cost for the year is spread over 9 months so that everything gets paid up before the guys go home for the summer. It can be very difficult to track down 30-50 rent checks each month during summer break.
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03-29-2007, 03:37 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by EE-BO
Tom,
Just to clarify- he is talking about something most of us do here. People living in the house get the room for 12 months, but the total cost for the year is spread over 9 months so that everything gets paid up before the guys go home for the summer. It can be very difficult to track down 30-50 rent checks each month during summer break.
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Excellent post and while we would love to do that, the cost of our new house would really add on costs as we are below house full.
When we get the beds full, I am sure that will change as you and I have discussed this.
Parlor fees do not cover the full costs as it would take away from so many other parts of the budget.
While one would think each school is different, I guess it really isnt in the big picture.
But, as long as Greeks have houses near campus and the school wants to buy them, we are in the squeeze.
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04-21-2007, 11:36 AM
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Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Catonsville, MD
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Here's A Thought
... to the whole zoning issue.
How are other not-for-profit organizations dealt with regarding zoning and property taxes? Are the Salvation Army, YMCA, various social/country clubs, with housing units taxed? What about churches?
Fraternal organizations are generally considered not-for-profit groups, and housing is not generally considered something that is not part of the core business of the group (if you had a bookstore or coffee shop, that would be a taxable enterprise, for example). We church leaders face this all the time, as folks want to take our tax exemptions away, or make it cost-prohibitive to build new churches because of greedy zoning rules.
Just a thought...
Art Hebbeler
Chapter Advisor, Phi-Delta Zeta of Lambda Chi Alpha
AA 1038 (Butler '82 -- Go Dawgs!)
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