Pictured: Congressional Country Club
Similar legislation failed in the last session of the state legislature, but Delegate David Moon has tweaked his proposal to abandon a “one-size-fits-all” approach and have clubs and golf courses in Montgomery County taxed according to the assessed value of their property, rather than under the current flat rate of $1,000/acre. Affected clubs would include Chevy Chase Club and Congressional CC.
Legislation being introduced in the Maryland General Assembly will call for expanding the number of country clubs and golf courses in Montgomery County, Md. that would be assessed at the county’s property-tax rates, which could lead to higher tax bills for private clubs in the county, reported Bethesda (Md.) Magazine.
Del. David Moon, a Democrat from Takoma Park, Md., plans to re-introduce legislation with co-sponsors Sen. Will Smith and delegates-elect Lorig Charkoudian, Vaughn Stewart and Julie Palakovich Carr, Bethesda Magazine reported.
Moon said the Maryland Department of Assessments and Taxation, known as SDAT, currently taxes private golf courses of at least 50 acres with more than 100 paying members at the rate of $1,000 an acre, instead of at the value of the property as assessed by the state.
“It [the course] might be worth $100 million when it’s being assessed at $1,000 per acre,” Moon said.
This latest proposal would tax clubs at the current rate of $1,000 per acre for the first $500,000 worth of land, and the rest of the property value would be subject to the local tax rate, Bethesda Magazine reported.
The properties affected by the change would include Bethesda Country Club, Kenwood Golf & Country Club, Chevy Chase Club, Columbia Country Club and Congressional Country Club, Bethesda Magazine reported.
Montgomery County has been losing $10 million a year since SDAT adopted the current exemptions for private clubs in 2002, Moon said. According to a fiscal analysis included in the proposed legislation, that amount could be made up by 2030 if the bill is passed in the current session, Bethesda Magazine reported.
Moon introduced a similar bill last year that would have required every private club in the county to be assessed at the market rate, but it did not advance because it was shown that smaller clubs would be hurt financially by paying higher taxes (https://clubandresortbusiness.com/attempt-increase-maryland-club-property-taxes-fails-initial-vote/).
“The problem with this one-size-fits all approach is that it lumped struggling clubs in with clubs that are not struggling at all,” Moon said.
But P.J. Hogan, a lobbyist with the Annapolis branch of Cornerstone Government Affairs, who represents the Maryland Coalition of Concerned Clubs, told Bethesda Magazine that he opposes Moon’s revamped bill, because the exemption is meant to prevent overdevelopment in parts of the county and also because higher taxes could force country clubs to close or lay off workers.
Hogan, a former state senator who represented parts of Montgomery County, pointed to the example of Indian Spring Country Club in the Layhill, Md. area, which closed in 2007 after it was sold for a housing development with more than 700 homes.
“What a lot of people fail to understand is that if a golf course sells for development, they have to pay back the difference between the market rate and the golf course rate for 10 years,” Hogan told Bethesda Magazine.
Hogan testified against Moon’s bill at a public hearing earlier in December in Rockville, Md. and said he plans to do so again in the state capital in Annapolis when the new legislative session begins. He disputes the notion by some that the exemption for courses and clubs is a tax loophole, Bethesda Magazine reported.
“If you look at the definition of a loophole, it’s someone who takes advantage of an oversight. This is not an oversight,”Hogan said. “You put your land into an easement [and] you don’t pay property tax on it. Ag [reserve] land is taxed at $500 per acre.”
Montgomery County’s northern crescent includes land with zoning for agriculture that is protected from development through easements, Bethesda Magazine reported.
Hogan added that SDAT’s agreement with the affected clubs runs through 2031, rendering null-and-void Moon’s argument that the new bill will help the county increase revenue.
“Even if the bill passed, the county would not see an extra dime until 2031,”Hogan said. “How is that going to solve the financial needs of the county in 2019?”
Moon’s response, Bethesda Magazine reported, was that “To recover this revenue by 2030, we have to get the ball in motion now.”
Bethesda Magazine’s report including this listing of the property values of clubs for 2017 in Montgomery County, according to state assessment records:
– Woodmont Country Club in Rockville, Md. – $15.5 million
– Bethesda (Md.) Country Club – $6.7 million
– Kenwood Golf & Country Club, Bethesda, Md.– $8.8 million
– Chevy Chase (Md.) Club – $8.3 million
– Columbia Country Club, Chevy Chase, Md.– $7.1 million
– Manor Country Club, Rockville, Md. – $5.1 million
– Lakewood Country Club, Rockville, Md. -$7.8 million
– Argyle Country Club, Silver Spring, Md. – $4.9 million
– Members Club at Four Streams, Poolesville, Md. – $3.6 million
– Montgomery Country Club, Laytonsville, Md. – $2.2 million
– Norbeck Country Club, Rockville, Md. – $4.4 million
– Tournament Players Club at Avenel, Potomac, Md. – $5 million
Data for Congressional Country Club in Bethesda, Md. and Blue Marsh Golf Course in Laytonsville, Md. was not available on the SDAT website, Bethesda Magazine reported.
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