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Records show that Sarah Palin hasn't paid any property taxes on cabins that have been built on two backcountry plots partially owned by the former Alaska governor.
There are no tax assessments for the two-story, house-sized cabins, a workshop and a sauna spotted Thursday in an aerial survey. Property taxes totaling $156.13 were paid on the land in 2009 - but that bill did not include anything for the structures because the local assessor didn't know about the new construction nearly 100 miles north of Anchorage.
The issue has attracted the attention of local tax officials who conducted the scheduled aerial survey of properties in the area on Thursday. The area is accessible only by floatplane, snowmobile or four-wheeler.
Dave Dunivan, the assessor for the Matanuska-Susitna Borough, said such a survey had not been done there in five years, before construction started on the cabins.
Palin's attorney, Thomas Van Flein, said it is not the responsibility of property owners to report structures that go up on their land.
"It is the borough's job," he said in an e-mail. "The property taxes on this parcel are fully paid and have never been delinquent."
Man the liberals are getting desperate.
You paint with too broad a brush. I just DEFENDED Sarah Palin, and my favorite liberal radio talk show host defended her on this yesterday.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/02/04/palin-did-not-pay-taxes-o_n_450344.html
Odd that her lawyer didn't know the houses were not livable.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/02/04/palin-did-not-pay-taxes-o_n_450344.html
Odd that her lawyer didn't know the houses were not livable.
The lawyer should have known about the livability of the Palin houses because the lawyer commented to the press about the status of Palin's property tax. A person who doesn't make full disclosure to his lawyer in a civil matter is a fool.
Say Palin finished the house except for installing the bathroom. Most every woman I know would claim the house was unlivable. Should this house then be exempt from the tax rolls? If not, how many interior doors would have to be absent for the house to be unlivable? It that doesn't work, then what would it take?
The IRS rules that any structure, RV, boat which has a place to sleep, a place to cook, and a pot to pee in can be claimed as a residence. Most local jurisdictions would put a house on the tax rolls when it is a specified percentage of completion.
The lawyer should have known about the livability of the Palin houses because the lawyer commented to the press about the status of Palin's property tax. A person who doesn't make full disclosure to his lawyer in a civil matter is a fool.
Say Palin finished the house except for installing the bathroom. Most every woman I know would claim the house was unlivable. Should this house then be exempt from the tax rolls? If not, how many interior doors would have to be absent for the house to be unlivable? It that doesn't work, then what would it take? The IRS rules that any structure, RV, boat which has a place to sleep, a place to cook, and a pot to pee in can be claimed as a residence. Most local jurisdictions would put a house on the tax rolls when it is a specified percentage of completion.
I don't know about where you live buy here a house is deemed unliveabe without a functioning bathroom. Since a house with no bathroom is unliveable to can bnot be called liveable.The lawyer should have known about the livability of the Palin houses because the lawyer commented to the press about the status of Palin's property tax. A person who doesn't make full disclosure to his lawyer in a civil matter is a fool.
Say Palin finished the house except for installing the bathroom. Most every woman I know would claim the house was unlivable. Should this house then be exempt from the tax rolls? If not, how many interior doors would have to be absent for the house to be unlivable? It that doesn't work, then what would it take? The IRS rules that any structure, RV, boat which has a place to sleep, a place to cook, and a pot to pee in can be claimed as a residence. Most local jurisdictions would put a house on the tax rolls when it is a specified percentage of completion.