First published by: main on sunday
At least half of English households face huge Council Tax increases under a nationwide reassessment of property values by a 'Big Brother' computer.
The Government has tried to play
down the effects of the survey of 21m homes, but The Mail on Sunday has learned
it will add hundreds of pounds to most bills. The American company which
designs the system the Government will use to update property values has been
forbidden from disclosing details of the project. But bosses admitted its
method of assessing properties nearly always found them undervalued.
Ben Story, the vice president of
Cole Layer Trumble, said: 'Generally, we find that most properties have been
under-evaluated. It is normally in excess of 50% of the properties looked at.
But in some cases, it has been as much as 100%.
'Data is often missing, incorrect
or out of date. Some places we have been called into in the States have shown
the information to be 50 years out of date. Our process updates this
information and typically applies a higher evaluation to the property.' The
company has won a £45m contract with the Valuation Office Agency in Whitehall
which, in the New Year, will begin its work on what has been dubbed a 'nice
home' tax.
Teams of inspectors will record
costly home improvements such as loft extensions, double-glazing and
conservatories, using aerial and satellite photographs to spot home
improvements. Good schools, low crime rates and clean streets will also be
taken into account to assess new levels of Council
Tax.
Ministers will use the American
software to rate a neighbourhood on the quality of local services and the type
of people living there. The Tories have described the computer firm's warning
of a widespread hike in bills as 'staggering'. And there were further
indications that the new assessment will bite hard. In Northern Ireland, where
a similar scheme has already begun, residents complained bitterly at being
hoodwinked over the size of increases. Some say that their bills have doubled.
The computer software provided by
Cole Layer Trumble uses information bought from retail giants and credit card
firms, and will allow inspectors to calculate a precise value of a home based
not only on its size and features but also its location. Ministers have divided Britain
into 10,000 neighborhoods. But these are not based on existing local authority
areas and Government officials have refused to disclose where their boundaries
lie.
The Government awarded the
contract to the American company despite bids from British firms. The
headquarters of Cole Layer Trumble is a windowless two-storey building on an
industrial estate in Dayton, Ohio. It has no UK or European office and no
functioning website. There, the Mail on Sunday was
refused entry to an area where teams of programmers were working on the British
project. General Manager Jim Keenan said: 'We have been supplying software and
consultation since 2003. It has been adapted for use in the UK. We are strictly
directed by our contract not to discuss what we are actually doing there.'
Tory communities and local
government spokesman Caroline Spelman said she was 'staggered' by the admission
of the extent of the increases. 'When homes in Wales were reassessed about one
third of them went up at least one Council
Tax band,' she said. 'It looks as if the experience in England is going to
be even worse. The Government may deny it but the gut instinct of the taxpayer
is that this exercise is really about raking in more money.'
In Northern Ireland, bills were
previously calculated according to the rental value of a property. Now they
will be determined by its value, mirroring the English system. Ministers have
claimed that more than half of Northern Ireland residents will see either no
increase or a decrease. However, it has admitted that there will be some
'exceptional percentage increases', with some householders seeing up to a
fivefold rise in their bills.
The Department for Communities
and Local Government said: 'Any claim that this company plays a role in
determining Council Tax levels in
this country is total garbage. To make any link between a company that have
simply supplied a software system and how Council
Tax is set is nonsense and irresponsible.'
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I support Council Tax Rebates in assisting home owners and tenants in getting a rebate on their over-paid Council Tax.