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Why are Chicago homeowners leaving money on the table?

The city gave 155,000 middle- and low-income homeowners a one-time chance to significantly soften the blow of a property tax hike. But few have taken the opportunity. Why?

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John Raoux/AP/File
A realty sign hangs in front of a home for sale in Orlando, Fla.

A year after moving to our new home in Michigan, we faced a big property tax hike. We swallowed hard, but paid it. After all, we had little choice, and it did reflect an increase in the value of our house. Then there is the story about homeowners in Chicago.听

They鈥檝e been hit with听 averaging 13 percent, or around $400 a year. But their tax hike didn鈥檛 come because home values climbed. Rather it was because Chicago had to raise rates to help cover听听(to the tune of $589 million over four years).

Here鈥檚 where the story gets interesting: The city gave 155,000 middle- and low-income homeowners a one-time chance to significantly soften the blow. But听听have taken the opportunity, with the rest seemingly preferring to pay the higher taxes. What happened?

It is all about the mechanism Chicago used to reduce their bills. Rather than increasing the property tax exemption鈥擬ayor Rahm Emanuel鈥檚 preferred choice鈥擨llinois lawmakers took a page out of the retailer鈥檚 book and created a $20 million rebate听. The rebates average $150 and some homeowners could get as much as $200. Alas, as of two weeks ago, only about 17,000 homeowners had applied.听

Emanuel didn鈥檛 want to repeat the city鈥檚 sad history with property tax rebates. In 2010, then-Mayor Richard M. Daley set aside $35 million for refunds, but few homeowners applied and the city distributed only $2.1 million.

鈥淭he rebate is not to be there on the books and then, with a nod and a wink, you hope nobody takes it,鈥澨齦ast summer. 鈥淚t鈥檚 there to alleviate any financial strain. And we鈥檙e gonna make sure that鈥檚 what happens when we do it.鈥澨

The city reached out to low-income homeowners through community groups, housing organizations, and places of worship and promoted the program through local news outlets. It even extended the application period by a month. Nothing worked.

One reason may be the onerous听. Each homeowner must听听辞蹿听, complete a听听form, present her most recent property tax bill, 2015 federal income tax return or Social Security award letter, and state-issued identification. Pulling together necessary paperwork, getting to a processing center, and completing the application on site could take the better part of a day.听

This, of course, takes another page from retailers, who know that only about half of mail-in rebates听. But the Chicago process was far more complicated than anything businesses could have designed.听

Even worse: Because the rebate program did not begin until late summer, it was out of sync听with the timing of both property tax payments and income tax filing. In Chicago, property taxes are due on March 1 and August 1. By the time the rebate program was available later in the summer, people may have already put their property tax bills out of their minds.

That points to another reason Chicago property taxpayers are leaving money on the table: They may not even know how much property tax they pay.

Crain鈥檚 Chicago Business听听most Chicago-area homeowners pay property taxes with their monthly mortgage payment. Lenders push borrowers to set up these escrow accounts both because they reduce the risk that homeowners won鈥檛 pay property taxes, and because it gives the banks access to no-interest cash for months before they remit the tax to local governments.

In their paper for the National Bureau of Economic Research, Marika Cabral of the University of Texas-Austin and Caroline Hoxby of Stanford听听homeowner awareness of property taxes. In other words, 鈥渢ax escrow makes people much less informed about the taxes they pay.鈥 A little property tax ignorance could lead to a little property tax bliss鈥 and little tax rebate uptake.听

Cabral and Hoxby reveal something else. They found that while property taxpayers believe the levy is 鈥渄isagreeable,鈥 they also say government spends the revenue efficiently. Perhaps middle- and low-income Chicago homeowners are simply willing to pay more for fire and police pensions.听

Or maybe the property tax rebate program was set up to fail.听

, publishing the first Wednesday of every month, helps make sense of tax policy for those outside the tax world and connects tax issues to everyday concerns. This story originally appeared on .

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