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Grant County assessor outlines annual evaluation process, timelines and disclosure limits

2098241 · January 10, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

At the Jan. 9 Grant County Commission meeting, Assessor Misty Trujillo reviewed the county'wide 2024 property-tax evaluation process, explained notice and protest timelines, and flagged limits from New Mexico''s non-disclosure rules that complicate commercial and land valuations.

Grant County Assessor Misty Trujillo told the county commissioners on Jan. 9 that the state'conducted Property Tax Division evaluation is an annual review of assessor operations and not a financial audit.

"It's not an audit. An evaluation determines merit using standards and focuses on outcome and impact and refers to techniques and process," Trujillo said.

The presentation outlined the evaluation's main purposes: highlight accomplishments, recommend improvements and identify departmental deficiencies. Trujillo described the key calendar items that determine property-tax calculations: notices of value mailed April 1; a 30-day window to file protests; June 15 submittal of certified interim values to the state system; receipt of Division of Finance tax rates that are applied in…

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