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Assessor highlights revaluation work, staff training and two statewide law changes aiding disaster and tax‑relief applicants
Summary
Coconino County Assessor Armando Reese told supervisors the office met all statutory deadlines, is maintaining certification training for appraisers, and helped draft two state bills (House Bill 2408 and SB1122) that change valuation and relief rules after disasters and adjust valuation caps for property tax relief programs.
Coconino County Assessor Armando Reese briefed the Board of Supervisors on May 15 about the assessor’s FY26 requests, staffing changes and recent legislative wins that he said will help homeowners affected by disasters and people applying for statewide property tax relief programs.
Nut graf: The assessor’s office manages the county’s property tax rolls—data used by every taxing jurisdiction to levy and distribute property tax revenue. Reese said the office completed state audits, continued staff certification and promoted bills that ease valuation outcomes for disaster‑impacted property owners and adjust eligibility calculations in statewide relief programs.
What the office does and key metrics Reese described the assessor’s statutory role—locating, identifying and valuing taxable property—and noted the office maintains about 86,000 property accounts. The…
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