http://www.omaha.com/index.php?u_pg=1673&u_sid=2220099Published Tuesday
August 8, 2006
Assessor reviewing Nelson property
BY SUSAN SZALEWSKI AND ROBYNN TYSVER
WORLD-HERALD STAFF WRITERS
Sarpy County Assessor Dan Pittman said he would look over Nebraska Sen. Ben Nelson's acreage Monday afternoon.
Nelson said Sunday that he had not known that the acreage, which is along the Platte River, was in a tax category that may have been inappropriate for his use of the land.
Supporters of Nelson's opponent, Pete Ricketts, had criticized Nelson's assertion that the wooded, 90-acre tract in Sarpy County was being used primarily for agriculture.
Mark Fahleson, a state GOP spokesman, said Sunday that as a Washington politician, Democrat Nelson felt free to disregard the property tax laws.
The two sides in the Senate race have been trading jabs in an extended property tax controversy. Each of the candidates has been criticized by members of the opposing political party for contesting the property valuations on their homes.
The Sarpy County property had become the latest battleground in the fight.
The senator could be required to pay about $14,000: three years in back property taxes, with interest.
Despite applying for the special designation in 1999 and 2001, Nelson said Sunday that he was unaware that the property around his hunting cabin had a greenbelt designation, a special property tax category for land used primarily for agriculture. Nonagricultural land is taxed on its market value.
A spokeswoman for Nelson said last week that Nelson raises turkeys on the land, although she acknowledged that that was not its primary use.
Nelson issued a statement Sunday saying he was willing to pay the full tax if the designation is found to be in error.
"The greenbelt designation was on the property when I acquired it and apparently had been for several years," he said. "Unfortunately, I never paid attention to it and apparently renewed it. I was not aware I received a benefit.
"I have not sought anything to which I am not entitled," Nelson said.
In February 1999, Nelson signed a greenbelt application for 26 of his 90 acres. And, in March of 2001, he signed a greenbelt application for the remaining 64 acres, Pittman said.
Pittman said he believed all 90 acres already were in the program when Nelson bought the land in 1999. Greenbelt status transfers when land changes hands, but county assessors request that landowners reapply for the designation.
Fahleson took issue with Nelson's explanation Sunday.
"Sadly, Ben Nelson has become a Washington politician," the GOP spokesman said. "One set of rules applies to the rest of us, and another set applies to him."