County staff explained to the Summit County Council that a new Tyler-generated report for Board of Equalization (BOE) matters pulls market values directly from the assessor's system and does not include the taxable-value columns that used to be provided in a manually prepared Excel spreadsheet.
"It is coming straight out of Tyler," a county staff member explained, noting the system report is more accurate but that adding taxable-value columns would require either Utah counties to coordinate a change to the shared Tyler reports or development of a county-specific report that would require programming time and funding.
Council members debated whether the new report was acceptable for BOE public hearings. Several members asked staff to annotate the report when changes were attributable to the primary-residence exemption or other non-market adjustments so the council can see why taxable value may differ from market value. Staff agreed they can add clarifying notes in the right-hand column that explain primary-residence adjustments where feasible.
After discussing the format and options, the council moved and voted to approve the 2023 stipulations as presented in the Sept. 13 packet.
The council also recorded a procedural recusal by a member who said they have an outstanding appeal and will not participate in matters affecting that parcel.
The BOE discussion clarified the tradeoff between automation/accuracy and the older spreadsheet's human-readable taxable-value columns, and the council directed staff to provide clearer annotations when changes reflect exemptions or administrative adjustments.