The Summit County Council denied a discretionary tax abatement request from 4990 Hubert Court LLC after a public hearing in which owner Robert Heck described mail‑forwarding complications while he was abroad.
Stephanie (assessor's office) summarized the record: an ownership change was recorded in October 2022, the assessor removed an exemption and staff mailed courtesy instructions and a tax disclosure; an incomplete application was received Oct. 31 and staff followed up by email. The staff report states that tax disclosures and tax notices were properly mailed and that, under state law, updating mailing information is the taxpayer's responsibility.
Robert Heck told the council his mail had been forwarded to a sister’s address while he and his family were in Austria and that tax notices were returned as undeliverable. "I have not received any communication telling me that the primary resident's status had changed," he said, and asked for forgiveness and relief. Heck told the council his home’s assessed value rose substantially while he was abroad and that he believed the property continued to qualify for the primary‑residence exemption.
Councilmembers debated precedent and statutory responsibilities. Several members said past practice favors the county's standard of holding taxpayers responsible for address changes. After discussion, Councilmember Roger moved — and the motion was seconded — to deny the discretionary abatement request for 4990 Wager Court LLC as presented. The motion carried by voice vote.
Staff noted appeals processes for assessed values remain available to a taxpayer who disagrees with market value determinations.