From Deseret News archives:
Some big names join list of tax delinquents
Still, they did not need to fill out any loan applications before automatic approval. They need not make any payments for five years. Their interest rate is 6.2 percent, not bad for shaky companies in tough times. Frontier's "loan" is for about $312,000, and Sprint Nextel's is for $860,000. It was all much simpler than seeking a congressional bailout.
How did that happen? They simply did not pay their 2008 property taxes on time.
The same deal applies to anyone who does not pay them by Nov. 30 each year. They are assessed a penalty of 2 percent. They are charged interest at 6 percent above a targeted federal rate as of Jan. 1 (which was an ultra low 0.25 percent this year). They have five years to pay their bill, or their property will be auctioned off at a tax sale.
While most property owners pay taxes on time to fund local governments, hundreds of businesses use nonpayment essentially as a cheap loan, according to an annual Deseret News analysis of delinquency records in Salt Lake, Davis and Utah counties.
Officials say no plans are in the works to try to reduce that practice or punish it more, because they worry increasing penalties or shortening payback periods could unduly hurt the truly needy people who are struggling with taxes.
Those taking most advantage of such "cheap loans" are real estate developers and construction companies which by themselves account for nearly a third of all delinquent 2008 property taxes in the three counties. They were late on $25.3 million worth of 2008 property taxes there.
The reason is no secret. They often wait to sell property or new projects before they pay the taxes on them to avoid tying up their cash, "and then the buyer pays for it" through a somewhat increased sales price, said Utah County Treasurer Robert C. Kirk.
He said developers have led Utah County to have a lower on-time tax payment rate in recent years than Salt Lake and Davis. Utah County's rate of on-time payment has been around 89 percent recently, while the other two have hovered around 95 percent.
"That was primarily due to developers. We had huge developments going on here in Utah County. We were the largest growing county in all of Utah. But we felt the effect of some of those developers," who were not paying on time, Kirk said. About 35 percent of unpaid taxes this year in Utah County came from developers, while they accounted for 26 percent in both Salt Lake and Davis.









