Rising Prices In Washington County Fueled By Steady Stream Of New Residents
By David Crigger/Bristol Herald Courier
Larry and Tammy Ginn talk about moving to Damascus, Va. “It’s a different lifestyle and a different quality of people,” Larry Ginn said. “I feel more a part of that community than the one I spent 30 years making a career living in and growing up.”
Published: February 8, 2009
Updated: February 9, 2009
DAMASCUS, Va. – To understand why property values continue to increase here despite doom and gloom in the national real estate market, you have to ask the folks who are buying.
“Living here’s like living in Mayberry,” said Tammy Ginn, who recently bought a house with her husband, Larry, and likens the feel of this small Washington County town to the idyllic setting of the classic 1960s sitcom, “The Andy Griffith Show.”
“We’re just like part of the family,” her husband said of the neighborhood where they bought a three-story Victorian for $180,000. The house with two turrets would easily cost $450,000 back in Hampton Roads, Va., he said.
“It’s a different lifestyle and a different quality of people,” Larry Ginn said. “I feel more a part of that community than the one I spent 30 years making a career living in and growing up.”
It’s a sentiment echoed throughout Washington County, where a steady stream of new residents are helping to drive prices up even amid the current recession.
Between August and December, as the national credit crunch worsened, Washington County saw 415 real estate transactions, and Commissioner of Revenue David Henry said many of those properties – such as the Ginns’ home – sold for much more than their assessed values.
“Everybody says $25,000 is too high,” Henry said, looking at a sheet representing a parcel of land in Washington County that tops a stack of reassessments. “Well, it sold for $55,000. It’s selling for double.”
“People are moving here from other localities, and they bring money with them, and they pay more for land than what local residents are used to seeing it sell for. You can look through here (the reassessments) and just open up a page,” Henry said.
“Just over half an acre, they’ve got that valued at $20,000, and here’s what it sold for. We’re supposed to be in the middle of a big decline, and right before Christmas, in November, that little piece of land sold for $210,000,” Henry said. “People say, ‘Oh, it’s not worth that,’ and I don’t disagree with them, but ... if it’s not worth it, why are people continuing to buy it?”
Recently, notices were mailed to Washington County property owners informing them of the newly assessed tax values of their properties. Since then, Henry’s office has been flooded with calls from county residents who say their property is overvalued, but officials say property is selling for much more than it did four years ago, when the last general reassessment was conducted.
While some county taxpayers suffering from sticker shock say they can’t comprehend skyrocketing tax assessments, local realtors echo county officials in their explanation: People want to move here.
“The downturn in the economy we’re finding is helping the market in places like Damascus,” said Russell McBride, a real estate broker and owner of Damascus Realty, who said he has more buyers looking for property than property for sale.
“As people readjust their lifestyles, they’re looking for ways to create recreation time and family time, and retirees are looking for a good climate, convenience and an active lifestyle.”
McBride said the same factors driving people away from traditional destinations such as Florida – the cost of travel and real estate – are driving them to communities closer to the cities where they and their families live – places such as Damascus, Green Cove, Konnarock and Whitetop. As a result, home values in the area are steady and rising.
“It gets down to basic fundamental economics, supply and demand,” McBride said. “As long as there is a healthy demand for the available property, the property will maintain or have a steady, orderly growth.”
Henry said the average home value in the county rose 15 percent since the last reassessment in 2004; when land is factored in, the countywide average increase since the last reassessment is close to 23 percent.
Henry said despite the economic downturn, the average value of farmland statewide had increased 3.5 percent in a year, to $5,900 an acre, according to government statistics.
“They’re [government statisticians] just beginning to scratch the surface of what these developers are doing: buying family farms and growing houses,” Henry said.
Both he and Dave Hickey, owner of Blue Ridge Mass Appraisal Co., which was hired by the county to conduct the reassessments, acknowledge that some homes have gone down in value. But, they said, while some property values have decreased in the past year, most remain higher than when the last reassessment was done.
Hickey said values in the county rose in 2005 and 2006, began to level out in 2007 and declined slightly in 2008. However, despite the decline in recent months they remain higher than in 2005.
“Washington County hasn’t been experiencing the rapid rises like Northern Virginia and some of the other areas. Therefore, the decline hasn’t been as rapid,” Hickey said.
He credits a stable market, a fairly stable population and a diversified economy – plus the fact that most homes in the area are in a price range for which there is still an active market. He said it’s the high-priced and secondary homes that have taken the hit around the country from the crisis in what he calls “funny money” mortgages.
The one category of homes that have dropped considerably in Washington County, mirroring national trends, is those with a higher-than-average price tag, said Pat McDonald at Callebs Realty in Abingdon.
“A lot of the more-expensive homes are taking a lot longer to sell right now,” McDonald said. “This is the worst I’ve seen it in 10 years.”
She said some homes in the more-expensive Abingdon neighborhoods have sold for 20 percent less than they would have a year ago. For example, a house that was bought for $582,000 for a transferring executive by his company in September 2008 sold for $450,000 in July.
But, she said, the market in the area remains stable and average homes – in the $200,000 to $250,000 range – don’t sit on the market as long.
“Abingdon has always been a little niche market where people want to live,” McDonald said, noting that people from outlying counties continue to move to the Abingdon area. “It’s a great community, it has a lot to offer, and I think that affects the home values also.”
Zillow.com, which tracks real estate trends in 163 metropolitan statistical areas across the country, states that the nation’s average housing values have slid for seven consecutive quarters – down 9.7 percent from a year ago.
The site also states that a third of the houses are selling at a loss and 14.3 percent of homeowners have negative equity.
Average home values have decreased by more than 20 percent in parts of Florida, according to the site, and more than 30 percent in parts of California.
By comparison, Johnson City, Tenn., has seen a decline of 1.3 percent on average in the past year.
Henry said the Mountain Empire has avoided some of the crunch because of its relatively stable economy and a steady stream of well-funded retirees – those who have worked a lifetime in areas with a higher prevailing wage than Southwest Virginia and are seeking a nice place to live with a lower cost of living.
“I’m not saying it’s good or bad; it’s just happening,” Henry said. “They can build the same house for half the money and bankroll the rest. ... They can really upgrade their lifestyle by moving to areas like we’re living in.”
As long as people are willing to sell their land to the highest bidder, Henry said, it fuels the fire of rising real estate values.
“It’s almost like we’re our own worst enemy. We promote the Virginia Highlands Festival [in Abingdon], we promote Trail Days in Damascus, and you can’t blame people for coming and wanting to stay,” Henry said.
“Washington County has kind of been discovered. ... It’s something that people who grew up here are going to have to face.”
But, Henry said, there’s still a dividing line between locals and outsiders when it comes to taxes. People who keep their land in agriculture rather than develop it pay the same taxes no matter how much the assessed value rises. The county also gives discounts to elderly and disabled residents.
Property owners who participate in the county’s land-use program pay taxes on just $150 an acre for wooded land, $400 an acre for pasture land and $930 an acre of crop land, Henry said. These taxable values remain constant regardless of the property’s assessed value.
“The state rewards you for having open land as opposed to putting a shopping mall on it or a housing development,” Henry said. “They’re trying to preserve the open land.”
Some of those moving here also seek to capture a piece of that rural dream, the same slower-paced lifestyle they’ve sought in other areas that have become more developed over the years.
Jon and Carole Towers, who bought a house in Washington County in August they plan to share with friends, are among those moving to the county for its lifestyle.
“I love Boone [N.C.]. We lived in Boone for 30 years, but the prices are so high and … Boone is not bike-friendly,” Carole Towers said. “I had a horse in Boone but I couldn’t ride where we live, so I had to trailer my horse anywhere we went.”
Now in the process of moving, the new couple said that at their new home on the Virginia Creeper Trail, they look forward to going into town without a car. Where they are situated, along U.S. Highway 58 with a big backyard on the river and the trail, they can walk or ride – by bike or horse – to both Abingdon and Damascus.
They also plan to return to some of the basics – such as growing their own food instead of relying on trucks to transport it hundreds of miles using fuel that fluctuates wildly in price.
“With the economy the way it is, it’s difficult for a single family to afford all the expenses of a home,” Jon Towers said, explaining that they will live with a young family – three generations in one house – in a kind of experiment.
“This way, there’ll be two families sharing a house, we’ll be sharing cars and sharing meals, splitting utilities and working in the garden.”
He said they plan to retrofit the house for solar energy and other reductions in energy use and cost – and demonstrate that the average family can provide the basics in uncertain times.
Washington County, with its trails, its blossoming local food movement, its relatively slow-paced life and strong sense of community, was the place they found after a three-year search.
Jon Towers said it’s the same thing he was searching for when he left New Jersey for Boone 30 years ago.
“I’m driving through Damascus, and right downtown I pass a house where they’re having a [music] jam,” he said, when asked to explain what it is about this place that draws so many outsiders along with those who grew up here and moved away decades ago.
“There’s a dozen musicians out on somebody’s front porch playing music, and it’s that kind of thing that is just appealing to know that that is still going on, that that’s still a part of people’s lives and so instead of watching TV they’re playing music out there, and to me that’s an important part, the music, the heritage, it’s a real important part of what I want to surround myself with,” he said.
Larry Ginn, who bought the house in Damascus, said he, too, was attracted to the simple quality of life.
“Where else could you live where you can walk to the post office, the grocery store, the fire department, the police department, the town hall, the library, you can go to the doctor and walk to get your prescription filled at the drug store, and no matter what denomination you are there’s a good chance you can walk to church,” he said. “It’s just an incredible sense of community, and you can’t put a price on that.”
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Reader Reactions
Wait a second. How much are taxes going up? If your parents paid off their farm 10 years ago, is the tax burden so high that they might lose it, or does it cut into their discretionary spending? I am for making the Yankees pass a test before they can buy a sandwich much less land in Bristol. Make ‘em move to Kingsport where it is polluted.
ONE OF THE REASON THE COST OF LIVEINNG IS GOING UP IN WASHINGTON COUNTY TN,IS THE AMOUNT OF WAST OF TAX PAYER MONEY BY THE POLICE DEPT IN JOHNSON CITY THEY CANT HARDLY SOLVE A CRIME UNLESS SOMEONE TELL ON SOME ONE THAT SEEN IT DONE . THERE TO BUSY WASTING TAX PAYERS MONEY ON RUNING STINGS ON PATRONIZING PROSTITUTION BY PAYING A UNDER COVER OFFICER TO ACT LIKE A HOOKER TO CACH MEN TALKING TO THEM OR DRIVING THROUGH THE ALLEY IN JOHNSON CIY TO AREST THE HOMELESS FOR VAGRENTY.WHEN THE POLICE NEEDS TO BE OUT CATCHING THE DRUG DEALES, CHILD MOLESTERS , AND SOLVING ALL THE SHOOTING STABING IN JOHNSON CITY . THIS IS ONE OF THE RESONS COST IS GOING UP
Higher property values are ok if you are going to sale and want a higher price for your property. If, on the other hand, you like your home and land and want to stay there until the day you die, you would like to be able to pay the actual land taxes, not what it would be worth if you sold it, or you might just end up not being able to pay the land taxes and having to sale, whether you want to or not. This isn’t fair.
Taxes may be higher, but when property values rise, everybody wins. Families can sell properties and make more money, raising their net worth. What’s upsetting about everyone’s property values increasing? I suppose everyone would rather have property values on the decline, like in other markets, which would really cause a mass exodus of folks. Talk about crime then. Everyone hates on the “yuppies” until crime raises because everyone is land poor. Then people will really be hurting. The crazy thing is, the same people who are upset about taxes and who are upset at these richer folks moving in are the same people that will vote to CUT taxes on the wealthy. Completely silly, in my opinion. If you really want some change their, raise the taxes of these yuppies (they can afford it) and keep your taxes the same. Then, everybody wins because property values increase for everyone. But people refuse to think that way for some strange reason.
A wise old mountaineer once said that if the people who bought the land next to his were fools, there was no call for him to be a fool, too. Some Northerner had just paid a small fortune for the land adjoining his, and he’d just received his next tax bill.
Apparently, the realtors and the county officials haven’t noticed that the economy continues to spiral downward, or, like atheists at a witch-burning, they believe themselves immune. The dudes being paid to do the accessments, are in it for the money, not the good of the community.
Where does that leave the natives of the community? About where NAFTA left them: blue and…well, call it high and dried.
Why don’t the people of the county raise a petition to impeach the county officials involved, to call for a reaccessment, and to make a law taxing the property for what its worth and not for what someone who doesn’t know better would pay for it?
Your county officials, their little eyes glowing with greed, wouldn’t want you to think about it too much, but it’s still America…
Living around here is like living in Mayberry? Interesting. Whoever said that must have watched a different Andy Griffith Show than I did/do. I don’t remember Andy, Barney, and the Mayberry gang being so wrapped up in material things. Seems to me that where the folks in Mayberry lived, or how big their house was didn’t matter to anyone. I remember Andy actually arresting people and putting them in jail when they did bad things. Around here, certain people are treated differently than others when they make bad decisions (Commit crimes). Some really interesting things have gone on in area banks, but wow, they were kept very hush hush!!!!! I wonder why? I believe it has something to do with perception. Something like….“If we don’t mention the bad stuff, maybe it’ll just go away.“
In the Mayberry schools, students were actually punished for bad behavior. That definitely doesn’t happen around here. In one episode, Opie actually got an “F” on an assignment. That’s rare for students here, but if they do get a bad grade, their parents can call the principal(s) and the grade will be changed.
I could go on and on, but I trust you get the picture.
Just what part of this area is like Mayberry?
So the reason my parents’ farm has tripled in taxes is because some wealthy people from other areas want to move here? This sounds like one more way the rich have worked out to take what little the average person has been able to buy and feel proud of. My parents have owned their farm since I was 8 years old and now I’m 48 so in their golden years, when they should be enjoying the fruits of their lifetime labors, some rich lawmakers have plans to make it impossible for them to hold onto it so one of their wealthy buds can have it. There should be a law against any raise in taxes after a person retires.
I also am tired of people coming from other areas distances away to move here and then complain about everything and everybody that lives here, ‘we’ are the uneducated because we haven’t been to college, ‘we’ are the hillbillies because of the way we look at life. But it would seem the people in this article came here for that very reason, to enjoy the culture here. I don’t know why others move here or stay here if they complain about this area. They can always move back to where they came from.
I was at a local dentist office a couple of weeks ago and overheard two couples (from up north), complaining about the poor quality of health care and lack of jobs in this area, and the cost of everything going up. “Things just weren’t this bad where they came from”. One of the ladys said “she was going to tell her children to not move here”. I wanted to jump and shout for joy, and also ask them to take their happy a*** back where they came from if they thought it was so bad here.
So let me get this straight, a few people move into Washington County from areas with much higher paying jobs,higher property values and want to basicly retire here because of lower proberty values. Then because of that the taxes go up for those residents that have lived here all their lives making maybe $10 an hour,paid their taxes and suffered through layoffs and a poor job market! Sounds like your represenatives have their heads in the sand!Those folks moving here sell their propery for double what it’s worth and come here and get a value, while that maybe good for them the locals pay the price in higher taxes!!!


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