Shasta County supervisors on April 7 adopted a resolution repealing Resolution No. 2005-2 and replacing it with a rule that sets a three-year waiting period before the tax collector will attempt to sell tax-defaulted nonresidential commercial property.
The change updates a county policy that previously used a five-year period, according to the staff report from the Treasurer-Tax Collector-Public Administrator. That report says the revision reflects state law changes tied to Assembly Bill 2144 and California Revenue and Taxation Code Section 3691, and says the recommendation carries no additional General Fund impact.
The board’s action affects how quickly qualifying commercial tax-defaulted parcels can move toward sale, but the record excerpt reviewed for this story does not show how many parcels could be affected or whether the change applies immediately to properties already in the pipeline.
The supporting staff report was prepared by the Treasurer-Tax Collector-Public Administrator department and listed Lori Scott as the department contact.