After claims by the owner of Boardwalk Beach Club at Cramond that his rates assessment was unfair when compared to council-owned properties, the rates assessor has rejected the allegations.
Ed Tait who owns the café on Cramond foreshore said that his property was unfairly assessed when he looked at the list of rateable values for properties owned by the council in the area.
Now the assistant assessor for Lothian Valuation Joint Board, Ross Paterson, has replied to Daily Business denying that there is any difference in treatment. He said: “I must refute the allegation made by Mr Tait that Edinburgh City Council owned premises are being given a more lenient assessment of their rateable value than private premises,” he said.
“Although a public official appointed by the Lothian Valuation Joint Board, the assessor is wholly independent of the four constituent councils that form the Joint Board for his valuation area.
“Such independence is crucial in the performance of his statutory duties in valuing all rateable property in his area, including that of local and central government bodies. He is therefore free from any political influence and is not answerable to his constituent councils as to the correctness of his valuations or the methods used to determine them.”
Mr Paterson said that in arriving at his valuations, the assessor “must do so strictly in accordance with Lands Valuation Acts”.
The Lothian Assessor is responsible for the four council areas of the Lothian Region. The most recent revaluation of all non domestic took place over four months ago on 1 April this year.
“Subjects are assessed in accordance with their most appropriate scheme of value in terms of what they are and the use to which they are devoted,” said Mr Paterson.
“It is solely the valuation of the property that the assessor is concerned and nothing else. The only distinctions he makes are those of a valuation nature insofar as they allowed for within the scheme itself.
“There is a statutory right of appeal should a ratepayer feel aggrieved with the value that the assessor has allocated to their property.
“The final date for lodging a proposal is fast approaching on 31 August 2023. More information on that or how to make a Non Domestic Proposal can be found by visiting www.saa.gov.uk.”
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