Texas Heat!

   / Texas Heat!
  • Thread Starter
#981  
The little fire we had here (400 acres) the electric co-op was out working on it at the rear of the fire before it was totally out. Mostly doing their survey for line replacement. Bastrop will be more complex for sure.

Did you guy's loose any actual power or sub stations to add to the headache?

As far as the insurance, the deductibles are a hold up for allot of folks I understand. That was a comment made about the floods in the East, but I'm sure that cost will also effect some people here as well.

Does getting FEMA certified make, or streamline the process??
 
   / Texas Heat! #982  
The deadline to file a property tax appraisal protest in Texas has expired. They are usually completed by the end of July so the rolls can be certified and the entities can start their budget process in August - September.

I don't know if the law provides anything for adjustments as the result of disasters after the rolls are certified.

Texas law requires new appraisals or re-appraisal at least every 3 years. Local authorities may make it every 2 years or, as in my case in Denton County, every year. The appraised value is as of January 1. And in this county the deadline for filing an appeal this year was June 3.
 
   / Texas Heat! #983  
With 1400 homes destroyed this will also affect the tax base of Bastrop County. Would the destroyed homes still have to pay 2011 property tax for the 2/3 year? I know when I moved the cabin in July (two years ago) I had to pay the complete years tax on it.

Don,
In Ohio the taxes are always billed for the previous year. That way catastrophic events can be adjusted prior to the next tax bill. Of course when you sell a property you end up paying two years worth to bring it up to date so the new owner doesn't receive a tax bill until his second year.
Are you sure Texas isn't that way too?
Ron
 
   / Texas Heat! #984  
Sure could have used this last week in Bastrop.

A giant jumbo jet is making repeated drops of 12,000 gallons of fire retardant today in hopes of slowing a tenacious wildfire north of Houston that overnight had expanded from 12,600 acres to 21,000 acres, the Texas Forest Service*reported.

The DC-10 airtanker - assigned to Bastrop County in Central Texas where the state's worst fire in history has devoured 34,000 acres - was temporarily diverted to attack a "particularly aggressive fire" that has been burning across Montgomery, Grimes and Waller counties, said Carman Apple, Texas Forest Service spokeswoman. That fire is now 60 percent*contained.

Grimes County Sheriff Don Sowell said the massive plane, which can spray a swath 3/4 of a mile long and 500 feet wide, was an amazing sight to behold. But more than that, he hopes it reinforces the bulldozers that had been working through the night to contain the active fire inside an earthen*berm.

Jumbo jet fighting area fire
By CINDY HORSWELL, HOUSTON CHRONICLE
Published 02:10*p.m., Friday, September 9, 2011
 
   / Texas Heat! #985  
Don,
In Ohio the taxes are always billed for the previous year. That way catastrophic events can be adjusted prior to the next tax bill. Of course when you sell a property you end up paying two years worth to bring it up to date so the new owner doesn't receive a tax bill until his second year.
Are you sure Texas isn't that way too?
Ron

Ron, I have both bought and sold homes in Texas (1968 to 2005) and in each case the taxes were figured for the current year and divided between buyer and seller at closing. In other words, the seller paid the taxes until the month of the sale and the buyer paid for the rest of the year.

Our tax statement will come in October for this year. The amount shown can be paid anytime prior to Feb. 1, 2012. After that there is a penalty and interest added. Actually we pay ours in December each year for the current year.
 
   / Texas Heat! #986  
Bird... I know what you mean about the Assessor not acting after the informal appeal window closes... I think it will be something I will have to do each year going forward.

As to firefighting...

Several times I have been asked to help in fire situations... I have no formal wild land fire training... just muscles and a presence...

I've helped with hoses... once helping the firefighter to man a hose on a grass fire or pulling lines for a couple of city blocks and turning on the hydrants at another fire once directed by the firefighters.

I've also been asked to do traffic duty... one time the police officer was called away and he gave me a disposable safety vest and half dozen flares... the area with the fire was impassable and the only way around meant backtracking several miles... I did a good job eliminating the bottle neck and facilitating the turnarounds...
 
   / Texas Heat! #987  
Sure could have used this last week in Bastrop.

A giant jumbo jet is making repeated drops of 12,000 gallons of fire retardant today in hopes of slowing a tenacious wildfire north of Houston that overnight had expanded from 12,600 acres to 21,000 acres, the Texas Forest Service*reported.

The DC-10 airtanker - assigned to Bastrop County in Central Texas where the state's worst fire in history has devoured 34,000 acres - was temporarily diverted to attack a "particularly aggressive fire" that has been burning across Montgomery, Grimes and Waller counties, said Carman Apple, Texas Forest Service spokeswoman. That fire is now 60 percent*contained.

Grimes County Sheriff Don Sowell said the massive plane, which can spray a swath 3/4 of a mile long and 500 feet wide, was an amazing sight to behold. But more than that, he hopes it reinforces the bulldozers that had been working through the night to contain the active fire inside an earthen*berm.

Jumbo jet fighting area fire
By CINDY HORSWELL, HOUSTON CHRONICLE
Published 02:10*p.m., Friday, September 9, 2011

I could smell the smoke from this fire in my house this morning. Second time in a week. So I knew it had taken a turn for the worst. Watching the evening news, I just saw the DC-10 dumping retardent on it.
hugs, Brandi
 
   / Texas Heat! #988  
I could smell the smoke from this fire in my house this morning. Second time in a week. So I knew it had taken a turn for the worst. Watching the evening news, I just saw the DC-10 dumping retardent on it.
hugs, Brandi

Hope this gets under control soon. It's completely unreal to me.
 
   / Texas Heat! #989  
I could smell the smoke from this fire in my house this morning. Second time in a week. So I knew it had taken a turn for the worst. Watching the evening news, I just saw the DC-10 dumping retardent on it.
hugs, Brandi

My son and I saw the DC-10 this morning on our way to see my doctor in Houston. At first I thought it was a Super Guppy, off in the distance. It looked like it was in a long straight in approach to Ellington Field.
hugs, Brandi
 
   / Texas Heat!
  • Thread Starter
#990  
I could smell the smoke from this fire in my house this morning. Second time in a week. So I knew it had taken a turn for the worst. Watching the evening news, I just saw the DC-10 dumping retardent on it.
hugs, Brandi

That would be a sight to see, sounds almost like a small rain shower when it comes out of that plane.
 

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