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Drug Store Chains Get Higher Assessments
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SCHENECTADY
Ruling to raise drugstore’s value
City’s win could affect other assessments

BY KATHLEEN MOORE Gazette Reporter

    The city has withstood an appeal of its win in a groundbreaking case that could raise the tax assessments of every chain drugstore in the Capital Region.
    The Appellate Division of state Supreme Court Thursday upheld a ruling that the city can use a different valuation method that could double the assessment of the CVS pharmacy at 1204 Eastern Ave.
    The decision means that when the city reassesses CVS next year, it could hike the property’s value from $2.02 million to $4 million.
    But the court’s sweeping decision also affects most drugstores in the state, paving the way for massive assessment increases. The court ruled that municipalities can assess drugstore properties based on income the landlord receives for renting to those companies.
    At issue is the fact that most chain drugstores do not own their property. Instead, pharmacies agree to an unusual lease arrangement in which they promise to pay rent each month for decades, no matter what happens to their store. They also agree to pay all taxes and maintenance.
    The leases are incredibly valuable, since the landlord never stands to lose rent if a business shuts down. When one of the socalled “triple-net leases” is placed on the market, they are routinely purchased for millions of dollars.
    CVS and many other pharmacies in the region have appealed their tax assessments on the argument that the leases should not be considered in the total value of the property. In the Schenectady case, CVS owner Brooks Pharmacy appealed its assessment and said the city should only look at traditional property values: the value of the land and the building.
    The Eastern Avenue CVS building cost $2.4 million to build in 2000, so Brooks Pharmacy argued that its current assessment should be $1.34 million based on current property values, not $2.02 million.
    City officials, however, noted that the owner of the land clearly felt it was worth far more than $2 million. Shortly after CVS signed a triple-net lease in which it promised to pay $27,000 a month and all taxes and maintenance until 2023, the landlord sold the land and the lease for $3.6 million. Less than a year later, the land and lease were sold again, this time for $4.1 million.
    City officials said those sales should be considered when determining the true value of the property.
    “There is a market for these lease arrangements,” Corporation Counsel L. John Van Norden said. “We argued you cannot separate the lease — the income stream — from the land.”
    The courts agreed, with the city winning in state Supreme Court in January 2007 and then again Thursday after CVS appealed to the Appellate Division.
    The city spent $15,000 to $20,000 on the case, making it one of the most expensive tax appeal cases in Schenectady’s history, Van Norden said. He said it was worth every penny.
    “There’s a lot of taxes coming out of that property,” he said. “And we could have lost with all of the other pharmacies. Many other drugstores in the Capital District have been bringing these tax challenges to their assessment, and in this case, they were seeking a significant reduction.”
    Assessor Patrick Mastro said the city will definitely increase the CVS assessment next year because of the decision, though he declined to say whether it would go up to the $4 million figure cited by the city’s expert in court.
    “We’ll have to analyze it this year,” Mastro said. “It will increase.”
    He can’t increase the assessment this year because the tentative assessment roll deadline has passed.
    Van Norden expects that the decision will also bolster the city’s case against Eckerd’s, which wants an assessment reduction for its closed store at the corner of Brandywine Avenue and State Street.
    “The fact that the store goes dark has nothing to do with that income stream because Eckerd’s keeps paying that lease,” Van Norden said. “So we don’t care if that store is operational or dark. That does not change the value of the property to the underlying owner.”
    To win the CVS case, the city spent $10,000 to hire Jeff Rothbard, an expert on triple-net leases. He is on retainer for the Eckerd’s case as well.
    “Bringing in this expert was critical,” Van Norden said.
    Without such experts, similar cases in the area had been decided in favor of the pharmacies. Appeal after appeal had been sent to the Appellate Division, and when that court delayed its decision two weeks ago, Van Norden said he was hoping for an all-encompassing decision that put an end to the controversy.
    He got his wish.
    “This is a big, big deal,” he said. “Eckerd’s has to give some thought to this.”
Brooks Pharmacy and Eckerd’s, now owned by Rite Aid, declined
to comment.
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May 2, 2008, 8:37am Report to Moderator
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Someone at the top is taking a hell of alot of viagara(probably those free samples) to be so ballsey.....

Kevin---how much was your drug co-pay??????

I dont have prescription coverage and pay straight up---I use flonase or the generic and it still costs upwards of 70.00.....anyone else have a story???

This is like the school text book industry---is it not????


...you are a product of your environment, your environment is a product of your priorities, your priorities are a product of you......

The replacement of morality and conscience with law produces a deadly paradox.


STOP BEING GOOD DEMOCRATS---STOP BEING GOOD REPUBLICANS--START BEING GOOD AMERICANS

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Kevin March
May 2, 2008, 10:04am Report to Moderator

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Generic copay is $10, name brand, $25, and there's a higher one that goes $40, but I try not to get those prescriptions. Don't know what they are, and don't know that I want to.


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May 2, 2008, 10:16am Report to Moderator
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The leases are incredibly valuable, since the landlord never stands to lose rent if a business shuts down. When one of the socalled “triple-net leases” is placed on the market, they are routinely purchased for millions of dollars.


Who is taking the viagra for these contracts??? These folks are making money for nothin'.......dont tell me the drug companies aren't involved, along with real estate, drug stores, banks,lawyers and government........sounds kind of like a pyramid....layer upon layer upon layer....meanwhile we get to look at an eye sore on brandywine ave just for fun all while these companies and those involved in the pyramid scramble to get someplace before national health care and lucrid government contracts come along for the management thereof........and even when it(universal 'healthcare')is established, it wont look too pretty.....much like the Truman Show........and we continue to line up for our drugs(even those we dont need but want)....baaaaaaaa


...you are a product of your environment, your environment is a product of your priorities, your priorities are a product of you......

The replacement of morality and conscience with law produces a deadly paradox.


STOP BEING GOOD DEMOCRATS---STOP BEING GOOD REPUBLICANS--START BEING GOOD AMERICANS

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bumblethru
May 2, 2008, 1:38pm Report to Moderator
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When I first read this, I thought what a great idea to really sock it to these drug store chains. But then after thinking awhile, I thought that if this passes, it could be done to ALL RETAIL CHAINS. It appears to be more of a punishment and a way to just collect even more taxes. It surely would make any business think twice before moving to a community with these regulations.

What if the commercial real estate market is slow? Should businesses be 'punished'? And so what if the owner of the property or the lease holder is still making money. Isn't that capitalism? We appear to becoming a society of telling businesses how to run their business. And how much money they are allowed to make. And what constitutes a chain? Two, three, one hundred stores?

I have to ponder this one.


When the INSANE are running the ASYLUM
In individuals, insanity is rare; but in groups, parties, nations and epochs, it is the rule. -- Friedrich Nietzsche


“How fortunate for those in power that people never think.”
Adolph Hitler
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EDITORIALS
Finally, an upside to all those drugstores in Schenectady


    Who would have ever imagined just how lucrative the drugstore business could be, given the extreme competition there is in a place like Schenectady? But as a story in Friday’s Gazette revealed, it’s so lucrative that even when two stores are built right across the street from one another — as in the case of the Rite Aid and CVS on Eastern Avenue — the market value of one of them nearly doubled almost as soon as it was finished.
    The key, according to the story, is that stores like these typically aren’t built by the drugstore companies but are merely leased by them; and the leases require that they pay rent, taxes and upkeep on them for as long as 50 years — even if the stores go out of business. (That the drugstores are willing to enter into such costly leases, especially in a dicey market like Schenectady’s, speaks volumes about the federal tax codes that mitigate the risk. The laws must be too generous.)
    Thus it’s no wonder that a property like the one occupied by CVS, even though it only cost $2.4 million to develop, was worth $3.6 million when it sold almost immediately after the lease was signed, then $4.1 not a year later.
    It’s also good news that the city of Schenectady decided to fight CVS’ tax grievance that the property was somehow worth only $1.34 million — and has now won a second round in state court. While the city spent $15,000 to $20,000 to hire a legal expert on the matter, it will easily make back that amount and more when it gets to raise the drugstore’s assessment by roughly double next year. Even better, because the recent victory in Appellate Court sets a legal precedent in the state, the city should now be free to raise other drugstores’ assessments — whether their buildings are occupied or not. As most people in the city are aware, there are a large number of such stores, so the impact on the city’s tax base should be considerable.
    Nice calculated gamble by the city’s law department.
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Thus it’s no wonder that a property like the one occupied by CVS, even though it only cost $2.4 million to develop, was worth $3.6 million when it sold almost immediately after the lease was signed, then $4.1 not a year later.


A pyramid? subprime? there's more than meets they eye here and I'm sure it has nothing to do with the monkey on NYS's back......


...you are a product of your environment, your environment is a product of your priorities, your priorities are a product of you......

The replacement of morality and conscience with law produces a deadly paradox.


STOP BEING GOOD DEMOCRATS---STOP BEING GOOD REPUBLICANS--START BEING GOOD AMERICANS

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