Grapevine - Colleyville - Southlake | August 2024

Fresh faces From the cover

How we got here

What’s happening

Zooming in

2023

Feb. 21: Keller council votes to recall TAD Chair Kathryn Willemon due to lack of transparency Feb. 22: Willemon resigns

The new board members said they all plan to enhance the district’s transparency and help restore the trust of the public, according to statements they gave to Community Impact prior to the election. “Taxpayers’ trust ... has been shattered,” Morris said in his statement. “TAD has been hostile to the taxpayers they are meant to serve, tried to hide the truth from the public and are difficult to work with. Tarrant County deserves better.” Grapevine resident Sarah Sanders had questions about how the appraisal of her home had changed so much in recent years. This year she protested the value the TAD thinks her house is worth. Sanders said her appraised value has gone up nearly $200,000 in three years. In addition to appraisal concerns, the TAD was the victim of a ransomware attack in March, according to Chief Appraiser Joe Don Bobbitt. Medusa, a group of hackers, asked for $700,000 after accessing information. The board and Bob- bitt, with advice from the FBI, chose not to pay the ransom, Bobbitt said. He said employees thought it was a server issue at first due to antiquated equipment and software—some dating back to the early 2000s—before employees found files that traced back to Medusa. He said it indicated to a TAD employee it was a ransomware attack. A week prior to the hack, appraisal notices had been printed and were waiting to be mailed to Tar- rant County residents. Bobbitt said had the attack happened earlier, there would’ve been delays up to two months for municipalities that use TAD numbers to budget. “It was great management and by the grace of God it wasn’t worse,” TAD Chairman Vince Puente Sr. said.

The TAD board of directors grew to add four additional members this year, and as of July 1, nine people will now vote. Three new board members, Callie Rigney, Matt Bryant and Eric Morris, were sworn in by Tarrant County Judge Tim O’Hare. Wendy Burgess, Tarrant County tax assessor-collector, sat on the board but as a nonvoting member. She accounts for the ninth voting member. Rigney, Bryant and Morris became the first elected by the public, rather than taxing entities.

May 9: Vince Puente Sr. appointed to TAD board

Aug. 25: Director of Information Systems Cal Wood fired Sept. 1: Chief Appraiser Jeff Law resigns

By the numbers

Sept. 6: William Durham begins serving as interim chief appraiser

The May 4 election was the first to elect Tarrant Appraisal District board members.

Total votes in May: 83,336 Total number of registered voters in Tarrant County: 1.27M

Dec. 15: TAD board votes in three new members Dec. 23: Joe Don Bobbitt hired as chief appraiser

6.53% voter turnout

2024

Top 3 candidates receiving votes Place 1-Eric Morris: 39,223 Place 2-Callie Rigney: 44,316 Place 3-Matt Bryant: 35,822

March 14: TAD website suffers technical issues March 21: Ransomware attack by Medusa

May 4: Three new board members elected

6 board members

3 new members

9 total board members

+

=

July 1: New members sworn in

July 22: TAD board changes appraisals to every two years with no more than 5% increase in 2026

SOURCES: TARRANT APPRAISAL DISTRICT, TARRANT COUNTY ELECTION OFFICE/COMMUNITY IMPACT

SOURCES: TARRANT APPRAISAL DISTRICT, TARRANT COUNTY/COMMUNITY IMPACT

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