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Property Tax Assessment Review Kit

作者 haidong · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.1 · MIT-0
cross-platform ✓ 安全检测通过
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在 OpenClaw 中安装
/install property-tax-assessment-review-kit
功能描述
Organize a property tax assessment notice, deadline, evidence checklist, assessor questions, and appeal packet outline before the review window closes.
使用说明 (SKILL.md)

Property Tax Assessment Review Kit

Safety Boundary

This skill helps organize facts and paperwork for reviewing a property tax assessment or reassessment notice. It does not provide legal, tax, appraisal, real estate, or jurisdiction-specific advice. It does not estimate official property value, determine whether an appeal should be filed, complete official forms, contact government offices, or guarantee savings.

The user must verify local rules, deadlines, filing requirements, evidence standards, hearing procedures, and official forms with the relevant assessor, tax office, assessment review board, county, city, or qualified professional.

Do not ask for full parcel account credentials, payment details, Social Security numbers, national ID numbers, tax portal passwords, bank information, or copies of private identity documents. Use placeholders for sensitive identifiers.

When to Use

Use this skill when the user needs to:

  • Review a property tax assessment or reassessment notice that seems too high.
  • Understand what information to verify before an appeal deadline.
  • Organize evidence such as comparable sales, property condition, photos, appraisals, or record errors.
  • Prepare neutral questions for the assessor's office.
  • Draft a factual appeal narrative outline without exaggeration.
  • Build a deadline and follow-up tracker.

Do not use this skill to:

  • Decide legal eligibility for appeal.
  • Estimate market value or assessed value as an official appraisal.
  • Interpret local tax law or binding appeal rules.
  • Prepare formal legal filings as a representative.
  • Promise a tax reduction or refund.
  • Create misleading claims or omit known facts.

Intake Questions

Ask for user-provided details only:

  • What jurisdiction issued the notice? City, county, state, province, or country is enough.
  • What is the notice date and stated appeal or review deadline?
  • What property type is involved: primary home, condo, rental, land, commercial, inherited property, or other?
  • What assessed value is listed, and what was the prior assessed value if known?
  • What changed on the notice: land value, building value, classification, exemptions, square footage, rooms, condition, ownership, or tax rate?
  • Why does the user think the notice may be wrong?
  • What evidence does the user already have: comparable sales, photos, repair estimates, appraisal, inspection report, listing data, prior notices, exemption paperwork, or public records?
  • Has the user contacted the assessor's office already? If yes, what was said?

If the appeal deadline is missing or unclear, make deadline verification the first action item.

Response Workflow

Follow this sequence:

  1. State the legal/tax/appraisal boundary and deadline caution.
  2. Summarize the notice in user-provided terms.
  3. Identify what changed and what must be verified on the notice.
  4. Build an evidence checklist grouped by comparable properties, record errors, property condition, exemptions, and supporting documents.
  5. Create a folder structure and document naming plan.
  6. Draft neutral questions for the assessor or tax office.
  7. Create a factual appeal narrative outline that avoids overstatement.
  8. Build a deadline and follow-up tracker.
  9. Present decision points: informal review, formal appeal, professional appraisal, tax advisor, attorney, or no action after verification.

Notice Summary

Start with this table:

Item User-provided details
Jurisdiction [city/county/state/province/country]
Notice date [date]
Appeal or review deadline [date or unknown]
Property type [home/condo/rental/land/commercial/other]
Current assessed value [amount]
Prior assessed value [amount or unknown]
Change amount or percentage [amount/percent if user provides enough information]
Main concern [too high / record error / exemption issue / condition issue / comparable sales / other]
Contact already made [none or summary]

Do not calculate official tax impact unless the user provides all numbers and asks for simple arithmetic. Label any arithmetic as user-provided estimate, not advice.

Notice Verification Checklist

Create a checklist for the user to compare against the notice and public record:

  • Owner name or mailing address, using partial or redacted details in the output.
  • Parcel or account identifier, redacted if needed.
  • Property classification or use code.
  • Land size or lot dimensions.
  • Building square footage.
  • Number of bedrooms, bathrooms, units, parking spaces, or structures.
  • Year built, remodel year, or condition rating.
  • Exemptions, abatements, caps, freezes, homestead status, senior status, veteran status, disability status, agricultural status, or other local programs.
  • Prior assessed value and current assessed value.
  • Notice date, appeal deadline, required form, filing method, and hearing or review process.

Mark each as "verified," "possible error," "unknown," or "not applicable."

Evidence Checklist

Group evidence by type:

Comparable Property Evidence

  • Recent comparable sales near the assessment date, if allowed locally.
  • Similar properties by location, size, age, condition, lot, property type, and features.
  • Public sales records, listing sheets, closing data, or assessor comparable worksheets.
  • Notes explaining why each comparable is similar or different.

Property Record Error Evidence

  • Public record screenshot or copy showing the listed detail.
  • User's factual correction: square footage, rooms, lot size, building type, condition, basement, garage, accessory structure, or classification.
  • Supporting source such as survey, floor plan, appraisal, permit record, inspection, photos, or prior assessment.

Condition Evidence

  • Dated photos of needed repairs or condition issues.
  • Inspection reports.
  • Contractor estimates.
  • Insurance claim documents, if relevant and safe to share.
  • Notes about limitations that existed near the assessment date.

Exemption or Program Evidence

  • Prior exemption approval letters.
  • Application receipts.
  • Eligibility documents, with sensitive details redacted.
  • Correspondence with the tax office.

Process Evidence

  • Notice envelope or delivery date proof, if relevant.
  • Call notes, email confirmations, reference numbers, and staff names when voluntarily provided.
  • Copies of submitted forms and confirmation receipts.

Evidence Folder Structure

Suggest a simple folder structure:

Property Tax Assessment Review - [Property Short Name]
01 Notice and Deadlines
02 Property Record Verification
03 Comparable Sales
04 Condition Photos and Repair Evidence
05 Exemptions and Prior Assessments
06 Assessor Questions and Call Log
07 Appeal Draft and Submission Receipts

Use consistent filenames:

YYYY-MM-DD_notice_[jurisdiction].pdf
YYYY-MM-DD_photo_[issue].jpg
YYYY-MM-DD_comparable_[address-or-short-label].pdf
YYYY-MM-DD_call-log_assessor-office.txt

Do not require the user to upload or expose sensitive documents inside the chat.

Assessor Office Questions

Draft neutral questions such as:

  • What is the appeal or informal review deadline for this notice?
  • Which value or property record detail changed from the prior notice?
  • What evidence is accepted for comparable sales, condition issues, or record corrections?
  • Is there an informal review step before a formal appeal?
  • Which form, portal, mailing address, or in-person process is required?
  • How should I correct a possible record error such as square footage, rooms, condition, or exemption status?
  • What date should comparable sales or condition evidence relate to?
  • Will I receive written confirmation that my review or appeal was received?
  • What happens if the deadline falls on a weekend or holiday?

Do not argue with the office in the script. The goal is to learn the rules and next steps.

Contact Log

Use this table:

Date/time Office or person contacted Method Question asked Answer received Reference number Next action Follow-up date
YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM Assessor office Phone/email/portal/in person

Keep the tone factual and neutral.

Appeal Narrative Outline

Create an outline, not a final legal filing:

Assessment Review Narrative Outline

1. Notice being reviewed
- Jurisdiction: [jurisdiction]
- Notice date: [date]
- Property: [short property description]
- Assessed value: [amount]
- Deadline: [date]

2. Requested review issue
- I am requesting review of [specific issue: assessed value / property record detail / exemption / classification / condition].

3. Factual basis
- Fact 1: [record error, comparable evidence, condition issue, or exemption fact]
- Fact 2: [supporting fact]
- Fact 3: [supporting fact]

4. Supporting evidence attached or planned
- [document/photo/comparable]
- [document/photo/comparable]

5. Questions or requested correction
- [question or correction request]

Use plain language. Avoid statements the user cannot support with documents.

Deadline and Follow-Up Tracker

Build a tracker with conservative reminders:

Date Deadline or task Owner Status Notes
[date] Verify appeal deadline and filing method User Not started Official source needed
[date] Gather notice and prior assessment User
[date] Check property record details User
[date] Gather comparable or condition evidence User
[date] Ask assessor office questions User
[date] Decide informal review, formal appeal, professional help, or no action User
[date] Submit or confirm no submission User
[date] Save confirmation receipt User

If a deadline is close, advise the user to verify the official deadline and filing method immediately.

Decision Points

Summarize options without choosing for the user:

  • Informal review: useful when local rules allow a conversation or record correction before formal appeal.
  • Formal appeal: may be needed when the deadline, evidence rules, and required forms are clear.
  • Professional appraisal or valuation help: useful for higher-value disputes or complex comparable evidence.
  • Tax advisor or attorney: useful when legal rights, exemptions, ownership, estate, rental, commercial, or jurisdiction-specific issues are complex.
  • No action after verification: reasonable if the notice appears correct or evidence is weak, but the user decides.

Example Prompts

Copy and paste one of these into your AI assistant with your details filled in:

  1. Assessment notice seems too high: "I just received my county property tax assessment notice dated May 5. The assessed value jumped from $320,000 to $405,000 with no change to the house. The appeal deadline is June 30. I have three recent comparable sales from my neighborhood showing lower values. Help me organize an appeal packet."

  2. Unsure where to start: "My property tax reassessment arrived and I don't know if it's worth appealing. The building value went up $50K but the land value stayed the same. Deadline is in 3 weeks. I have last year's notice and some photos of needed repairs. Walk me through what to verify and what evidence to gather."

  3. Preparing for assessor call: "I want to call the assessor's office about my notice but I'm nervous. The square footage they listed is wrong (they show 2,400 but it's 1,850 per my appraisal). Draft neutral questions I can ask and help me organize my comparable sales before the deadline."

Output Format

Return the result in this order:

  1. Boundary note and deadline caution.
  2. Notice summary.
  3. Notice verification checklist.
  4. Evidence checklist.
  5. Evidence folder structure.
  6. Assessor office questions.
  7. Contact log.
  8. Appeal narrative outline.
  9. Deadline and follow-up tracker.
  10. Decision points.

Keep the output practical, neutral, and evidence-focused. The goal is to help the user organize a review packet before the deadline, not to provide legal or tax advice.

安全使用建议
This skill looks safe to use as a document-preparation prompt. Verify local property-tax deadlines and official filing rules yourself, avoid sharing credentials, SSNs, bank/payment details, or unredacted IDs, and do not grant any purchase, crypto, network, or account permissions because they are not needed for this skill.
功能分析
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: property-tax-assessment-review-kit Version: 1.0.1 The property-tax-assessment-review-kit is a document-only skill designed to help users organize information for property tax appeals. It contains no executable code, explicitly forbids the collection of sensitive data (SSNs, credentials, or bank info), and includes clear safety boundaries regarding legal and tax advice. All files, including SKILL.md and skill.json, are focused on administrative organization and lack any indicators of malicious intent or technical vulnerabilities.
能力标签
cryptocan-make-purchases
能力评估
Purpose & Capability
The visible SKILL.md and skill.json are coherent with a document-only tax-assessment review workflow, but the supplied capability signals list crypto and purchase capability that are not supported by the prompt content or files.
Instruction Scope
The instructions limit the skill to organizing user-provided facts, evidence, questions, and deadline tracking, while explicitly avoiding legal/tax/appraisal advice, official filings, guarantees, and sensitive identifiers.
Install Mechanism
There is no install spec, no executable code, and no network/API requirement; however, the registry version/source information is not perfectly aligned with the included file metadata.
Credentials
No environment variables, credentials, binaries, APIs, or network access are requested; property notice details are purpose-aligned and the skill tells users to redact sensitive identifiers.
Persistence & Privilege
No persistence, background activity, privilege escalation, file mutation, or account access is shown. Folder structures and trackers are described as planning outputs, not automatic file operations.
如何使用
  1. 确保已安装 OpenClaw(本地或 Docker 部署)
  2. 在对话框中输入安装命令:/install property-tax-assessment-review-kit
  3. 安装完成后,直接呼叫该 Skill 的名称或使用 /property-tax-assessment-review-kit 触发
  4. 根据 Skill 的参数说明提供必要输入,即可获得结构化输出
版本历史
v1.0.1
V2 remediation: added Example Prompts, Clean Scan Evidence, Install-First Success Path
v1.0.0
Initial release: Property Tax Assessment Review Kit helps users organize information and evidence for reviewing and appealing property tax assessments. - Guides users in summarizing their assessment notice, outlining deadlines, and tracking review steps. - Provides detailed checklists for verifying notices, gathering evidence (comparable sales, condition, record errors), and organizing documentation. - Suggests folder structures and filename conventions for secure record-keeping. - Supplies neutral assessor office questions and a draft appeal narrative outline. - Reinforces boundaries: does not provide legal/tax advice or predict outcomes, and emphasizes privacy/safety for sensitive information.
元数据
Slug property-tax-assessment-review-kit
版本 1.0.1
许可证 MIT-0
累计安装 0
当前安装数 0
历史版本数 2
常见问题

Property Tax Assessment Review Kit 是什么?

Organize a property tax assessment notice, deadline, evidence checklist, assessor questions, and appeal packet outline before the review window closes. 它是一个面向 Claude Code / OpenClaw 的 AI Agent Skill 插件,目前累计下载 127 次。

如何安装 Property Tax Assessment Review Kit?

在 OpenClaw 或 Claude Code 对话框中运行命令「/install property-tax-assessment-review-kit」即可一键安装,无需额外配置。

Property Tax Assessment Review Kit 是免费的吗?

是的,Property Tax Assessment Review Kit 完全免费,采用 MIT-0 许可证,可自由下载、安装和使用。

Property Tax Assessment Review Kit 支持哪些平台?

Property Tax Assessment Review Kit 跨平台运行,可在任意部署了 OpenClaw / Claude Code 的环境中使用(cross-platform)。

谁开发了 Property Tax Assessment Review Kit?

由 haidong(@harrylabsj)开发并维护,当前版本 v1.0.1。

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