Politics & Government

Tarrant County judge calls on Appraisal District to follow recall process for filling board seat

After Chief Appraiser Jeff Law sent a letter at odds which a conclusion drawn during a meeting last week, taxing entities are threatening to sue.
After Chief Appraiser Jeff Law sent a letter at odds which a conclusion drawn during a meeting last week, taxing entities are threatening to sue. mcook@star-telegram.com

Tarrant County and the city of Keller are threatening legal action against the Tarrant Appraisal District over its handling of a vacancy on the board.

During a March 3 meeting to discuss filling board chair Kathryn Wilemon’s seat, Tarrant Appraisal District Chief Appraiser Jeff Law was clear: the path forward isn’t legally prescribed in Texas tax code.

Wilemon was recalled on Feb. 21 by Keller City Council. She resigned the next day.

Law said, “The recall does not supersede the vacancy, and the vacancy does not supersede the recall.”

However, in a letter sent the same day to taxing entities, he wrote something very different: “Since the recall process was only initiated, it is now canceled as a result of the vacancy.”

The discrepancy has taxing entities in receipt of the letter threatening lawsuits against TAD.

Tarrant County District Attorney Phil Sorrells wrote Law on Friday and urged him to pursue the recall process. He wrote that the county believes the recall process prevails over the vacancy process.

“The recall process allows taxing entities to exercise oversight of TAD Board Members who received their votes and ensures accountability,” Sorrells wrote.

The county’s letter comes a day after a similar one from Keller Mayor Armin Mizani, in which he threatened legal action against the agency.

When the Star-Telegram inquired about the discrepancy between the March 3 meeting and the letter’s content, Law did not reply.

His assistant Julie Wooddell wrote, “Jeff referenced ‘The Appraisal District’s attorney, that provides council to the board, provided advice to the board concerning these two provisions.’ Jeff was only reflecting what the board’s advised them on. I hope that is helpful.”

County Judge Tim O’Hare announced the letter in a Twitter post.

“The public trust in TAD must be restored,” he wrote. “Tarrant County taxpayers deserve transparency. We will use the authority of this office to see if they get it.”

This story was originally published March 10, 2023 at 4:28 PM.

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Jess Hardin
Fort Worth Star-Telegram
Jess Hardin covered growth and development for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram from 2021 to 2023. Reach our news team at tips@star-telegram.com.
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