CONNECTICUT STATUTES AND CODES
Sec. 9-199. Assessors and boards of assessment appeals. Alternate members.
Sec. 9-199. Assessors and boards of assessment appeals. Alternate members.
(a) Unless otherwise provided by law, each town shall elect three assessors and a board
of assessment appeals consisting of three members and shall elect such officers at regular
municipal elections for terms of four years. Such assessors and members of the board
of assessment appeals shall hold office for the term for which they are elected and until
their successors are elected and have qualified. When the number of assessors or the
number of members of the board of assessment appeals to be elected by any town is
even, no person shall vote for more than one-half the number, and when the number to
be elected is odd, no person shall vote for more than a bare majority of the number,
provided the legislative body of any town may provide that the electors of such town
vote for the full number of assessors or members to be elected thereat, any provision of
the special acts to the contrary notwithstanding. The candidates in number sufficient to
fill such offices who have the highest number of votes shall be elected. Nothing in this
section shall be construed to affect the method of rotation of assessors or members of
a board of assessment appeals legally in effect on October 1, 1976.
(b) The legislative body of a municipality or, in the case of a municipality for which
the legislative body is a town meeting or a representative town meeting, the board of
selectmen may appoint an alternate for each member of the board of assessment appeals.
Each alternate member shall be an elector of the municipality. When seated, an alternate
member shall have all the powers and duties of a member of the board of assessment
appeals.
(c) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a) of this section or of any special
act, municipal charter or home rule ordinance, a municipality may, by ordinance, authorize its legislative body to appoint additional members to the board of assessment appeals
for any assessment year.
(1949 Rev., S. 501, 502, 503, 515; 1951, S. 106b; 1953, S. 680d; P.A. 76-173, S. 7; P.A. 95-132, S. 4, 5; 95-283, S.
28, 68; P.A. 00-120, S. 11, 13; P.A. 02-49, S. 4.)
History: P.A. 76-173 deleted contrary provisions and provided for election of three assessors and a three-member board
of tax review, authorized legislative body to allow electors to vote for full number of assessors or members, further provided
that nothing be construed as affecting method of rotation of assessors or members of a board of tax review legally already
in effect on October 1, 1976; P.A. 95-132 added Subsec. (b) re appointment of alternate member (Revisor's note: The
Revisors editorially changed two references to "the board of tax review" to "the board of assessment appeals" for consistency
with Subsecs. (a) and (c) as amended by P.A. 95-283); P.A. 95-283 replaced board of tax review with board of assessment
appeals and added Subsec. (b), designated by the Revisors as Subsec. (c), to provide for appointment of additional board
members, effective July 6, 1995; P.A. 00-120 amended Subsec. (c) to provide for appointment of additional members for
year prior to revaluation, effective May 26, 2000; P.A. 02-49 amended Subsec. (c) to allow municipalities to appoint
additional members in any assessment year, deleting provision re appointment in the assessment year in which a revaluation
becomes effective, for the assessment year prior to and following such year of revaluation, effective May 9, 2002.
See Sec. 9-167a re minority representation requirements.