BILL ANALYSIS Senate Research Center S.B. 973 89R4985 TJB-D By: Eckhardt et al. Local Government 3/14/2025 As Filed AUTHOR'S / SPONSOR'S STATEMENT OF INTENT Some have claimed that the prohibition of certain residential properties has created an arbitrary obstacle to individuals accessing information about their own property. Interested parties have stated that allowing a basic sketch of the property to be posted online would enable a property owner to more easily access appraisal information that could assist the owner in contesting property taxes. To address this issue, the bill seeks to provide property owners online access to certain basic property information without resulting in the disclosure of vulnerable property features. The bill amends Section 25.027, Tax Code, to allow appraisal districts to post a street-level photograph of only the exterior of a building or a field record or overhead sketch of a property on the Internet. The sketch may only depict the following: (1) an outline of one or more buildings on the property, (2) the general landscape features of the property, including ponds, pools, and walls, and (3) the dimensions of or distances between the buildings and features depicted. No entry points, such as windows or doors, will be depicted in the sketch. Finally, the bill changes the type of aerial photographs excluded from the prohibition from an aerial photograph that depicts five or more separately owned buildings to an aerial photograph that depicts more than one separately owned building. This is an identical draft of S.B. 348 88(R), by Senator Springer, which passed the Senate with unanimous support. The Texas Association of Appraisal Districts is expected to testify in favor of the bill. There was no opposition to this bill last session, and no new opposition has been identified. As proposed, S.B. 973 amends current law relating to the prohibition on posting on the Internet information held by an appraisal district regarding certain residential property. RULEMAKING AUTHORITY This bill does not expressly grant any additional rulemaking authority to a state officer, institution, or agency. SECTION BY SECTION ANALYSIS SECTION 1. Amends Section 25.027(b), Tax Code, as follows: (b) Provides that Subsection (a)(1) (relating to prohibiting certain information in appraisal records from being posted on the Internet) does not apply to an aerial photograph that depicts more than one separately owned building, rather than five or more separately owned buildings; a street level photograph of only the exterior of a building; or a field record or overhead sketch of the property that depicts only the outline of one or more buildings on the property, the general landscape features of the property, including ponds, pools, and walls, and the dimensions of or distances between the buildings and features depicted. Makes nonsubstantive changes. SECTION 2. Effective date: upon passage or September 1, 2025. BILL ANALYSIS Senate Research Center S.B. 973 89R4985 TJB-D By: Eckhardt et al. Local Government 3/14/2025 As Filed Senate Research Center S.B. 973 89R4985 TJB-D By: Eckhardt et al. Local Government 3/14/2025 As Filed AUTHOR'S / SPONSOR'S STATEMENT OF INTENT Some have claimed that the prohibition of certain residential properties has created an arbitrary obstacle to individuals accessing information about their own property. Interested parties have stated that allowing a basic sketch of the property to be posted online would enable a property owner to more easily access appraisal information that could assist the owner in contesting property taxes. To address this issue, the bill seeks to provide property owners online access to certain basic property information without resulting in the disclosure of vulnerable property features. The bill amends Section 25.027, Tax Code, to allow appraisal districts to post a street-level photograph of only the exterior of a building or a field record or overhead sketch of a property on the Internet. The sketch may only depict the following: (1) an outline of one or more buildings on the property, (2) the general landscape features of the property, including ponds, pools, and walls, and (3) the dimensions of or distances between the buildings and features depicted. No entry points, such as windows or doors, will be depicted in the sketch. Finally, the bill changes the type of aerial photographs excluded from the prohibition from an aerial photograph that depicts five or more separately owned buildings to an aerial photograph that depicts more than one separately owned building. This is an identical draft of S.B. 348 88(R), by Senator Springer, which passed the Senate with unanimous support. The Texas Association of Appraisal Districts is expected to testify in favor of the bill. There was no opposition to this bill last session, and no new opposition has been identified. As proposed, S.B. 973 amends current law relating to the prohibition on posting on the Internet information held by an appraisal district regarding certain residential property. RULEMAKING AUTHORITY This bill does not expressly grant any additional rulemaking authority to a state officer, institution, or agency. SECTION BY SECTION ANALYSIS SECTION 1. Amends Section 25.027(b), Tax Code, as follows: (b) Provides that Subsection (a)(1) (relating to prohibiting certain information in appraisal records from being posted on the Internet) does not apply to an aerial photograph that depicts more than one separately owned building, rather than five or more separately owned buildings; a street level photograph of only the exterior of a building; or a field record or overhead sketch of the property that depicts only the outline of one or more buildings on the property, the general landscape features of the property, including ponds, pools, and walls, and the dimensions of or distances between the buildings and features depicted. Makes nonsubstantive changes. SECTION 2. Effective date: upon passage or September 1, 2025.