This is an archived article that was published on sltrib.com in 2013, and information in the article may be outdated. It is provided only for personal research purposes and may not be reprinted.

The call hasn't come yet, but longtime Salt Lake County Assessor Lee Gardner plans to resign from his elected office soon to go on a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Gardner, a five-term assessor first elected in 1994, announced his plans at Thursday's meeting of the Salt Lake County Republican Party's central committee. Once his retirement becomes official, the GOP-majority County Council will turn to the party to nominate a replacement to serve the rest of Gardner's term, which expires in January 2015.

Gardner said "we don't know when, or where, or how soon" officials of the LDS Church will respond to his formal notice that he and his educator wife, Ursula, are ready to serve a mission. Both are multilingual.

Expecting a call may come in early summer, Gardner said he wanted to forewarn party leaders about his intentions.

"I haven't made my [interest in a mission] a secret or anything," he said. "But I wanted to be transparent so that when the County Council goes through the [replacement] process, people will know it's an open process and anybody who wants to throw their hats into the ring can do so."

While Gardner feels some of his top aides in the assessor's office are well qualified to assume his duties, he said he has heard of outside interest in the position.

"I wanted to ensure there wasn't any appearance something was being done secretly," he said. "I have a responsibility to the public to ensure it's a totally open process."

County Republican Party Chairwoman Julie Dole said that when Gardner officially steps down, a successor will be picked in a special election involving almost 800 members of the party's central committee.

Gardner was a State Tax Commission appraiser in 1994 when he defeated Democrat David Swan, a colleague in that state office, in an election to replace retiring Republican Assessor Robert Yates.

At the time, his office employed 108 people to maintain records on each piece of taxable "real" and "personal property" in the county — roughly 264,000. Since then, the number of parcels has increased since to 345,000 while the size of his office staff declined slightly to 105.

Gardner was re-elected for the first time in 1998, besting Democrat Bob Adams. In the next three elections, he defeated Democratic foes Liz Fehrmann (2002 and 2010) and Josie Valdez (2006). He won all five elections handily, receiving between 56 and 60 percent of votes cast.

During his 18 years in office, Gardner said his major accomplishment was creating equity in the assessment process. Rather than reviewing sections of the county every five years, he revised the rolling system to spare home and business owners some shock each fifth year when the value of their properties would escalate, resulting in higher taxes.

He also cited his decision to stand by his assessment of Alliant Techsystems' property in Magna. The company challenged the assessment all of the way to the Utah Supreme Court, which ruled in the county's favor in 2005.

Twitter: @sltribmikeg —

Lee Gardner

The former State Tax Commission appraiser has won five elections over Democrats since 1994, when Republican Robert Yates retired as Salt Lake County assessor:

1994 • Defeated David Swan, 58-42%

1998 • Defeated Bob Adams, 59-41%

2002 • Defeated Liz Fehrmann, 58-42%

2006 •Defeated Josie Valdez, 56-44%

2010 • Defeated Fehrmann, 60-40%

Source: Salt Lake County Clerk's Office