Commentary - Local tax conflict heats up
https://www.elkgrovenews.net/2019/07/local-tax-conflict-heats-up.html
By Dan Walters |
CALmatters Columnist |
For decades, it’s been an article of political faith – as well as
law – that local government taxes designated for particular purposes require
two-thirds approval by voters.
The supermajority vote provision was created by Proposition 13,
California’s famous – or infamous – property tax limit measure, passed by
voters in 1978, and later bolstered by another initiative, Proposition 218.
Two years ago, however, the state Supreme Court seemingly carved
out a way for local governments to sidestep that law. It implied, in ruling on a Southern California marijuana case, that if special purpose tax measures are
placed on the ballot by initiative petition, rather than by the local
governments themselves, the two-thirds vote threshold might not apply.
Ever since, those who want to raise local taxes have yearned to
learn whether the Supreme Court really meant to make an exception and, not
surprisingly, San Francisco’s very liberal city government, acting on the
advice of City Attorney Dennis Herrera, volunteered to become the legal guinea
pig.
Members of the city’s governing body, its Board of Supervisors,
personally sponsored two tax increase initiatives last year, one for the June
election and another in November, both listed on the ballot as “Proposition C.”
The June measure, a tax on commercial rents to finance early childhood education
and childcare services, received 51 percent voter support. The November proposal, a tax on businesses to finance services and housing for the
homeless, garnered 61 percent voter support.
With both votes below two-thirds, opponents of the measures sued,
contending that they were invalid. The city began collecting the taxes, but not
spending them, while the legal battle raged.
Last week, San Francisco Superior Court Judge Ethan Schulman
agreed with Herrera and validated both taxes. However, he doesn’t have the last
word. Business and anti-tax groups, such as the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers
Association, vowed “an immediate appeal” and the issue is clearly headed to the
state Supreme Court for a definitive ruling.
A third San Francisco tax measure, also placed by initiative
petition and receiving a simple majority approval from voters in 2018, is also
being contested. Proposition G imposes a new “parcel tax” on homes and other real estate to
increase teacher pay.
Were the state’s highest court to convert its 2017 implication
into declarative law, it would almost completely change the dynamics of local
tax battles.
Rather than propose special-purpose taxes directly, local
officials and their political allies, especially public employee unions, could
do it via initiative petition and completely bypass the long-standing
supermajority vote requirement.
There is, however, another wrinkle to the situation.
Last year, as the San Francisco tax measures were being
challenged, the state Supreme Court issued another decision that could affect the eventual outcome.
It declared that when former San Diego Mayor Jerry Sanders
sponsored a 2012 ballot measure to reform city pensions, he was acting in an official
capacity, not as a private citizen, and therefore was legally obligated to
“meet and confer” with unions on something that affected their members’
compensation.
Logically, if Sanders was under that legal obligation as an official while sponsoring a ballot measure, then members of the San Francisco
Board of Supervisors also were acting officially, and not as ordinary citizens,
when they sponsored their tax measures. If so, their measures probably should
have been subject to the supermajority rule.
It will be interesting to see how the court balances one ruling
with the other, if it can, with financial stakes astronomically high in the
outcome.
CALmatters is a public interest
journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works
and why it matters. For more stories by Dan Walters, go to calmatters.org/commentary
Elk Grove News is a media partner of CALmatters.
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