Page 101 - AAGLA-MAR 2022
P. 101

 Member Update
   RThe Fight to Limit Taxation Continues
By Jon Coupal, Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association
egular readers of this column year’s budget spends $255 billion and that over 90% of it is undoubtedly know what Proposition revenue from taxes. The Legislative Analyst’s Office gives us 13 is, but they may not know it does some examples of where this comes from, like “sales taxes more than set property taxes at 1% of paid on goods and income taxes paid on wages and other the home’s market value with a 2% cap sources of income.” The rest is from fees and other charges on annual increases. It also imposed like “charges relating to regulatory activities.”
certain voter requirements for other
kinds of taxes, including a requirement
that local special taxes receive a two-thirds vote of the electorate and a state tax increase proposed by the California Legislature receive a two-thirds vote of each house.
Government hates these constraints on taking other people’s money, so they constantly try to find ways around them — and they have. In the early ‘80’s, they hit upon “benefit assessment districts,” which historically had been used legitimately to fund capital improvements that directly benefited property. But over time, bureaucrats began imposing assessments for general municipal services rendering them indistinguishable from property taxes. The sole reason for this transformation was to avoid Proposition 13’s voter approval requirements.
That’s why the Howard Jarvis Taxpayer Association put Proposition 218 on the ballot in 1996. It gave the people the right to vote on all local taxes and required taxpayer (or ratepayer) approval of assessments and property related fees. But just like when you squeeze a water balloon too hard, it tends to pop out somewhere else, so it is with government avoiding clear voter intent. That’s why state business associations and the Howard Jarvis Taxpayer Association are supporting the Taxpayer Protection and Government Accountability Act initiative to close some new loopholes recent court rulings have opened in Propositions 13 and 218.
While the initiative is still waiting for a circulating title and summary from the California Attorney General, the fiscal analysis by the nonpartisan Legislative Analyst’s Office was released last week and it’s instructive in explaining the tangled web of taxes our government weaves. For perspective, the Legislative Analyst’s Office notes that this
At the local level, the largest tax paid is on property. Property taxes raise “roughly $75 billion annually.” Other taxes include “sales taxes, utility taxes, and hotel taxes.” Then come the levy of fees and other charges like building permit fees. The Legislative Analyst’s Office notes that when it comes to fees, local governments and the state Legislature can also “delegate their authority to adjust fees and other charges to administrative entities,” such as city and state departments. There, “charges can be increased or changed by the department within certain limits.” For example, a true “fee” should not exceed the “reasonable” cost of providing a service, but that’s more theory than reality as local governments charge excessive fees.
The newest wrinkle is the ever-leftward tilt of our court system and the move away from the plain language of the law to what judicial activists would prefer the law say. As the Legislative Analyst’s Office notes, “[r]ecent case law suggests that citizen initiative special taxes may be approved by majority vote, rather than a two-thirds vote.” The “recent case law” to which the Legislative Analyst’s Office referred is the infamous Upland decision from the California Supreme Court that upended nearly 50 years of court precedent and the clear intent of the voters. Closing this one loophole alone is a big reason why the Taxpayer Protection and Government Accountability Act initiative, like Proposition 13 and 218 before it, is necessary.
 Jon Coupal is President of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association. The opinions expressed in this article are those of its author and not necessarily those of the Apartment Association of Greater Los Angeles. This article is being reprinted with permission from the Howard Jarvis Taxpayer Association and the author.
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