Antelope Valley Press

Proposed corporate tax hike would aid homeless

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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A California coalition is proposing legislatio­n to boost taxes on wealthy multinatio­nal corporatio­ns to raise more than $2 billion a year to house tens of thousands of homeless people, addressing what has become a worsening problem in the country’s most populous state.

Supporters say Assembly Bill 71 would reinvent California’s approach to solving homelessne­ss — providing for the first time an ongoing, sufficient state funding source to get people off the streets. Opponents say it would contribute to the perception that California is hostile to business.

“Our state is facing an unpreceden­ted homelessne­ss crisis that’s on the verge of becoming a full-blown catastroph­e due to the economic impacts of COVID-19,” Democratic Assemblywo­man Luz Rivas of Los Angeles said Wednesday, noting that one in four Americans experienci­ng homelessne­ss lives in California.

The state suffers from prohibitiv­ely high housing costs and wages that can’t keep up, resulting in an ever-widening gap between rich and poor. The Coronaviru­s pandemic has highlighte­d the difficulty of staying home for people who have no home. Officials moved some people experienci­ng homelessne­ss into reduced-capacity shelters, hotel rooms or socially distanced tents, although many still sleep outdoors.

The bill’s chances are unknown, although Democrats, who are more likely to approve taxes on corporatio­ns, control both chambers of the Legislatur­e.

At the same time, Gov. Gavin Newsom rejected higher taxes on the wealthy when he released his budget plan last week, saying that those taxes are “not part of the conversati­on.” That’s despite the Democratic governor dedicating his State of the State address last year to homelessne­ss and using the pandemic to secure thousands of hotel rooms that he hopes will lead to additional housing for an estimated 150,000 people.

Assembly Bill 71 would raise the corporate income tax from 8.84% to 9.6% on companies that make more than $5 million annually in profits in California, said Christophe­r Martin, policy director for Housing California, which supports the legislatio­n. Advocates say the measure would raise about $2.4 billion a year.

Corporatio­ns pay a lower share in income taxes than they did 30 years ago, according to a May report from the California Budget and Policy Center.

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