Daily News (Los Angeles)

Sacramento’s latest tax-hiking schemes

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On Wednesday, with a $68 billion budget shortfall looming over the state Capitol,

Gov. Gavin Newsom will meet a deadline to deliver his annual budget proposal, and, ominously, the Assembly Revenue and Taxation Committee will hold a hearing on two bills that could ultimately lead to sharply higher taxes for homeowners or retirees.

The committee chaired by Ventura County Democrat Jacqui Irwin will hear Assembly Bill 259, a wealth tax, and AB 362, a requiremen­t to study the “efficacy” of replacing Propositio­n 13 with a “land value tax.”

Both bills were authored by San Jose Democrat Alex Lee, a hard-left progressiv­e lawmaker. Both bills had failed to move in the legislatur­e until now.

Barely a month after Lee introduced AB 259 in January 2023, Newsom announced his opposition to the bill, which would place a 1% tax on “worldwide net worth” of more than $50 million, and an additional .5% on net worth above $1 billion. When Lee introduced a similar proposal, AB 2088 in 2020, Newsom said, “A wealth tax is not part of the conversati­on. Wealth taxes are going nowhere in California.” We’ll see if that’s still true.

AB 259 would take effect only if the state constituti­on were changed to allow a wealth tax, and the proposed amendment has already been introduced as Assembly Constituti­onal Amendment 3. It would empower the Legislatur­e to define wealth and tax it at a rate lawmakers would determine.

Although SB 259 specifies that the wealth tax would apply only to the super-rich, ACA 3 contains no such restrictio­n. If approved by voters, it would allow the Legislatur­e to write a new law that taxes the value of individual retirement accounts, appreciate­d assets such as real estate and stocks, and anything else lawmakers define as “wealth.”

As real estate values are pushed up by inflation, struggling California homeowners may discover that politician­s in Sacramento think they’re “millionair­es.” Try paying the electric bill with that “wealth.”

Lee’s second bill, AB 362, requires a study of replacing the current property tax assessment system under Prop. 13 with a tax based on the value of land if something else was built on it. Taxpayers should be on their guard against these schemes to invent new ways to get into their pockets.

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