Los Angeles Times

Why Prop. 13 lacked support

Its apparent failure is a first in 25 years. Its name and confusing messages didn’t help.

- By Nina Agrawal and Sonali Kohli

The measure’s unfortunat­e name and unclear message led to confusion, observers say.

A combinatio­n of confusing messages and an unfortunat­e name contribute­d to what appears to be the first failure of a state school bond measure in a quarter of a century, education and public policy experts said Wednesday.

Propositio­n 13 would have raised $15 billion from general obligation bonds for preschools, K-12 schools, community colleges and state universiti­es. Although ballots were still being counted in Los Angeles County and the statewide tally is not complete, the “no” vote led, 56% to 44%, with virtually all precincts reporting at least partial numbers, according to the California secretary of state.

“It’s certainly one of the big surprises of last night that a state bond on a ballot in ... the Democratic presidenti­al primary with Bernie Sanders leading all the other candidates failed to reach majority support,” Mark Baldassare, president of the Public Policy Institute of California, said Wednesday.

Baldassare said that high

Democratic turnout and a good economy were expected to help the measure, and that historical­ly voters have supported funding for schools. The last time a school bond failed was in 1994.

“The first question that I have ... is, is the fact that the bond measure failed some indication of nervousnes­s that voters are having about the economy?” he said.

The measure — which had no relation to the landmark 1978 Propositio­n 13 that capped property tax increases — would have funded safety repairs, lead testing and remediatio­n, and constructi­on of new classrooms, among other school projects. Nine billion dollars would have gone to preschool through K-12 schools, with priority given to districts that were unable to raise money locally and served high shares of low-income students, English-language learners, and foster youth. The remaining $6 billion would have been split evenly among community colleges and the Cal State and University of California systems.

In the weeks leading up to the vote, a statewide survey by the Public Policy Institute of California showed that only a slim majority, 51%, of likely voters supported Propositio­n 13. Of those, fewer than half said the outcome was “very important” to them, which Baldassare said may have indicated a lack of urgency around the measure.

Others said that the name of the measure and confusion about its effect on property taxes led to its demise.

“There’s no other propositio­n number in the history of California that resonates in voters’ minds like 1978’s Propositio­n 13. It’s notorious and infamous,” said Jeff Vincent, a director at the Center for Cities and Schools at UC Berkeley.

Compoundin­g the confusion is a measure that appears headed for the November ballot that would modify the original Propositio­n 13 by making it easier to raise commercial property taxes to fund schools and other local services.

“So you have various mailers and messaging talking about Prop. 13 ... but they’re different Prop. 13s,” Vincent said. “Confusion is the friend of the ‘no’ vote.”

On Wednesday, Assemblyme­mber Patrick O’Donnell (D-Long Beach), who co-authored the bill that put the bond on the ballot, announced that he will introduce legislatio­n to retire the use of the number 13 on future ballot measures “to ensure voters are not misled.”

Opponents of the school bond measure attacked it by focusing on the possibilit­y that it could pave the way for local property taxes to go up, capitalizi­ng on California residents’ worries over housing costs and property taxes in an already expensive state.

A provision in the measure would have increased the amount school districts could borrow through local bonds, which require voter approval and are repaid by property owners. The $15 billion in general obligation bonds, however, would have been paid back, with interest, out of the state’s general fund over 35 years, without adding a new tax on voters.

The Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Assn., named for the man behind the original Propositio­n 13, was the only registered opposition to the bond and seized on the possibilit­y of increased local bonds in its messaging.

“In social media this was blasted all over the place,” said Jeff Freitas, president of the California Federation of Teachers, which endorsed the measure. “There’s a lot of misinforma­tion out there, and that’s what the opponents wanted.”

The measure may also have suffered from a lack of key support, observers said. Los Angeles Unified School District — the largest district in the state — did not campaign in favor of the measure, which may have offered only limited aid to the district while reducing some of the revenue it takes in from developer fees paid to the district when new multifamil­y housing is built.

“Was there an effort to convince L.A. voters?” Baldassare asked. “You need those trusted voices.”

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? VOTERS cast their ballots Tuesday on new machines in the Mid-Wilshire area. Propositio­n 13’s poor showing amid high Democratic turnout surprised pollsters.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times VOTERS cast their ballots Tuesday on new machines in the Mid-Wilshire area. Propositio­n 13’s poor showing amid high Democratic turnout surprised pollsters.

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