Los Angeles Times

Millionair­es face higher tax rates

Surcharge on income of $1 million and up would fund schools, other services in a state hit hard by virus.

- By John Myers

Lawmakers propose an increase for the wealthy to help the state’s recovery.

SACRAMENTO — Democrats in the California Legislatur­e have unveiled a new effort to significan­tly raise tax rates on taxable income of $1 million and higher, an effort they say would provide billions of dollars to improve K-12 schools and a variety of government services vital to the state’s recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic.

The bill, introduced by 15 Democrats on Monday in the Senate, is the clearest sign so far that liberal legislator­s and interest groups intend to put pressure on business-aligned lawmakers and Gov. Gavin Newsom for new tax revenue before the legislativ­e session ends Aug. 31 — arguing that California’s deepseated racial and socioecono­mic inequities, exacerbate­d by the current recession, can’t be addressed without more government resources.

“When you take a look at the state, there’s a lot of pain and suffering out there, and we need to put every idea on the table,” said Assemblyma­n Miguel Santiago (DLos Angeles), the bill’s author.

Assembly Bill 1253 lays out three new surcharges on income tax for California’s

highest earners. It would impose a new 1% surcharge on adjusted gross income starting at $1 million, increasing to 3% for those who earn more than $2 million and rising to 3.5% for taxpayers with income above $5 million.

Santiago’s staff cites a labor-union analysis that the tax increase could amount to $6.8 billion in new annual revenue. That’s equal to almost half the amount of general-fund spending in the current fiscal year for the University of California and California State University systems.

If approved by a supermajor­ity vote of both houses before the end of August and signed by Newsom, AB 1253 would apply to all income earned since Jan. 1. The impact would be felt almost immediatel­y by taxpayers who file quarterly and face their next installmen­t on Sept. 15.

Jeff Freitas, president of the California Federation of Teachers, praised the proposal as fair in light of continued success in the stock market for some of the state’s wealthiest residents during the coronaviru­s crisis, and record-high unemployme­nt for millions of others.

“California must invest in essential services, including public education, in order to stop the spread of this pandemic and recover from this economic crisis,” he said. “The stark and widening inequality laid bare by the pandemic makes apparent that we must have a more equitable tax structure to invest in California.”

Education groups are likely to be some of the proposal’s biggest champions. The state budget signed last month by Newsom relies on $12.5 billion in deferred payments to public schools, money the schools will have to borrow or take from their reserves and wait to be repaid in years to come.

Even with overwhelmi­ng Democratic majorities in both the state Senate and Assembly, a new and permanent increase in income tax is far from a sure bet. Sizable numbers of Democrats in both houses are generally more aligned with the limited tax positions of business groups. Critics are already warning the bill could be an economic drag on the state.

“During the worst recession in decades, it would be an astonishin­gly bad idea to enact a massive tax increase,” said David Kline, a spokesman for the California Taxpayers Assn.

Other than a controver sial recession-inspired levy imposed in 1991 with the backing of the governor at the time, Pete Wilson, state lawmakers have shied away from tax increases.

The last effort was in 2009, when legislator­s and Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger asked voters to extend temporary taxes — a ballot measure that was soundly defeated and resulted in the electoral defeat of Republican lawmakers who joined Democrats in supporting the proposal.

Voters changed their minds in 2012, imposing temporary income and sales taxes championed by Gov. Jerry Brown and labor unions. The income tax increases, affecting those earning more than $250,000, were extended by voters in 2016 and will expire in 2030.

The tax increases in AB 1253 would be permanent. Santiago, who said he has spent most of his recent weekends watching long lines at food banks in his district, stretching through much of downtown L.A., said he worries that low-income communitie­s will continue to suffer long after the coronaviru­s is contained.

“We’re not talking about increasing taxes on the average person,” Santiago said. “This is an idea that should be debated.”

AB 1253 would affect the tax returns of only 0.5% of those who filed in 2018, according to data compiled by the state Franchise Tax Board. But those taxpayers already account for 40% of all income tax revenue collected that year — a function of the state’s strongly progressiv­e tax structure.

California’s highest marginal tax rate is 13.3%, higher than that of any other state, according to statistics compiled by the Tax Foundation, a conservati­ve-leaning think tank in Washington. For years, critics of California’s tax policy have warned that its most wealthy residents might consider moving to other states if taxes continue to rise.

In the meantime, demand for government services is on the rise.

The state’s Employment Developmen­t Department has paid out jobless benefits to 8.7 million California­ns since the beginning of March. And while the state’s budget was balanced for the current year, with a combinatio­n of delayed payments and cash reserves, estimates are that additional actions will be needed next year to fill an operating deficit currently projected at $8.7 billion.

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? A S S E M B LY M A N Miguel Santiago (D-Los Angeles), right, with colleague Shirley Weber (D-San Diego) in June. Santiago is the author of AB 1253, which lays out three new tax rates for California’s highest earners.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press A S S E M B LY M A N Miguel Santiago (D-Los Angeles), right, with colleague Shirley Weber (D-San Diego) in June. Santiago is the author of AB 1253, which lays out three new tax rates for California’s highest earners.
 ?? Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ?? BARBARA FERRER, director of the county Department of Public Health, said the food companies all had “significan­t outbreaks amongst their employees.”
Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times BARBARA FERRER, director of the county Department of Public Health, said the food companies all had “significan­t outbreaks amongst their employees.”

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