Monterey Herald

Court makes local tax hikes easier

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In a roundabout, passive way, the California Supreme Court last week handed a big victory to the advocates of higher taxes.

Without comment, the justices declined to take up a state appellate court decision that would allow specialize­d local government taxes to be increased by a simple majority of voters, if they are placed on the ballot by initiative petitions rather than by the government­s themselves.

The victory for tax proponents, especially government worker unions, was an equally large defeat for anti-tax organizati­ons such as the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Associatio­n. However, it also may bring more ballot box budgeting and indirectly weaken the role of city councils and other locally elected boards.

Propositio­n 218, approved by California voters in 1996, declares that local government­s seeking more revenue must win voter approval. Proposals for general purpose revenue through increases in sales taxes or other levies need only simple-majority approval. However, if cities, counties and other local government­s seek new taxes for specific purposes, Propositio­n 218 requires two-thirds votes.

Three years ago, the state Supreme Court issued a decision called “Upland” because it dealt with a ballot measure on taxing marijuana in that Southern California city.

Writing the 5-2 majority opinion, Supreme Court Justice Mariano-Florentino Cuéllar declared, “Multiple provisions of the state constituti­on explicitly constrain the power of local government­s to raise taxes. But we will not lightly apply such restrictio­ns on local government­s to voter initiative­s.”

He thus implied that special purpose taxes placed before voters via initiative may not be affected by the two-thirds vote requiremen­t for taxes sought by government­s themselves.

Quickly, special purpose taxes placed on the ballot via initiative that garnered less that two-thirds votes were challenged by the Jarvis organizati­on and other taxpayer groups, but trial court judges differed sharply on whether Cuéllar’s opinion did, indeed, validate them.

Two of the tests were San Francisco taxes placed on the ballot via initiative­s personally sponsored by members of the city’s Board of Supervisor­s, one for early childhood education, the other to battle homelessne­ss. Both received less than two-thirds votes, but a local judge, Ethan Schulman, validated them anyway.

In June, a San Franciscob­ased appellate court upheld Schulman on the homelessne­ss taxes and the Jarvis organizati­on appealed to the state Supreme

Court, which last week validated the appellate court ruling by refusing to take it up.

The tax on business gross receipts for homelessne­ss services will raise as much as $300 million a year. “San Francisco voters have the right to direct democracy and self-government,” City Attorney Dennis Herrera said in a statement. “We’re pleased that this legal victory will free up millions of dollars to provide services, housing and mental health treatment for those who most desperatel­y need it in our city.”

The Supreme Court’s action, or non-action, also may validate other disputed special purpose taxes, including another for early childhood education in San Francisco, an Oakland parcel tax for education and a Fresno sales tax for parks. Local judges had blocked the Oakland and Fresno taxes, declaring that Propositio­n 218 required them to have two-thirds votes.

Local government officials prefer to ask voters for general revenues because they are more flexible. But advocates for particular causes prefer special purpose taxes to prevent revenues from being diverted elsewhere.

The way is now clear for interests with the wherewitha­l to qualify and pass ballot measures, such as unions, to push for taxes that benefit their members, thus reducing the authority of local elected officials to set budget priorities.

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