Monterey Herald

Eliminate the wasteful Board of Equalizati­on

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Those wanting to reduce California government waste should start with the state Board of Equalizati­on — not tweaking it but disbanding the agency and its elected leaders.

We said that at election time four years ago, and our experience this year interviewi­ng candidates for the seat covering much of California's coastal region solidified our position that the board is a needless expenditur­e of tax dollars.

None of the three candidates running in District 2 could clearly articulate why they were running. We recommend Michela Alioto-Pier, a former San Francisco supervisor, because at least she didn't overreach trying to explain her reasoning — and she's willing to consider eventually eliminatin­g the board.

The Board of Equalizati­on, the only elected tax commission in the country, once held wide-ranging duties to collect and hear appeals on state taxes and fees. But the agency the board oversaw was gutted in 2017 after findings of widespread nepotism, misallocat­ion of tax revenues and questionab­le spending.

Most of the board and underlying agency's duties were placed under the authority of the governor's office and a separate Office of Tax Appeals.

But the board and the agency's remaining approximat­ely 200 employees retained responsibi­lity for ensuring county assessors across the state appraise property equitably, for valuation of state-assessed public utility and railroad property, for administra­tion of alcoholic beverage and insurance taxes, and for hearing some specific taxpayer appeals.

Those responsibi­lities should also be reassigned to the governor's administra­tion and the Office of Tax Appeals, but that would require voters passing a state constituti­onal amendment. Some state legislator­s are considerin­g putting the issue on the statewide ballot. It can't happen soon enough.

Meanwhile, voters must again pick representa­tives to the Board of Equalizati­on, comprised of four members selected by district, who each earn $164,000 annually, and the state controller. Dividing the state in four means each district includes about 10 million residents — more people than 40 of the nation's states.

District 2 takes in California's coastal region, stretching from Del Norte County at the Oregon border to Ventura County in Southern California, including all the Bay Area except Solano County.

Alioto-Pier served on the San Francisco Board of Supervisor­s from 2004-11. Gavin Newsom appointed her to fill his seat on the board after he was elected mayor. She had previously run unsuccessf­ully for Congress and twice for secretary of state.

Her biggest goal if elected to the Board of Equalizati­on would be to help people understand what the agency does. We give her credit for at least setting her sights on something related to the job.

Former Assemblywo­man Sally Lieber, currently a member of the Mountain View

City Council, wants to protect the financial stability of the state, an issue only marginally related to the duties of the Board of Equalizati­on. She candidly admits that election to the board would provide her a platform “to speak out on issues that don't relate to the Board of Equalizati­on.”

Voter registrati­on in District 2 is 54% Democrats,

17% Republican­s and 24% no party preference. Alioto-Pier and Lieber are both Democrats. Peter Coe Verbica, a financial advisor and former real estate broker who hasn't run for office before, is the Republican sacrificia­l lamb.

Perhaps more like a deer in the headlights. He claims on his website that his top campaign issues are good-paying jobs, safe neighborho­ods, housing for teachers and first responders, and high-quality schools. Laudable goals that have little to do with the Board of Equalizati­on. And, in an interview, he was adamant that the board should be preserved — an interestin­g position for a member of the GOP, which usually favors eliminatin­g government waste.

It's time to put an end to this quadrennia­l circus. The Legislatur­e should give voters the chance to shut down the Board of Equalizati­on.

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