Royal Oak Tribune

California voters reject revamp to property tax system

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SAN DIEGO » California voters rejected a proposal to partially dismantle the state’s 42-year-old cap on property taxes, a move that would have raised taxes for many businesses in a pandemic-hobbled economy.

Following Tuesday’s update to the vote count, Propositio­n 15 had only about 48% support and was trailing by more than a half-million votes. The loss is another blow to organized labor, which also came out on the losing side of the most expensive ballot question in state history. It would have required Uber, Lyft, DoorDash and other appbased delivery services to treat their drivers as employees rather than independen­t contractor­s. Since 1978, California has limited tax increases to 2% a year until a property is sold. With prices climbing at a much higher rate, taxpayers who have held homes and businesses for many years pay far less than what the market value would determine. Propositio­n 15 would have allowed local government­s to reassess commercial and industrial property every three years, while residentia­l property, including home-based businesses, would remain under 1978 rules.

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