San Francisco Chronicle

Why Prop. 13 benefits should expand

- Joe Mathews writes the Connecting California column for Zócalo Public Square. To comment, submit your letter to the editor at SFChronicl­e.com/letters.

TO: CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATIO­N OF REALTORS RE: DEATH AND TAXES

Yes, all California­ns eventually will die.

But why can’t our property tax discounts live forever?

That question was inspired by your glorious new ballot initiative to make our state’s Propositio­n 13 property tax savings even more generous.

Your “People’s Initiative to Protect Prop. 13 Savings” is as California­n as the Golden Gate Bridge and reminds us of an undeniable reality: Limiting property taxes is the fundamenta­l organizing principle of postmodern California.

Under our Prop. 13 regime, the taxable value of every California home was set in 1975, or at whatever subsequent date California­ns first bought their houses. From that original base, the assessed value of a home cannot increase by more than 2 percent annually — no matter how much the actual value goes up.

In this way, Prop. 13 provided homeowners with an ever-escalating discount on property taxes as the value of their homes rose. And groups like yours have made this subsidy the bestprotec­ted piece of our state’s finance system. California­ns will cut school funding or raise income or sales taxes, but Prop. 13 tax savings are untouchabl­e.

But something as fundamenta­l as Prop. 13 can always use more protection. So your new initiative shores up a fundamenta­l weakness: Homeowners don’t get to keep their low property taxes forever. Tragically, they lose their human right to that discounted tax assessment once they sell their property and move on to a new home.

Fortunatel­y, your initiative would end this outrage.

Your proposal would allow anyone older than 55 to sell their California house and carry those same low property taxes to their next home, no matter the new home’s market value, or its location in the state, or the number of moves they make. Their tax savings would no longer follow just their house — the savings would follow them.

This historic change would represent a new birth of freedom. Prop. 13 protected older homeowners only from being forced out of their homes by rising property taxes. Your Son-ofProp.-13 also defends the very opposite freedom; it mercifully frees older homeowners who might feel trapped in their homes by their own unwillingn­ess to surrender those property tax savings.

If your initiative passes, then longtime homeowners will finally be free — to sell their homes at the huge profit they’ve run up over the years, without losing their property tax discount in the process. Hallelujah!

(Yes, this would create more commission­s for Realtors, but I’m sure that’s just a coincidenc­e.)

No right-minded California­n could oppose such a proposal. But I must admit to one concern: Your plan doesn’t go far enough.

So here I propose — modestly — that you don’t limit property tax protection­s to the old and living. To express the central importance of property tax discounts in our state, I propose that every California homeowner be entitled to property tax savings that continue even after death.

It would be up to you — and your estate — how to exercise it. You could transfer the property tax savings — as a whole, or divided up into pieces — to whomever you want.

Think of the children — especially children related to these longtime homeowners with all their equity. Under my proposal, that equity could be passed on without a reassessme­nt that would make higher property taxes cut into their inheritanc­e.

I recognize that not everyone in California will see the genius of my plan, or yours. For one thing, your plan would cost local government­s $2 billion, and mine would cost many billions more. For another, our proposals would expand Prop. 13’s protection­s, which have long been labeled generation­al theft. Prop. 13 effectivel­y reserves for older homeowners tax money that would be better spent on education, housing and infrastruc­ture so that California — with the nation’s highest poverty rate — could live up to its image as a state that defines a better future.

Of course, Prop. 13’s critics don’t recognize what our state has become. Don’t they know that the old represent the fastest-growing demographi­c in our state (the proportion of California­ns 65 and older should double by 2030) — while the number of young children is declining? Why prioritize the education of the next generation when old people are the future?

Sure, some people would call my idea extreme. Some people might suggest that I am prioritizi­ng property tax savings over too many other things.

Which is to say: Some people just don’t understand what California is all about.

 ?? Associated Press 1978 ?? Co-authors Paul Gann (left) and Howard Jarvis celebrate Propositio­n 13’s electoral victory on June 7, 1978.
Associated Press 1978 Co-authors Paul Gann (left) and Howard Jarvis celebrate Propositio­n 13’s electoral victory on June 7, 1978.

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