The Bakersfield Californian

Supervisor­s vote to put 1-cent sales tax increase for unincorpor­ated county areas on Nov. 8 ballot

- BY JOHN COX jcox@bakersfiel­d.com

Voters in unincorpor­ated Kern will be asked on the Nov. 8 ballot whether to raise their sales tax by 1 percentage point to help fund public safety and other services following a 4-1 vote Tuesday of the county Board of Supervisor­s.

The board’s decision to refer the matter to voters came after three hours of discussion and public comments dominated by support from county department heads and representa­tives of local businesses and law enforcemen­t unions.

If approved in November by a simple majority of Kern voters living outside cities, the measure is expected to raise $54 million per year in support of “general government” administra­tion — specifical­ly including law enforcemen­t, fire protection, medical emergency response, attraction of industry and work toward addressing mental health and addiction, with “no money for the state.”

The tax increase would come with a citizens oversight committee whose structure and precise role would have to be determined by the Board of Supervisor­s.

County staff said increasing the sales tax rate in unincorpor­ated areas to 8.25 percent from 7.25 percent would help ensure enough money is available to pay for priorities like enhanced recruitmen­t and retention of sheriff’s deputies at a time when the county’s property tax revenues are under pressure from anti-oil policies out of Sacramento.

Staff made the case the county is doing all it can to live within its means — becoming more efficient, cutting its budget wherever possible and fighting back against state mandates detrimenta­l to the

local tax base — but that more money is needed to maintain or improve vital public services.

“People are frustrated,” Sheriff Donny Youngblood told supervisor­s Tuesday, “very frustrated with me as a sheriff, you as a board and the way we’re governing our county. … They don’t quite get it.” He added that he wasn’t advocating for the sales tax increase, only the opportunit­y to let citizens choose.

Supervisor David Couch voted against the proposal after calling unsuccessf­ully for an amendment that would have phased out the tax after 20 years. That left the board with the bare minimum support necessary to put the measure before voters.

It remains to be seen how much support the proposal has among voters. A similar ballot measure in 2018 failed by a vote of 65 percent against to 35 percent in favor.

But a survey done in May and June found 56 percent of respondent­s living in unincorpor­ated Kern indicated they recognize the county faces a “great need” for additional funding. Sixty-four percent suggested they would or probably would be interested in a potential, unincorpor­ated-only funding measure.

Carol Bender, a resident of an unincorpor­ated area of the county living in District 1, told the board Tuesday she supports the idea of letting voters decide for themselves whether to increase their taxes.

“It’s never a right time,” she said, “and if we do not do this now, our services are going to continue to degrade.”

Among few people to speak publicly against the proposal was a representa­tive of the Fresno-based environmen­tal justice group Leadership Counsel for Justice and Accountabi­lity. Regional Policy Manager Emma De La Rosa told the board county government should do more to engage with residents of unincorpor­ated areas to find out their views of the situation.

After criticizin­g county priorities such as carbon capture projects, De La Rosa expressed concern most revenues from the tax proposal would be spent on law enforcemen­t.

“Is it really going to be used as a general service tax, or is it going to be used as a special purpose tax?” she asked.

Board Chairman Zack Scrivner blamed state policies for Kern’s fiscal struggles. Without new revenue, he said, there’s a chance that the county will have to cut back on other services just to support law enforcemen­t and fire protection.

“I don’t think that’s the county we want to live in, where all we do is public safety,” Scrivner said. “I fear that is on the horizon.”

 ?? ELIZA GREEN / THE CALIFORNIA­N ?? Kern County Sheriff Donny Youngblood speaks to the Board of Supervisor­s at Tuesday morning’s public meeting. He spoke in favor of letting voters decide on a one-cent sales tax increase in unincorpor­ated areas of Kern County.
ELIZA GREEN / THE CALIFORNIA­N Kern County Sheriff Donny Youngblood speaks to the Board of Supervisor­s at Tuesday morning’s public meeting. He spoke in favor of letting voters decide on a one-cent sales tax increase in unincorpor­ated areas of Kern County.
 ?? PHOTOS BY ELIZA GREEN / THE CALIFORNIA­N ?? Zack Scrivner, District 2 supervisor and chairman of the Kern County Board of Supervisor­s, listens to a speaker during a public comment period at Tuesday morning’s meeting.
PHOTOS BY ELIZA GREEN / THE CALIFORNIA­N Zack Scrivner, District 2 supervisor and chairman of the Kern County Board of Supervisor­s, listens to a speaker during a public comment period at Tuesday morning’s meeting.
 ?? ?? David Couch, Kern County District 4 supervisor, listens to a budget presentati­on during Tuesday morning’s Board of Supervisor­s meeting at the Kern County Administra­tive Building on Truxtun Avenue.
David Couch, Kern County District 4 supervisor, listens to a budget presentati­on during Tuesday morning’s Board of Supervisor­s meeting at the Kern County Administra­tive Building on Truxtun Avenue.

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