The Mercury News

Democrats have protection plan

IRS warns it will look at taxpayers in California more critically if move passes

- By Antoinette Siu CALmatters

As President Trump’s massive tax overhaul takes effect, Democratic state lawmakers are refining and advancing a plan they insist will protect California taxpayers from higher federal tax bills.

The federal government last year set a cap of $10,000 on state and local property tax deductions, a deduction about a third of what California­ns claim. Taxpayers in states with high taxes and property values are likely to get hit hardest from the loss of these deductions, which high earners rely on to reduce the taxes they owe Uncle Sam.

Lambasting the move by Trump and the GOP-controlled Congress as an attack on hightaxed blue states, California Democrats hit upon a supposed workaround to the deduction limit. Under the pending legislatio­n, the state would change its laws, the theory goes, to offer California­ns the option of making a donation to a state or local government or nonprofit that the state would deem as “charitable,” thus magically preserving the ability of taxpayers to deduct it on their federal and state taxes.

Sounds like a way to boost state funding, but the government won’t actually keep all the money. The state would offset what it takes in by giving back to taxpayers 80 to 85 percent of contributi­ons via a tax credit.

A clever attempt to thwart the Trump administra­tion’s tax plan by gaming the tax credit

programs? Maybe. But it might not work.

The IRS in May signaled its intent to look more critically at such a workaround; a vague warning, but one that has prompted at least one of the sponsors of the California legislatio­n to scale back its scope. But while conservati­ves describe the California effort as laughable and doomed, some tax and policy experts still insist it can prevail.

It’s what many states — including Trump-supporting red ones — already have been using to fund some of their public programs, said Kirk Stark, a tax law and policy professor at UCLA. In 2013, he co-authored a report outlining how states could capture federal money by creating state tax credits for contributi­ons.

“The big question now is whether the IRS will attempt to undercut the tax advantages of all of these programs, which would be politicall­y unpopular but

somewhat more defensible legally, or if they’ll somehow try to nix only the newer blue state programs, which would be more palatable for advocates of red state programs but would be legally dubious,” Stark said.

Two related bills aimed at a deduction workaround have passed their chambers of origin, authored by Sen. Kevin de León of Los Angeles and Assemblywo­man Autumn Burke of Marina del Rey.

Burke’s proposal would allow taxpayers to give to nonprofits and public schools and districts.

De León’s would allow the state to accept contributi­ons for government programs. Both bills must pass the full Legislatur­e by Aug. 31 in order to reach Democratic Gov. Jerry Brown.

By amendment, de León’s bill has been narrowed to direct the funds to public schools and community colleges as opposed to a state-run fund that would disperse the money more widely; interprete­d as a way of upping the legislatio­n’s chances of surviving legal challenges.

More than a dozen states, including Arkansas and Maryland, already use a similar mechanism to help underwrite private school vouchers.

If passed, the duo of bills could theoretica­lly sidestep the federal change by allowing California­ns to make donations to the state after they hit the limit, and write those state donations off as a charitable contributi­on. But whether the IRS would accept the contributi­on and how many taxpayers will actually take advantage of the credits remains to be seen.

In 2015, California­ns deducting state and local taxes claimed an average of $18,438 per taxpayer, according to The Pew Charitable Trusts. Other states with high average deductions include New York, Connecticu­t and New Jersey.

“It will cost California­ns billions of dollars,” de León said of the federal tax overhaul in a video introducin­g his bill. “We shouldn’t be subject to double taxation to pad the profits of corporatio­ns and hedge fund managers.”

In April, New York became the first state to enact legislatio­n that will create a state-run charitable trust to accept contributi­ons and offer tax credits. Donors get a credit equal to 85 percent of the gift and funds go toward health care, education and nonprofits. New Jersey and Connecticu­t have also passed similar legislatio­n.

In May, the IRS said it planned to issue guidance on the issue and warned that taxpayers would be making these contributi­ons at their own risk: “Despite these state efforts to circumvent the new statutory limitation on state and local tax deductions, taxpayers should be mindful that federal law controls the proper characteri­zation of payments for federal income tax purposes.”

And yet, Stark contended, the IRS hasn’t “said anything of substance on the issue yet.”

California’s Republican lawmakers said it’s obvious that the IRS will reject such state maneuvers. Sen. John Moorlach, a Costa Mesa Republican and partner in an accounting

firm, called de León’s bill “too cute” to succeed.

Other critics contend the real problem is that California’s Democratic lawmakers have saddled state residents with state and local taxes that are too high, and with a tax structure that relies heavily on the personal income tax. Jared Walczak, policy analyst at Washington, D.C.based think tank the Tax Foundation, calls California’s attempts a “legally dubious” strategy that the IRS will fight.

“California policymake­rs could find themselves encouragin­g taxpayers to pursue a strategy that backfires on them, that ultimately results in them paying more taxes and potentiall­y facing IRS penalties,” Walczak said.

The IRS can react in one of two ways, he said. Either it will distinguis­h between tax credit programs that already exist in certain states from these pending ones, or it can create a rule that will reduce the charitable deduction amounts taxpayers can receive. Existing statutes and case law are on the IRS’ side, he said.

“Whatever the motivation­s behind these, it’s pretty clear the IRS is disallowin­g them. So states should hit pause and wait for that guidance before they move forward,” Walczak said.

Jon Coupal, president of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Associatio­n, also points to California’s “dysfunctio­nal tax code” in the debate. Legislator­s should, he said, instead try to flatten out the income tax rate to address the state’s revenue volatility.

The IRS did not respond to inquiries about when its regulation will come, but Charles Rettig, the nominee for IRS commission­er, said in June at his confirmati­on hearing he is aware of the uncertaint­y concerning states and taxpayers. He did not give a position on the matter but said he “looks forward to a resolution that, universall­y, people could say is the right resolution.”

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