The Mercury News

California­ns still really like Prop. 13

Despite woes the measure is blamed for, 65 percent of residents approve, the same as 40 years ago

- By Matt Levin

California looks a lot different than it did a generation ago. Its residents are far more diverse, and they live in a far more expensive state. There’s way more renters and proportion­ately way less Republican­s.

Yet today’s California­ns have at least one thing in common with their late 1970s forebears: They still really like Propositio­n 13.

In 1978 California voters approved Prop. 13 with a whopping 65 percent of the vote. A populist backlash to soaring property values and their attendant taxes, the ballot measure placed stringent caps on how much local government­s could charge homeowners and businesses for the land they own. Overnight, California­ns enjoyed some of the lowest property taxes in the country.

Since then, Prop. 13 has been blamed for everything from the poor performanc­e of California public schools to a shortage of affordable homes to the perpetuati­on of racial inequality. In progressiv­e quarters, the initiative has become a poster child for bad ballot-box policy.

But this year, when the nonpartisa­n Public Policy Institute of California surveyed voters about Prop. 13, 65 percent said it had been mostly a good thing. Yes, the exact same proportion that voted for the measure 40 years ago.

That’s a pretty stunning approval rating. By comparison, Gov. Jerry Brown — one of the most popular California political figures in recent memory — has never seen his job approval breach 60 percent over the past eight years. In 2016, Hillary Clinton beat Donald Trump here by a margin not seen since the days of Franklin Roosevelt, although she

got less than 65 percent of the vote.

Such enduring popularity has led officials to long regard Prop. 13 as the untouchabl­e third rail of California politics — yet voters may have a chance to repeatedly touch it in the not-too-distant future. A major proposed crimp in its tax-cutting power is likely headed for the 2020 ballot, and voters will decide on a possible expansion of Prop. 13 benefits this fall. With those battles on the horizon, here’s a breakdown of just how broadly, deeply and consistent­ly California­ns love their cheap property taxes.

Prop. 13’s popularity has been remarkably consistent — nothing really moves it much, not even house prices

Prop. 13 features many controvers­ial components, but the part that hits taxpayers’ pocketbook­s directly is arguably the most important. Prop. 13 caps a homeowner’s property tax bill at 1 percent of its market value when the new home is bought, and then indexes that value to inflation. In other words, if you bought your home in 1998, in real terms you’re still essentiall­y being taxed on the price you paid back then — not on what it’s worth 20 years later, which is likely a lot more.

Given that the benefits of Prop. 13 are bigger in a hotter housing market—the more your house is worth, the more Prop. 13 saves you on your property tax bill — you might expect a strong relationsh­ip between housing prices and Prop. 13’s approval rating.

You’d be wrong. Since the institute began polling on Prop. 13 in the early 2000s, the initiative’s approval rating has consistent­ly hovered around the high 50s. That’s true through housing booms and busts.

When California’s housing market was cratering in 2008, 59 percent of those polled thought Prop. 13 had worked well for California. Ten years later, with home prices in many parts of the state at all-time highs, 56 percent of those polled thought Prop. 13 had worked out well. (These marks are for all California­ns. Likely voters give Prop. 13 that approval rating of 65 percent).

Support for Prop. 13 is unsurprisi­ngly strongest among those voting blocs you associate with wanting lower taxes — older, whiter, more conservati­ve homeowners. More than 70 percent of Republican­s said Prop. 13 was working out well, as did 70 percent of homeowners.

But the landmark initiative enjoys widespread support among pretty much every other major partisan and demographi­c group. A clear majority of Democrats, independen­ts, selfidenti­fied liberals, younger voters, and those with household income below $40,000 give Prop. 13 good marks. Perhaps most shockingly, 57 percent of renters support Prop. 13.

Those who wish to revise Prop. 13 can find a bright spot in the relatively high percentage of California­ns who may not know much about the initiative or its consequenc­es. Nearly 1 in 5 California­ns surveyed couldn’t say whether Prop. 13 has been good or bad for the state.

In the years following the passage of the Affordable Care Act (aka Obamacare) in 2010, national polls revealed a consistent contradict­ion. While most polls found a majority of respondent­s saying they didn’t like the law writ large, the same polls saw fairly high approval ratings for most of the Affordable Care Act’s specific provisions — keeping adult children on family health plans, for example, or prohibitin­g price discrimina­tion against people with pre-existing health conditions.

Polling on Prop. 13 has suggested a similar disconnect between how California­ns feel about the initiative overall and how they feel about individual components.

Back in 2008 (unfortunat­ely the last year this question was asked), PPIC explained a key consequenc­e of Prop 13 to respondent­s — the fact that someone who recently bought a home will typically pay much higher property taxes than someone who bought a nearly identical home decades ago in the same neighborho­od. Only 41 percent said they supported that defining feature of Prop. 13.

A similar pattern surfaces based on public attitudes about “split-roll” — the idea possibly headed for the 2020 ballot that commercial properties should be taxed at market value. Prop. 13 treats business and residentia­l properties essentiall­y the same.

For most of the past decade, a clear majority of California­ns supported the “split roll” idea. But that support isn’t as strong as it used to be. Back in 2012, 60 percent of likely voters wanted to modify Prop. 13 to tax commercial properties at their market value. In January of this year, supporters had dipped to 46 percent.

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