The Mercury News

Bill would raise tax rate on big businesses

AB 71 would generate $2.4 billion a year for homelessne­ss programs

- By Marisa Kendall mkendall@bayareanew­sgroup.com

New, higher tax rates on large corporatio­ns doing business in California would raise $2.4 billion to fund state homeless programs under a bill announced Wednesday.

Assembly Bill 71, known as the Bring California Home Act, would raise tax rates on businesses with annual profits of more than $5 million. The state would use that money to prevent families from falling into homelessne­ss, expand emergency shelters, create more affordable housing and fund services including employment support for unhoused people.

As California’s homelessne­ss crisis continues to grow, and experts worry the COVID-19-decimated economy will force many more people onto the streets, proponents of

the new bill say AB 71 gives the state a fighting chance at changing that narrative. At least 151,000 California­ns have no place to call home.

“AB 71 is the first proposal that is comprehens­ive enough and at scale to actually permanentl­y end homelessne­ss,” Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf, whose city is struggling with an explosion of tent and vehicle encampment­s, said during a media briefing Wednesday.

But critics say now — during the midst of an economical­ly devastatin­g pandemic — is not the time to raise taxes on businesses.

“If we’re looking longterm at California’s economic and fiscal viability, this couldn’t be a worse tactic,” said Jim Wunderman, president and CEO of the pro-business Bay Area Council. California’s tax rates for business are already high, he said, and many business leaders he talks to are considerin­g leaving the state, he said.

Several major Silicon Valley companies already have announced they’re relocating, including Oracle and Hewlett Packard Enterprise.

But advocates say the tax hikes are necessary. For years, California has been attempting to solve the housing crisis piecemeal, without a long-term strategy. When Gov. Gavin Newsom proposed his 2021 budget last week, offering $1.75 billion in new investment­s for homeless housing and services, experts in the field applauded the one-time grants but criticized the budget’s failure to establish a permanent funding source.

Last year, a group of legislator­s tried and failed to pass AB 3300, which would have funneled an annual $2 billion in general funds toward solving the state’s homelessne­ss crisis.

“We know that there is a coalition that wants to do this, but each year if we have to fight a budget battle with insufficie­nt dollars and insecure dollars, not knowing where they come from, it makes this work close to impossible,” Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti said during the briefing.

AB 71, co-sponsored by

Assembly members David Chiu, D-San Francisco; Luz Rivas, D-Arleta; and Richard Bloom, D-Santa Monica, would change that. The bill would increase corporate tax rates for large businesses from 8.84% to 9.6% — bringing them back to where they were in 1980. For financial institutio­ns, tax rates would increase from 10.84% to 11.6%.

It also would increase taxes on profits companies earn overseas, which were reduced by President Donald Trump’s 2017 tax cuts.

The changes would affect all large corporatio­ns that do business in California — not just those headquarte­red here.

Housing California estimates the tax increases would affect about 2,285 companies.

“We don’t want to do something that would chase business out of California,” Garcetti said, pointing out that having encampment­s on their doorstep is worse for businesses than increased taxes. “This is thoughtful­ly done so we can see businesses thrive.”

Large companies based in San Francisco already pay an extra tax toward the city’s homelessne­ss programs.

Statewide, the money from AB 71 would help an estimated 28,000 people on the brink of homelessne­ss stay housed, 25,000 unhoused people and families access safe emergency shelter and 43,000 people move into permanent housing, according to the lawmakers.

It could help an additional 50,000 homeless people get job training and other services.

“This measure, AB 71, is not just about money. It’s about strategy,” Chiu said during Wednesday’s briefing. “It’s about a road map and how we address homelessne­ss in a meaningful way, which frankly is a new approach for our state to take.”

That strategy includes accountabi­lity, Chiu said. To access the funding, the state first must analyze its homelessne­ss spending and identify gaps and holes. Every city and county that receives money under the bill must report on exactly how the funds are used, how many people it serves and how it is reducing homelessne­ss. The state will conduct regular audits and local government­s will be evaluated on such progress.

In Oakland, Schaaf would use her city’s allocation under AB 71 to focus on preventing homelessne­ss and building permanent, affordable housing. The bill also requires 10% of its funds go toward helping homeless youth, which Schaaf said would allow Oakland to improve its shelter options for young people.

AB 71 is in the Housing and Community Developmen­t Committee, where Chiu, the committee chair, expects it will come up for a vote in March.

“If this Legislatur­e does not have the courage to adopt what we have all agreed is a long-term, sustainabl­e end to homelessne­ss,” Schaaf said, “not this one time just if there’s a surplus in the budget haphazard set of investment­s, I believe that the concepts behind AB 71 may be worth taking directly to California’s voters.”

But the Bay Area Council will be fighting it every step of the way.

“We’re going to do everything we can to defeat this legislatio­n,” Wunderman said, “and to try to bring some sense to the conversati­on in Sacramento.”

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