The Sun (San Bernardino)

Dishonest report attacks Prop. 13

- By Dan Walters Dan Walters is a columnist with CalMatters.

It’s amazing, in a way, that as California’s politics drifted leftward over the past several decades, the iconic symbol of its once-conservati­ve mien, Propositio­n 13, has remained intact.

Overwhelmi­ngly passed by voters in 1978, Propositio­n 13 froze property tax rates (1% plus bonds) and limited the growth of taxable values to 2% a year as long as property did not change hands. It also made it more difficult to enact new taxes of any kind, either by politician­s or voters.

Like all tax policies, Propositio­n 13’s provisions were arbitrary. With property tax bills soaring at the time due to high inflation, anti-tax gadflies Howard Jarvis and Paul Gann saw an opportunit­y and took it, overcoming fierce opposition from leaders of both political parties and those who disliked the notion of tax and spending limits.

The state’s leftward turn in the last quarter-century has spawned new efforts by those who detest Propositio­n 13 — public employee unions and other advocates of additional spending — to modify or repeal it, but so far they have been unsuccessf­ul.

Opponents believed that the most salable change would be to remove property tax limits on commercial property, while leaving them in place for houses and other residentia­l property. They chose 2020’s presidenti­al election, with an anticipate­d heavy turnout of anti-Donald Trump Democratic voters, as the most favorable venue. However, they couldn’t make the sale for a “split roll” and Propositio­n 15 was defeated, albeit not by a wide margin.

So what’s next in the perpetual battle over Propositio­n 13?

Last month, some left-ofcenter academics ginned up a new study framing Propositio­n 13 as a racist tool because White and Asian homeowners allegedly receive disproport­ionately high benefits from its limits vs. Black and Latino California­ns. “Generation­s of California­ns have been harmed by this policy — especially Black and Latino California­ns, those with lower incomes, and those with less property wealth,” the study declares. “The policy has benefited older generation­s of California­ns at the expense of those who have followed.”

The income and wealth disparitie­s among California­ns are well-known and regrettabl­e but they did not stem from Propositio­n 13, as the study, conducted for and released by the Berkeley-based Opportunit­y Institute, alleges. The study essentiall­y catalogs a bunch of social ills that emerged after Propositio­n 13’s passage and attempts to tie them to the measure — guilt by chronologi­cal associatio­n, one could say. But the effort is undercut by one revealing paragraph: “We find that housingwea­lth disparitie­s have widened. Although we cannot causally connect these patterns to Propositio­n 13, they nonetheles­s paint a troubling picture of disparitie­s that undercut California’s values related to equal opportunit­y for all.

So on one hand it blames Propositio­n 13 for disparitie­s and on the other says it “cannot causally connect” them to Propositio­n 13. That qualifies as intellectu­al dishonesty — starting with a conclusion and then cherry-picking data to make its case.

The study concludes that “scholars, public finance experts, local leaders, and movement builders should collective­ly determine what it will take to overcome political and taxpayer resistance to changing Propositio­n 13 and other policies that constrain taxation and budgetary decision-making in California.”

That statement is also revealing. The study’s real goal is getting more tax money to spend, not righting some moral wrong that it cannot convincing­ly prove.

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