Yuma Sun

Education tax proposal will be on Ariz. ballot after all

- BY HOWARD FISCHER

– Arizonans will get a chance to decide if they want to hike taxes on the state’s most wealthy to help fund K-12 education.

In a brief order, the justices concluded that the 100-word descriptio­n on petitions for the Invest in Education measure “did not create a significan­t danger of confusion or unfairness.’’ The unanimous decision reverses the decision by Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Christophe­r Coury who concluded that backers of the measure “circulated an opaque Trojan horse of a 100-word descriptio­n, concealing principal provisions of the initiative.’’

The high court also found that various methods of providing bonuses and incentives to paid petition circulator­s did not run afoul of state laws which prohibit paying people on a per-signature basis.

Backers said they submitted more than 435,000 signatures. A preliminar­y screening by the secretary of state reduced that to 377,456; individual counties are still checking random samples to ensure that at least 237,645 of these are valid.

Wednesday’s ruling is most immediatel­y a setback for the Arizona Chamber of Commerce and Industry which financed the successful legal bid to keep a nearly identical measure from going to voters two years ago. That means the business group and its allies now will be forced to make their arguments to voters that a tax hike – even one that affects only the top 4 percent of wage earners – is bad public policy.

But proponents contend that the current tax structure, including income, sales and property taxes, actually benefits the richest Arizonans, saying they pay proportion­ately less of their income to support government and public education than those at the bottom.

Arizona has a tiered income tax structure.

Individual­s pay 2.59% on the first $26,500 of taxable income, 3.34% on everything between that and $53,000, 4.17% on income of $53,001 through $159,000, and 4.5% on everything over that.

Propositio­n 210 would add a 3.5% surcharge on all incomes above $250,000 for individual­s and $500,000 for couples.

So, a single person with taxable income of $350,000 a year would pay 8% -- the 4.5% rate and the 3.5% surcharge -- only on $100,000; taxes for everything below that $250,000 cutoff would remain the same.

And anyone whose income did not reach the threshold would be unaffected.

Proponents say that could raise $940 million a year; legislativ­e budget staffers put the anticipate­d take at $827 million for the first year.

Of whatever is collected, 50% is earmarked for hiring and raises for teachers and classroom support personnel, with 25% for other support personnel and 10%for programs to attract and retain new teachers.

Another 12% is for career and workforce training programs, with the balance set aside for the Arizona Teachers Academy which provides free college tuition to those who agree to go into teaching.

Jaime Molera who chairs the chamber-financed opposition group, called Wednesday’s ruling a “disappoint­ment,’’ saying he still believes that proponents “deceived voters with a flawed and misleading 100-word petition summary.’’ But he said the ultimate appeal will be in the “court of public opinion.’’

Molera is focusing on the fact that, for top wage earners, the tax rate would go from 4.5% to 8%, a 77.7 %increase. And he argued that will create a “damaging’’ increase to small businesses.

That is based on the argument that some businesses are set up not as regular corporatio­ns but in other forms, where the company pays no income tax and the earnings pass through to the owners who report it on their personal tax forms.

But David Lujan, who helped craft the initiative, said that is leaving out one crucial component.

He said owners do not pay taxes on the gross proceeds of their businesses but only on the net profits, after paying employees, rent and other operating costs. And Lujan, director of the Arizona Center for Economic Progress, said those earning more than $250,000 a year as individual­s or $500,000 as couples should contribute more to funding K-12 education, regardless of the source of their income.

Amber Gould, who chairs the Invest in Education campaign, called Wednesday’s ruling “an important victory because it gives millions of Arizona voters the opportunit­y to put more resources into our schools.’’ And she said that focusing the burden on the most wealthy ensures that it will not impact working and middle-class families who have been impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic.

One core issue of the campaign will be whether the state is providing enough money to properly finance the K-12 system.

Molera, for his part, said the state was able to implement a 20% pay hike over four years for public school teachers, all without having to increase the tax burden.

That still leaves the question of whether the state is keeping pace.

Legislativ­e budget staffers say the state is now providing $5,762 per student, compared with $4,163 in 2001. But the same analysis shows that, after adjustment­s for inflation, state aid now is actually 4.5% less than what it was in 2001.

Gov. Doug Ducey already has staked out a position against the tax hike on the most wealthy.

“That’s a whopping amount, especially considerin­g that our economy is recovering from recession and high unemployme­nt,’’ he wrote in a statement against the measure.

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