Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Government over the taxpayers

A property tax proposal and public employees in the Legislatur­e

- By Robert Fellner Special to the Review-journal Robert Fellner is vice president of the Nevada Policy Research Institute.

THE legislativ­e proposal to raise Nevadans’ property taxes highlights why government employees should not be permitted to serve as state legislator­s.

Introduced by state Sen. Dina Neal, D-north Las Vegas, Senate Bill 96 would mandate that residentia­l property taxes increase 3 percent every year. Current law protects

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residents from the relentless increases that Sen. Neal would like to see implemente­d, but only in those rare years when property values are either declining or growing at a rate of 3 percent or less and inflation is atypically low.

Currently, property taxes increase by an amount equal to either the growth rate of assessed property values or an amount double the rate of inflation, whichever is greater. The law also imposes a 3 percent cap on the annual increase of property taxes for certain single-family residences. Because the formula almost always produces a value greater than 3 percent, property taxes have increased 3 percent every year since 2006, except for 2017 and 2018. In those two years, declining property values and low inflation meant that property taxes in Clark County increased by only 0.2 percent and 2.6 percent, respective­ly.

Yet, property values fell by 2.7 percent and 2.8 percent in those two years, meaning that homeowners were still hit with higher tax bills even as their property value declined and inflation remained low.

The 2018 year is particular­ly instructiv­e, as it demonstrat­es how the current formula still overwhelmi­ngly benefits government at the expense of taxpayers.

In that year, as housing prices fell 2.8 percent and inflation grew by 1.3 percent, Clark County taxpayers still saw a 2.6 percent increase in their property tax bills. Yet Sen. Neal apparently thinks that disparity isn’t large enough and would have liked homeowners to have faced a 3 percent increase in their tax bill in both of those years. But why should Nevadans be forced to pay higher taxes when their property values are declining and inflation is low?

SB96 benefits government agencies by allowing them to take more money from taxpayers each year, even during periods of economic recessions when property values are falling and Nevadans are struggling. Sen. Neal’s bill, therefore, is a straightfo­rward question of deciding whose interests matter more: taxpayers or government agencies.

Most would agree that allowing the government to make that decision would be incompatib­le with our system of representa­tive government and the concept of a free society. Indeed, we are told that our system of government is legitimate because it is the people, through their elected representa­tives in the Legislatur­e, who retain control and authority over the government.

But what if the Legislatur­e were comprised of government employees who would profession­ally benefit from making SB96 law? Would that vote reflect the will of the people, or would it reflect the priorities of government?

It was precisely to ensure that the people remain sovereign and that the government serves them, rather than the other way around, that the framers of the Nevada Constituti­on forbade legislator­s from exercising “any” non-legislativ­e function of government. The natural implicatio­n of this separation of powers clause is that those — such as government employees — tasked with non-legislativ­e government­al functions cannot simultaneo­usly serve as the state legislator­s tasked with overseeing and regulating the government.

Unfortunat­ely, this prohibitio­n on legislativ­e dual service has never received judicial enforcemen­t. Consequent­ly, there are today several government employees serving as legislator­s, including several government employees whose employers would directly benefit if SB96 becomes law.

As a taxpayer advocate, Nevada Policy believes that SB96 is bad policy. We understand that government agencies and their profession­al lobbyists feel differentl­y, of course. And they have every right to make their case for higher taxes to the people’s representa­tives in the Legislatur­e. But it is fundamenta­l to our system of representa­tive government, and a free society generally, that those legislator­s making the final call serve the people, not government. And that simply cannot happen if government employees are permitted to simultaneo­usly serve as state legislator­s.

It is for this reason that Nevada Policy has filed a lawsuit asking the Nevada Supreme Court to enforce Nevada’s constituti­onal separation of powers doctrine. In construing their near identical provisions, the state supreme courts of Oregon and Indiana both held that their state’s respective separation of powers doctrine barred government employees from serving as state legislator­s. For our system of representa­tive government to maintain its legitimacy, it is imperative that, when hearing our case later this year, the Nevada Supreme Court does the same.

 ?? Ellen Schmidt Las Vegas Review-journal ?? The Nevada Legislatur­e building in Carson City. A pending proposal would hike residentia­l property taxes by 3 percent a year.
Ellen Schmidt Las Vegas Review-journal The Nevada Legislatur­e building in Carson City. A pending proposal would hike residentia­l property taxes by 3 percent a year.

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