Los Angeles Times

Myth of fleeing millionair­es

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Re “Prop. 30 would push our tax rate from bad to ugly,” column, Aug. 18

George Skelton’s suggestion that Propositio­n 30’s plan to fund climate action with a small tax increase on the richest California­ns may contribute to them “fleeing the state” is baseless, and the actual data tell a different story.

The No. 1 cause of California’s population decline is the cost of housing, and people exiting the state are in fact more likely to have a lower income level than those moving to it. Since 2010, our millionair­e population has grown by more than 50%.

Propositio­n 30 will provide rebates for zero-emission vehicles — including light-duty cars, long-haul trucks and other vehicles now powered by diesel engines — expand their charging network, and reduce the impact of wildfires. According to polling, California­ns eager for action on climate change support the initiative nearly 2 to 1.

Skelton also calls Propositio­n 30 the product of special interests, but the 38 million out of 39 million California­ns who breathe toxic air are not special interests. They are every one of us.

Denny Zane Santa Monica The writer is founder and policy director of the public transit advocacy group Move L.A., which helped develop Propositio­n 30.

While it is true that Texas has no income tax, its average effective property tax rate is more than twice that of California.

So, for many middle-income property owners, the small savings from not paying income tax are greatly exceeded by property taxes.

Darrel Miller

Santa Monica

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