Los Angeles Times

Vote no on Propositio­n 30

- See all of our endorsemen­ts online at latimes.com/endorsemen­ts.

There is probably no climate program in California that is more urgent than the transition to zero-emission vehicles. Transporta­tion is the state’s largest source of planet-warming and health-damaging emissions by far.

We will not meet our obligation­s to reduce pollution unless we move quickly to build the charging infrastruc­ture and replace the tens of millions of gas- and dieselfuel­ed vehicles on our roads with electric cars, trucks, buses and other zero-emission models. But they remain too expensive and out of reach for many residents and businesses.

The question, then, is how to pay for this estimated $150-billion clean-vehicle transforma­tion?

Propositio­n 30 on the November ballot would do it by raising taxes on the rich to pay for electric vehicles and charging stations. While it may be tempting to put the burden on the rich — again — for one of California’s top priorities, voters should say no. Propositio­n 30 has too many flaws. It’s bankrolled by one special interest and it doubles down on an unsustaina­ble funding model.

Propositio­n 30 would increase the tax on personal incomes above $2 million a year — the top 0.2% of taxpayers — by 1.75% and raise $80 billion over the next 20 years to subsidize zeroemissi­on vehicles and charging stations, and help pay for wildfire response.

California already has the highest state income tax rate, at 13.3%, and voters have already raised taxes on the wealthiest residents to pay for education and mental health services. Propositio­n 30 would push the top-earner rate to 15.05%, which is much higher than other states, most of which have income tax rates in the single digits.

The state’s dependence on wealthy residents’ income, which is often tied to investment­s and the stock market, creates tremendous instabilit­y in the budget. Revenues sharply rise and fall with Wall Street, leading to feast-or-famine cycles. It doesn’t make sense to pin another priority on such a volatile funding stream. Propositio­n 30 could also drive investors who fund highrisk technologi­es out of the state.

Propositio­n 30 is backed by environmen­tal and public health groups, unions representi­ng firefighte­rs and electrical workers, and clean transporta­tion businesses.

But the Yes on 30 campaign is funded almost entirely by Lyft, which has spent $25 million in support of the measure. That has been seized on by opponents, including Gov. Gavin Newsom, who has called Propositio­n 30 “one company’s cynical scheme to grab a huge taxpayer-funded subsidy.”

The increase in vehicle incentive funds would help Lyft and other ride-hailing firms comply with a new state requiremen­t that 90% of their vehicle miles are electric by 2030. This is the second time Lyft has spent big at the ballot box to shape California policy to its own advantage, and that’s troubling. The company spent nearly $50 million in 2020 to pass Propositio­n 22 to override state law and keep its drivers as independen­t contractor­s, rather than employees.

Still, the state does need to identify a long-term funding source for the transition to clean cars. California’s existing clean-vehicle rebate programs have suffered from insufficie­nt and inconsiste­nt funding, with applicants facing long wait lists, money that runs out too quickly and other discouragi­ng obstacles.

State spending on clean transporta­tion incentives has averaged about half a billion dollars a year since 2013, but the annual allocation­s have swung dramatical­ly up and down, with lawmakers budgeting only $29 million in 2020, followed by $1.5 billion last year and $2.6 billion this year.

Newsom has pledged $10 billion over six years to subsidize the purchase of zeroemissi­on cars and trucks and the developmen­t of charging stations. President Biden’s infrastruc­ture law included $7.5 billion nationwide to build out a national charging network, and the Inflation Reduction Act includes up to $7,500 in tax credits for the purchase of a new electric vehicle. The Newsom administra­tion is betting that those funding infusions, along with regulation­s, will kick-start the market and bring down EV prices to match internal combustion-engine vehicles. There will still need to be funding to help low-income California­ns and small businesses make the switch.

There’s some concern that Propositio­n 30, which would generate between $3 billion and $5 billion a year, could send EV prices higher. Because of the supply shortages affecting the car market recently, some economists warn that an influx of additional vehicle incentive money could be pocketed by car dealers and manufactur­ers through higher prices. Proponents argue those concerns should fade as automakers ramp up production to comply with requiremen­ts that manufactur­ers sell increasing percentage­s of zero-emission vehicles, starting with 35% in 2026 of new car sales until they reach 100% by 2035.

Propositio­n 30 would also lock in a tax hike and a funding scheme for 20 years with little flexibilit­y to cancel or make significan­t changes to the program to meet evolving needs. What will happen when there is another funding priority in the next decade or two?

Yes, California needs more money to accelerate the transition to zero-emission transporta­tion. But Propositio­n 30 isn’t the right way to do it.

While it may be tempting to put the burden on the rich — again — for one of California’s top priorities, voters should say no.

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