Porterville Recorder

California voters reject tax on rich for more electric cars

- By KATHLEEN RONAYNE

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — California’s wealthiest residents won’t see a tax increase after voters rejected a measure Tuesday that would have boosted rates on incomes above $2 million to help put more electric cars on the roads.

Propositio­n 30’s defeat marks a win for Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom, who campaigned against it despite his administra­tion’s moves to ban the sale of most new gas-powered cars next decade. He branded it a taxpayer-funded giveaway to rideshare companies, which under California regulation­s must ensure nearly all trips booked through their services are zero-emission by 2030. The rideshare company Lyft supplied most of the “yes” campaign’s funding.

“California voters decisively rejected this poorly crafted and unnecessar­y tax hike,” the “no” campaign said in a statement. “The fact is Propositio­n 30 was a solution to an issue the state is already addressing.”

Newsom, who handily won a second term, did not immediatel­y comment on the measure’s defeat.

The measure would have leveed a 1.75% tax on incomes above $2 million. That’s estimated to be fewer than 43,000 taxpayers in a state of nearly 40 million people. Even without that, California’s highest earners pay the highest income tax in the country, at more than 13%.

Most of the money would have gone to programs that help people buy electric cars or install more chargers, with some money dedicated to lower-income people. One-fifth of the money would have gone toward boosting resources for fighting wildfires, another major source of emissions in the state.

Transporta­tion is the largest source of planetwarm­ing emissions in California, accounting for roughly 40%. That’s not just from passenger cars, it also includes delivery trucks, ships, public transit and other forms of transporta­tion.

Wildfires, meanwhile, are spewing tens of millions of tons of carbon into the air as they burn up California’s forests, threatenin­g to set back California’s progress on its climate goals.

“With Prop 30, we had a chance to create a healthier, safer future for our state and our families — one with less air pollution, fewer catastroph­ic wildfires and an opportunit­y to save our state from some of the most devastatin­g impacts of climate change,”

the “yes” campaign said in a statement.

At Newsom’s direction earlier this year, California air regulators adopted a ban on the sale of new cars that run solely on gasoline starting in 2035. Car companies would have to sell cars powered by hydrogen, batteries, or hybrids that run on a gas-battery combo. People could still drive their gas-powered

cars or buy used ones.

Newsom noted his administra­tion has already dedicated $10 billion over the next six years to boost electric transporta­tion.

Backers of the measure, including most major environmen­tal groups, said the state needs a dedicated, robust source of funding to set up infrastruc­ture that can handle more plug-in

cars and to help California­ns of all income levels to buy them.

This year, about 18% of new car sales have been for fully electric or hybrid cars, according to Newsom’s office.

That will have to double by 2026 to meet new state mandates for car sales.

By 2045, the state wants to be “carbon neutral,” which means it

wouldn’t put any emissions into the air that it can’t remove. That will require a massive reduction in emissions from vehicles and other sources, as well as the build up of technologi­es that can capture carbon as it’s emitted or pull it from the air, then store it undergroun­d.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY RICH PEDRONCELL­I ?? Gov. Gavin Newsom, center, is flanked by state lawmakers while discussing the package of legislatio­n he signed that accelerate­s the climate goals of the nation’s most populous state, at Mare Island in Vallejo, Calif., Friday, Sept. 16, 2022. Newsom opposes Propositio­n 30, which would raise taxes on people making more that $2 million to pay for electric vehicle infrastruc­ture and firefight resources.
AP PHOTO BY RICH PEDRONCELL­I Gov. Gavin Newsom, center, is flanked by state lawmakers while discussing the package of legislatio­n he signed that accelerate­s the climate goals of the nation’s most populous state, at Mare Island in Vallejo, Calif., Friday, Sept. 16, 2022. Newsom opposes Propositio­n 30, which would raise taxes on people making more that $2 million to pay for electric vehicle infrastruc­ture and firefight resources.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States