The Fresno Bee (Sunday)

Business groups, lawmakers battle over measure on taxes

- BY DAN WALTERS CalMatters

California­ns coughed up many billions of dollars this month when they filed their federal and state income tax returns and paid the second installmen­t on their property taxes.

How much? Annually, individual Calicapita fornians and California-based businesses pay roughly a halftrilli­on dollars in federal taxes – personal income taxes, Social Security and Medicare payroll taxes, primarily. They also pay at least another half-trillion dollars to state and local government­s – personal income taxes, sales taxes and property taxes, primarily.

By any measure, California is a high-tax state.

The Tax Foundation, a Washington-based organizati­on that tracks nationwide tax trends, recently reported that California’s state government levies the nation’s highest taxes per at $7,200, which translates into about $280 billion a year. As a portion of California’s $4 trillion economy, its $540 billion in state and local taxes rank fifth highest at 13.5%.

These numbers – and the state’s multibilli­on-dollar budget deficit – set the stage for a monumental, multi-front war over taxation this year, including three statewide ballot measures that could dramatical­ly alter the politics of taxation.

The Democratic Party’s progressiv­e wing, strongly backed by public employee unions, contends that new taxes are needed to maintain vital welfare, education and health care services. However, Gov. Gavin Newsom has publicly rejected tax hikes and proposes a budget that closes the deficit, at least on paper, with spending deferrals, bookkeepin­g maneuvers, loans and an injection of money from the state’s rainy day reserves.

Two years ago, California’s two most authoritat­ive polling organizati­ons, UC Berkeley’s Institute of Government­al Studies and the Public Policy Institute of California, asked residents about their tax burdens, and both found increasing discontent, in part because they were feeling the pinch of other costs of living.

The polling punctuated voters’ rejection of a tax increase measure on the 2020 ballot that would have changed Propositio­n 13, the iconic property tax limit approved by voters in 1978, by increasing taxes on commercial property.

Hoping to leverage popular resistance to tax increases, business and anti-tax groups led by the California Business Roundtable have qualified a measure for the November ballot that would make raising state and local taxes much more difficult.

If passed, the measure would require two-thirds votes for any local tax increases, effectivel­y overturnin­g a state Supreme Court ruling that local taxes proposed via initiative require only simple majority votes. It also would subject any state tax increases to voter approval as

well as two-thirds votes by the Legislatur­e.

The measure’s qualificat­ion has touched off a legal and political war with Newsom, the Legislatur­e and pro-tax interests, such as unions. Newsom and the Legislatur­e have filed suit, hoping to persuade the state Supreme Court that the measure is a constituti­onal revision, rather than an amendment, and thereby cannot be enacted by initiative.

The contending interests have filed written arguments with the court, which has not formally decided whether to accept the case. If it does, it will have only a few months to declare whether or not the measure goes on the ballot. The Legislatur­e has also placed its own measure on the ballot that, if passed, would require the business tax limit measure itself to get two-thirds voter approval. And it passed another ballot measure to reduce vote margin for local tax and bond measures that increase spending on housing and infrastruc­ture to 55% from the current two-thirds, potentiall­y nullifying the Business Roundtable measure.

It’s a showdown that’s been building for nearly five decades, ever since Propositio­n 13 won approval. With countless billions of dollars at stake, hundreds of millions of dollars are likely to be spent for and against the three interrelat­ed measures.

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