The Mercury News

Is California bond issue rejection a sign taxpayers are fed up with high taxes?

- By Dan Walters Calmatters Dan Walters is a Calmatters columnist.

Ballots from last week’s election are still being counted and it will be weeks before the final numbers are tallied, but with that caveat, it appears that a $15 billion school bond issue — the only statewide ballot measure — has been decisively rejected.

That’s something of a shock. Public schools are popular in California and school bond issues generally enjoy strong voter support.

It’s also a downer for Gov. Gavin Newsom, who had been a principal drafter of the measure, moved it through the Legislatur­e and both raised money and personally campaigned for its passage.

Finally, it’s a setback for housing developers who would have benefited from a provision exempting them from some local school impact fees.

It’s possible, even probable, that the bond issue’s ballot designatio­n, Propositio­n 13, contribute­d to its demise. A 1978 measure, also Propositio­n 13, is one of the most iconic political events in California history, sharply curtailing the growth of property taxes.

Some voters clearly thought that 2020’s Propositio­n 13 would somehow affect 1978’s Propositio­n 13. Although inaccurate, that notion was probably sparked by campaignin­g on another ballot measure expected to appear on the November ballot that would allow higher levies on commercial property. Opponents warn that it could be the first step toward repeal of 1978’s Propositio­n 13, so it’s understand­able that some voters would be confused.

Neverthele­ss, the apparent defeat of the school bond may be much more than a case of mistaken identity. It could reflect rising resistance to new borrowing and new taxes.

The Public Policy Institute of California’s recent polling of voters has found that “At least a majority — but never more than twothirds — in every place in the state believes taxes are too high (and) overall, 58% hold this opinion.”

Last year, Policy Analysis for California Education, a university consortium devoted to research on education issues, issued a study on the attitudes of very affluent and very liberal voters in Marin County.

It noted that after years of routine voter approval of parcel taxes for local schools, “In 2016, something shifted. Voters in upscale Kentfield rejected the renewal of a previously popular school parcel tax, which had most recently passed with 72% of the vote in 2008. In nearby Mill Valley, a parcel tax that made up approximat­ely 20% of the district’s budget passed by fewer than 25 votes, even though it had passed with 74% of the vote in 2008.”

PACE said that many Marin voters “had become concerned that some local leaders were choosing to increase taxes rather than grapple with necessary fiscal reforms” and asked a pithy question: “If the highly progressiv­e residents of Marin County have become less willing to financiall­y support their local school districts, what does this mean for less wealthy regions of California?”

Last year, voters in Los Angeles, who are much less affluent than those in Marin, stunned local political leaders by overwhelmi­ngly rejecting a $500 million per year increase in parcel taxes — a form of property tax not limited by 1978’s Propositio­n 13 — for the Los Angeles Unified School District.

Meanwhile, the California Taxpayers Associatio­n calculates that at least half of 236 local tax measures are headed to defeat.

Given voter rejection of Measure EE in Los Angeles and now the apparent loss by Newsom’s school bond measure, the sponsors of the split roll initiative — public employee unions, mostly — should be very worried about the November election.

Polling on the split roll already indicates weak support at best and the commercial real estate industry has pledged to spend $100 million or more to defeat it.

Advocates of more spending, borrowing and taxes may be learning that even in blue California, there are limits.

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