CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“TAX OVERHAUL PLAN HAS POTENTIAL”
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“TAX OVERHAUL PLAN HAS POTENTIAL”
Rarely does a freshman state senator
propose anything substantial during his or her first few days in office. But
Robert Herzberg, elected last fall from a safe Democratic district in the San
Fernando Valley portion of Los Angeles, is hardly a typical newbie.
Hertzberg, speaker of the state
Assembly from 2000-2002 and an advisor to both former Govs. Arnold
Schwarzenegger and Gray Davis for several years after that, has now taken on
one of the toughest, most complex topics any legislator can. He wants to change
California’s entire tax system, and he just might pull it off.
Hertzberg expects his plan, known as
SB8, will take at least two years before coming to any floor vote,
figuring it will probably undergo major changes in the process. But here are
the basics:
This system would reduce income taxes
across the board, while still keeping “progressive” features like having those
with higher incomes pay a larger percentage of it as tax. The minimum wage
would rise, by a yet-undetermined amount. Business would get some tax breaks,
designed to encourage job creation. More than making up for these revenue
losses would be a new sales tax on services (education and health care to be
exempt). So movie tickets, legal work, accounting and labor on auto body
repairs would be taxed. It’s still uncertain how this might apply to the
Internet and at what level businesses would be eligible for new tax incentives.
Of
course, any sales tax is regressive, hitting those with low incomes harder than
the rich. It’s not certain whether the reduced income tax and a higher minimum
wage could compensate for this.
The plan is not Hertzberg’s brainchild
alone. It stems from his work with an outfit called the Think Long Committee,
whose membership has included Google executive Eric Schmidt, movie executive
Terry Semel, former Republican state Treasurer Matt Fong, Los Angeles
businessman and philanthropist Eli Broad, ex-Gov. Davis, former Secretary of
State Condoleeza Rice and former state Chief Justice Ron George, among others.
The group is funded by billionaire Nicolas Berggruen.
“We’re aiming for $10 billion a year in new
money from this plan,” Hertzberg said in an interview. “We’ll start with what’s
now in my bill, and modify it to try to have it make sense if people have
problems with it. It could even end up as a ballot initiative. But we need this
to help both our kids and businesses in this state.”
Hertzberg points to the ongoing controversy
over tuition at the University of California and the California State
University system as one example of how the existing tax system harms young
people in California.
“We need a new philosophy of government,”
Hertzberg said in one essay on his tax plan. “California has long been known as
the land of opportunity, but for too many of its residents the future is
receding. Inequality continues to rise… Something more is needed. Above all, we
need public investment in infrastructure and in public education, especially
higher education.”
Hertzberg is firm about one part of his
bill that would hold off cuts in the income and corporate taxes until new sales
levies bring in enough money to give low-income workers earned-income tax
credits similar to what the federal tax system provides.
And he says he will not change parts of the
plan earmarking the new $10 billion for schools, colleges, infrastructure
including road repairs and $2 billion for that earned income tax credit.
“The revolutionary thing about this is that
we would tax services for the first time,” he said. “And that we give the new
money to cities, counties, community colleges, school districts, universities
and the low income.”
Hertzberg expects this plan to provoke “the
longest discussion of the next two years.” Since he chairs the Senate committee
in charge of state and local governance, taxes and finance, “I can call all the
hearings on it I want, and I will.”
So far, there are few supporters or
opponents. But both business and labor groups, along with leading Democratic
and Republican legislators say they look forward to the talk and the hearings.
The twin questions yet to be answered: Will this all be mere
talk? And should it ever amount to anything more? Stay tuned.
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
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