CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JULY 17, 2018, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“DO DEMOCRATS REALLY WANT TO FIX PROP. 13 PROBLEMS?”
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“DO DEMOCRATS REALLY WANT TO FIX PROP. 13 PROBLEMS?”
If it’s
ever to be fixed, only a ballot proposition can repair the largest and most
obvious inequity caused by Proposition 13, the landmark 1978 tax-cutting
initiative that causes next-door neighbors in identical homes to pay vastly
different sums for property taxes.
But the
other big problem area of the tax-cutting measure originally sponsored by the
late political gadflies Howard Jarvis and Paul Gann could be solved by a simple
vote of the Legislature. That inequity is a loophole allowing some commercial
and industrial properties to escape the tax increases that normally come when a
building or lot changes hands. Sadly, this loophole will remain in place at
least another year, after legislative Democrats in late spring killed a
Republican bill to close it.
The
essence of the loophole: As with homes and other residential properties,
business property is taxed at 1 percent of the latest sales price. But an
exception was written into the Prop. 13 rules by legislators a year after
Jarvis-Gann passed handily. This one allows the tax bill to remain static after
sale unless at least one new owner has more than a one-half interest in the
property.
Perhaps
the most egregious case of this loophole costing taxpayers money came when
former basketball star Earvin “Magic” Johnson and a group of big-money partners
bought the Los Angeles Dodgers from parking lot magnate Frank McCourt and his
now ex-wife Jamie.
As part
of the $2 billion deal, McCourt retained a half-interest in the sprawling
parking lots surrounding Dodger Stadium, even though the new owners control parking
prices and get all the revenue. That essentially made Johnson & Co. the
real owners, but kept the tax bill on the lots (with a book value of $300
million at the time of sale) from more than quadrupling. This has let the new
owners save about $2 million yearly starting in 2012.
Theoretically,
the same sort of arrangement could have been worked out for the far more
valuable Dodger Stadium itself, but that would have led to reams of negative
publicity the Dodgers didn’t want.
Other
well-publicized examples of the loophole saving big bucks for wealthy new
owners came when a Central Valley vineyard changed hands and when a landmark
Santa Monica hotel was sold to a new group, later becoming part of the
ultra-luxurious Fairmont group.
Almost
yearly during this decade, some state legislators have tried to get rid of this
egregious injustice. Back when former Democratic state Sen. Martha Escutia of
East Los Angeles first proposed closing the loophole, the state’s non-partisan
legislative analyst estimated a change could produce between $3 billion and $8
billion in additional property tax revenue.
The
latest effort, carried by state Senate Minority Leader Patricia Bates, a
Republican from Laguna Niguel, failed on a 3-2 vote of the Senate’s Governance
and Finance Committee, with two ostensibly liberal Los Angeles County Democrats
– Ed Hernandez and Robert Herzberg – abstaining. Both votes for the Prop. 13
reform came from Orange County Republicans, John Moorlach and Janet Nguyen,
while Democrats Jim Beall of San Jose, Richard Lara of East Los Angeles and
Mike McGuire of Ukiah all voted no.
The
vote was odd because it’s usually Democrats striving to bring more fairness to
Prop. 13, while Republicans fight to keep it static.
But
over time, the conservative GOP establishment has come to see closing the
50-per-cent-ownership loophole as simple fairness. Some Republicans saw the
Democratic no votes as a political ploy aimed at keeping things unfair in order
to make passage of a “split roll” initiative in 2020 easier.
That
proposal would see business properties taxed at a higher rate than homes, even
if no sale is involved.
Said
Jon Coupal, head of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Assn., which usually fights to
maintain Prop. 13’s rules, “Killing this bill shows that progressive tax and
spend interests don’t want to fix how Prop. 13 is interpreted, but they’d
rather…advocate for a larger split roll tax increase. They would rather play
politics.”
The
bottom line is that the vote likely means this problem won’t be fixed for at
least two more years, as there will be no reason for a change in Democratic
tactics next year. Which means this obvious inequity will remain a part of
California life and local governments will keep losing out on significant funds
they could use for schools and many other causes.
-30-
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, visit www.californiafocus.net.
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