CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2022 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“MORE REASONS TO LEAVE TEXAS OFF
YOUR WISH LIST”
Most Californians have long
been restless and mobile; many of us or our parents came from someplace else.
So it’s no surprise when surveys show almost half the folks living here have at
least thought about moving somewhere else.
The most popular destination
for those who do leave is Texas, where about 35,000 former Californians have
gone in each of the last five years.
This has
not seriously dented California’s 39.5 million population, as most emigrants
were quickly replaced by new arrivals from around the world and nation.
But there
is now ample reason to believe the transplanted Californians did not land in
the nirvana many expected to find, a place of much lower taxes, cheap real
estate and little government regulation.
For many,
one of their first Texas experiences came in mid-February 2021, when a blizzard
and deep-freeze struck the Lone Star state, dropping outdoor temperatures near
zero and indoor levels into the 30s or lower as electricity failed.
Icy
temperatures froze water pipes, many laid near the land’s surface because Texas
building codes are lax. Several hospitals saw their water polluted, forcing
mass patient transfers in extreme weather. All this barely three years after
Hurricane Harvey reduced much of Houston, the nation’s fourth-largest city, to
a bunch of rivulets and ponds.
For sure,
there is little zoning and building regulation in much of Texas, where the
state’s ideal of light government control often lets junk yards, strip joints
and body shops exist beside single-family homes. But it’s something else to see
Houston reduced to non-functionality twice in 40 months.
It also
turns out “light government control” is a mere legend. It may apply to zoning
and guns, which anyone can carry concealed, but no longer to some vital
personal choices. All abortions, even for pregnancies involving rape and
incest, are now criminal. If a fetus has fatal disorders, it cannot be aborted.
And never mind the mother’s health or survival.
Now comes
a new report from the Washington, D.C.-based Institute of Taxation and Economic
Policy, which concluded that only the wealthiest Texans actually pay lower
taxes than Californians.
That is
at least in part because of this state’s Proposition 13, which bases property
taxes on 1 percent of the latest sales price for the vast majority of properties.
The comparison is based on federal income taxes, plus state and local sales
taxes, property tax and information from the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics
and the U.S. Census.
These
figures debunk the notion of Texas as a low-tax state. It turns out Texans in
the lowest 20 percent of income earners (less than $20,900 per year) pay about
13 percent of their income in state and local taxes. Californians in the bottom
20 percent (under $23,200 yearly) pay 10.5 percent of their income in such
taxes. Similar proportions apply to middle and upper-middle class taxpayers in
both states, with Texans paying more than Californians unless they are in the
top 1 percent of earners ($714,000 or more in California).
In Texas,
the one-percenters pay 3.1 percent of their income in state and local taxes,
compared with 12.4 percent in California.
All of
which destroys yet another popular concept about Texas, as California imports
to that state discover soon after arriving.
Sure,
some companies and billionaires get big tax breaks from Texas state and local
governments as incentives to move there. But that still leaves newly arrived
women subject to the cruelties and potential criminal charges imposed on some
of the pregnant by the blanket abortion ban.
It's much the same in other
states that have been popular with California emigres. For example, Idaho,
Arizona and Tennessee all have abortion bans similar to the Texas law.
Tweeted Robert Garcia, Long
Beach mayor and current Democratic candidate for a California congressional
seat, upon learning the Texas tax numbers: “Hey, Texans, come over to
California to pay lower taxes. And we have great weather.”
As those numbers appeared, so
did billboards in San Francisco and Los Angeles bearing the message “Don’t Move
to Texas” and “The Texas Miracle Died in Uvalde,” referring to the mass
shooting there.
No one knows who put up those
billboards, but they just may be offering sound advice.
-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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