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Proposition 13: The Drama

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'People's Initiative to Limit Property Taxation' Caps property tax rates at no more than 1% of full cash ... http://blogs.indystar.com/varvelblog/09122006.jpg ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Proposition 13: The Drama


1
Proposition 13 The Drama
2
Plot Summary
3
What is Proposition 13?
  • People's Initiative to Limit Property Taxation
  • Caps property tax rates at no more than 1 of
    full cash value and caps increases in assessed
    value per year are capped at either 2 or the
    percentage growth in the Consumer Price Index
    (CPI), whichever is less.
  • New construction and the sale of property, with
    some exceptions, also increase assessed values.
  • Required a two-thirds majority in both
    legislative houses for future increases in all
    state tax rates or amounts of revenue collected,
    including income tax rates
  • Received an enormous amount of publicity
    throughout the United States.

4
Setting the Scene
5
Serrano v. Priest
  • 1971 and 1976 Supreme Court rulings saying that
    educational funding was favoring the wealthy.
  • State legislatures responded by capping the rate
    of local revenue that a school district could
    receive and distributing excess amounts among the
    poorer districts
  • Property owners in wealthier neighborhoods were
    unhappy that they could no longer see the
    immediate benefits from their taxes.

6
Housing Demand
  • Growing population in the state caused an
    increase in demand for real estate
  • As demand increased, prices also increased, along
    with taxes
  • Elderly citizens on fixed income became unable to
    afford their homes with the growing tax rates, a
    fixed income, and inflation.
  • The Proposition 13 campaign felt that elderly
    citizens should be able to keep their houses (and
    then increased wealth they acquired) without
    being forced to pay the property taxes that go
    along with it.

7
Playwrights
  • Proposition 13 was originally popularly known as
    the Jarvis-Gann Amendment
  • Howard Jarvis and Paul Ganns actions had a
    greater impact as a symbol of citizen initiated
    reaction against what was perceived as big
    government

8
Howard Jarvis
  • Born in Magna, Utah
  • Father was a state supreme court judge and member
    of the Democratic Party.
  • Jarvis was active in the Republican Party and
    also ran small town newspapers
  • Primary candidate for the U.S. Senate in
    California in 1962
  • Founded the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association,
    which basically opposes all new and old taxes on
    Californians

9
Paul Gann
  • Born in Clark County, Arkansas
  • Founded People's Advocate in 1974, an
    organization dedicated to educating and
    mobilizing the public regarding issues of
    taxation, government spending, personal freedoms,
    property rights and maintaining government
    responsiveness to the will of the people.
  • 1980 Republican challenger in the United States
    Senate race
  • Avid crusader for lower taxes
  • Died of AIDS, contracted from a blood
    transfusion, in 1989.

10
The Aftermath
  • The effects of Proposition 13

11
Nordlinger v. Hahn
  • Acquisition value system of Prop 13 created
    dramatic disparities in the taxes paid by persons
    owning similar pieces of property because of the
    differences in the terms for which they were
    owned. Newer buyers were paying far greater
    amounts for their property.
  • Former Los Angeles apartment renter who had
    recently purchased a house in Los Angeles County,
    filed suit claiming that the proposition violates
    the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth
    Amendment
  • Court dismissed the complaint, saying that states
    had the right to discourage the rapid turnover of
    housing through taxation.

12
AB 80
  • Home values skyrocket, particularly after AB 80,
    a reform bill, was passed
  • AB 80 held tax assessors to keep assessments a
    uniform percentage of market value so tax figures
    could not be fudged to reward friends
  • Cities rely more on the state government
  • Since cities cannot collect as much property tax,
    they must look to the state government for funds

13
Sales Tax
  • Sales tax is heavily relied on
  • Cities must impose a harsher regressive sales tax
    in order to make up the difference
  • In the place of a progressive tax
  • Fair?
  • Housing is scarce because cities attempt to build
    sales-tax generating businesses, not houses
  • House prices are inflated

14
Schools
  • School funding by property tax is declared
    unconstitutional (Serrano vs. Priest)
  • Money from taxes is not going to the immediate
    community, but is distributed evenly across
    California
  • Total amount of money put into education declines
    until Proposition 98 is passed in 1985

15
Cities
  • Public services in cities suffer from the loss of
    revenue
  • Firefighting programs, police departments, and
    libraries all suffer major budget cuts
  • Cities cannot afford the upkeep of roads and
    public utilities

16
Food for Thought
17
Is it fair?
  • Equity and Efficiency
  • These two ideal characteristics of a tax law are
    absent in the freezing of the property tax
  • The better established and wealthier are
    subsidized
  • Properties of the same value may be taxed
    differently depending on the year bought
  • No incentive to sell houses for fear of a new
    assessment and higher taxes creates a stagnant
    house market
  • Cities lose so much revenue that public utilities
    suffer
  • Corporations, if the deed is kept, can avoid
    paying higher taxes even if the property
    physically changes hands

18
Why not repeal it?
  • Proposition 13 is the third rail of California
    politics
  • It would completely upset the system that is
    already in place
  • Realistically, people will not volunteer to pay
    extra taxes

19
As the Curtain Closes
  • Its all relative
  • From the view of an elderly homeowner, an
    established homeowner (any income), or a
    homeowner in a position to sell at a profit,
    Proposition 13 is undoubtedly beneficial
  • As a buyer or a new family, Proposition 13 is
    awful
  • Utilities, school funding (investment in future
    generations that will support the vast majority
    in old age and advance progress), and other
    essential public services might be a better
    long-term investment, even if property taxes are
    unappealing
  • Is it worth the loss?

20
Bibliography
  • www.wikipedia.com
  • http//www.caltax.org/research/prop13/prop13.htm
  • www.krankyscartoons.com/local.htm
  • http//blogs.indystar.com/varvelblog/09122006.jpg
  • http//www.ed-data.k12.ca.us/Articles/Article.asp?
    titleProposition2013
  • http//www.caltax.org/research/prop13/prop13.htm
  • http//everything2.com/index.pl
  • http//query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res950
    DEEDF1331F931A2575AC0A96F948260
  • http//www.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/90-1912.ZS.h
    tml
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