Under the Paperweight, July 19-25, 2009 1


Under the Paperweight last week were links on the targeting of Proposition 13 and the two-thirds majority requirement for tax increases as limits and causes of California’s fiscal problems.

The negative attention these cherished limits are getting lately should be a warning to the clear majority of Californians who oppose state tax increases.

A review article in the Glendale News Press on the idea of a state constitutional convention reported that it was “gaining traction among local lawmakers” and specifically mentioned the two-thirds majority requirement.

An LA Times editorial narrows the focus on the two-thirds majority requirement by advocating it only for tax increases, while allowing simple majorities to pass budgets:

The current system, requiring two-thirds for both, has diffused responsibility without protecting the state from excessive spending. If voters want to give a clear majority of their representation to one party, let the majority prevail — and let the people judge the consequences. Only three other states require a supermajority for budgets, but 15 require a supermajority to raise taxes.

Byron Williams, in the Huffington Post, believes that voters would preserve Prop 13’s residential property tax limit while removing the concurrent corporate property tax break, if they could. He’s apparently unable to develop a solid argument against the two-thirds majority requirement, so he simply asks if readers would have voted for it.

An earlier Calitics post by San Francisco Assessor/Recorder Phil Ting deals specifically with revenues that could be raised by eliminating the corporate tax loophole in Prop 13.

LA Times’ Joel Fox says Proposition 13 Isn’t the Problem, and disputes the notion that limitings its benefits to residential property owners would benefit the state:

The split-roll proposal is self-defeating for an economy trying to dig itself out of a hole, and implementing it would cost jobs. Former state legislative analyst William Hamm co-wrote a study last year that claimed a 1% increase in business property tax rates would lead to 43,000 jobs lost. With double-digit unemployment, that is something California can ill afford.

In the Sunroom Desk file drawer are two of its editor’s archived posts on Proposition 13 and the two-thirds majority requirement:

Next for California: Targeting the Two-Thirds Majority

Under the Paperweight, June 28 – July 4, 2009


One thought on “Under the Paperweight, July 19-25, 2009

Comments are closed.