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State's planners want Legislature to change Prop. 13 this year
Friday January 31, 2003
By JIM WASSERMAN Associated Press Writer
SACRAMENTO (AP) Representatives for nearly 5,000 California
urban, environmental and transportation planners say they'll fight
this year for changes to Proposition 13 to raise more money for
parks, transit-oriented growth and farmland preservation.
The state's planners say they want the Legislature to allow
local voters to raise taxes or approve bonds for specific projects
with 55 percent votes instead of the two-thirds majority required
by the 1978 tax measure.
Characterizing it as modest change, planners said it will raise
money to stimulate highways, transit, housing and parks in existing
cities and spare working farms from development.
All are ``things that make a nice community,'' said Sande
George, executive director of the California chapter of the
American Planning Association.
Already, voters have approved a 55 percent majority to pass
bonds for new schools in California.
But opponents of higher taxes said expanding a 55 percent
majority vote for other needs would be a ``disaster'' for millions
of property owners.
``If you lower the two-thirds vote requirement you are
essentially allowing those who don't own property to levy taxes on
those who do,'' said Jon Coupal, president of the Howard Jarvis
Taxpayers Association.
Jarvis, who died in 1986, co-wrote Proposition 13, which greatly
limited California property taxes by requiring two-thirds votes on
new taxes. It also froze residential property taxes at 1 percent of
a home's assessed value and said a homeowner's taxes could rise no
more than 2 percent a year.
But the Sacramento-based coalition of government and
private-sector planners maintains Proposition 13 has confused the
state's tax system, disrupted state development patterns to
encourage sprawl and created a severe housing shortage.
``There's not a lot of incentive for cities to build houses,
because in very few instances do you generate enough revenue from
housing to cover the cost of providing services to that housing,''
said Vince Bertoni, a Santa Clarita city planner.
Bertoni, legislative director for the APA's California chapter,
said many tax-starved cities resist building new houses and fight
each other for stores and sales taxes.
``Clearly, our revenue system is broken,'' Bertoni said.
But planners face tremendous obstacles changing a tax system
still widely supported by taxpayers and legislators who represent
them. A major reform bill last year aiming to jump start more
housing by sharing sales taxes among neighboring cities died. So
did another asking the state to give cities a bigger share of their
own property taxes.
Planners also pledged during 2003 to fight plans by Gov. Gray
Davis to cut funds for farmland preservation and central-city
redevelopment. Davis has proposed cuts in both programs to fight
the state's $34.8 billion budget deficit.
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On the Net:
Read more about the California Chapter of the American Planning
Association at http://calapa.org.
Visit the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association at
http://www.hjta.org.
(Copyright 2003 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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