March 18, 2013

California lawmakers propose several changes to state fees and taxes

California's legislative leaders vowed to act with austerity after voters passed billions of dollars in tax hikes last November.

California’s legislative leaders vowed to act with austerity after voters passed billions of dollars in tax hikes last November.

More than two dozen bills introduced in the current session, however, take aim at Californians’ pocketbooks.

Taxes, fees or other charges are proposed for soda pop and sweet tea drinkers, motorists, gun owners and people who frequent strip clubs, buy prepaid cellular phone minutes, or use paper or plastic shopping bags.

Businesses are targeted by proposals ranging from an oil severance tax to a manufacturers fee for mattress recycling, and a crackdown on firms that avoid property tax reassessments after ownership changes.

“It doesn’t surprise us at all,” Jon Coupal, president of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association, said of the numerous bills. “Our elected political class has an insatiable appetite for even more money.”

Added Republican Assemblywoman Shannon Grove of Bakersfield: “Did you ever really expect them to keep their word about fiscal restraint?”

Democrats, who are carrying almost all of the bills, are not using their newly won supermajority to push for sales, income or other across-the-board tax hikes. They are targeting narrower groups instead, attempting to alter what they consider harmful habits or bolster services.

Legislative leaders say there’s a big difference between crafting a revenue-raising bill and winning legislative approval and Gov. Jerry Brown’s signature.

Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg characterizes the process as a giant funnel of ideas, many of which fall by the wayside without becoming law, said Mark Hedlund, Steinberg’s spokesman.

“He does not see 2013 as being a year to be looking toward more taxes,” Hedlund said.

Some bills would impose a new fee: to build a statewide firearms ownership database, for example, or impose an ignition interlock mandate on convicted drunken drivers.

Other measures would not cost Californians more immediately, but they would extend an existing fee, costing more in the long run.

Assembly Bill 8 would provide an eight-year extension, from 2016 to 2024, for pollution-fighting fees charged as part of vehicle registration.

Looking to the future, a handful of proposed constitutional amendments would ask voters to lower the two-thirds threshold to 55 percent for school parcel taxes and revenue measures for police, fire, library, local transportation, and community and economic development projects.

Assembly Republican leader Connie Conway said the rush of tax and fee bills contradicts the notion that Proposition 30’s passage last November would fix California’s fiscal problems.

“So was it not true that it was going to fix everything — or are we now breaking a promise that it was going to be enough?” the Tulare lawmaker said.

“It’s disingenuous to say that you’re going to be austere and then have bills to raise every tax that anyone can think of,” Conway added.

Assembly Speaker John A. Perez, D-Los Angeles, said in a written statement that Brown has made it clear he will not raise taxes without a vote of the people.

“He’s never equivocated, and we’ve never asked him to,” Perez said.

“It should come as no surprise that many legislators introduced legislation on fees and taxes for a variety of reasons, as they do every year, and they will go through the legislative process. But at the end of the day, I don’t expect to see a flurry of this type of legislation passing.”

Brown declined to comment on pending bills. But spokesman Evan Westrup said the governor remains committed to fiscal restraint.

“Fiscal discipline helped us claw our way out of the $27 billion hole we inherited,” Westrup said. “The same prudence is required if we expect to stay out of it.”

One key revenue-raising proposal was sidetracked by a Democratic legislator even before it was launched.

Sen. Ted Lieu said in November that he would try to place before voters a tripling of the state’s car tax, raising it to the level it was before GOP Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger slashed the rate in 2004.

Lieu, a Torrance Democrat, quickly abandoned the idea when legislative leaders did not embrace it.

The vast majority of Republican lawmakers have signed a national no-new-taxes pledge and aren’t carrying major revenue-raising measures.

Republican Sen. Bill Emmerson of Hemet is pushing to close what he considers an ambiguity in current law, however, by proposing a specific fee for copies of medical records: $30 for search and retrieval, plus 50 cents per page for the first 25 pages. Additional pages would be 25 cents. The fee would rise with inflation.

Some of the most closely watched revenue-raising bills this year may be those designed to alter consumer behavior as well.

Senate Bill 700 would create a 5-cent tax on each paper or plastic bag carried out of grocery stores. Senate Bill 622 would impose a penny-per-ounce tax on soft drinks, sweet teas and energy drinks to “discourage excessive consumption of sweetened beverages by increasing the price of these products and by creating a dedicated revenue source for health programs.”

Hedlund, commenting generally about using taxes or fees to change risky behavior, said there are circumstances that justify such action.

“If you have behaviors that are exacerbating health problems, which are in many cases creating health costs that are picked up by taxpayers, that’s something to look at,” he said.

But Senate GOP leader Bob Huff of Diamond Bar said the Democrat-dominated Legislature tends to act too much like a nanny.

“I think people are adult enough to make choices for themselves,” he said.

Here is a sampling of legislation aimed at raising state revenue through new or higher fees, taxes or other charges.

— Senate Bill 622: Impose a penny-per-ounce tax on soft drinks, energy drinks, sports drinks, sweet teas and other sweetened beverages to raise funds for childhood obesity, dental disease and other such programs. Sen. Bill Monning, D-Carmel.

— Senate Bill 700: Impose a 5-cent charge on each paper or plastic single-use shopping bag to raise funds for city and county parks and litter programs. Sen. Lois Wolk, D-Davis.

— Assembly Bill 760: Impose a tax of 5 cents per bullet on sales of ammunition to raise funds for mental health services. Assemblyman Roger Dickinson, D-Sacramento.

— Senate Bill 782: Impose a $10-per-person tax on nightclubs, bars and restaurants that combine booze with nude or partially nude entertainment. Funds would be used for sexual assault prevention and treatment. Sen. Mark DeSaulnier, D-Concord.

— Senate Bill 391: Impose a $75 fee for recording various legal documents, such as deeds, default notices and mechanics liens. Property sale documents would be excluded. Funds would be used to support affordable housing. Sen. Mark DeSaulnier, D-Concord.

— Assembly Bill 1002: Raise the vehicle registration and renewal fee by $6. Revenue would be used to encourage use of bicycles, public transportation and pedestrian walkways. Assemblyman Richard Bloom, D-Santa Monica.

— Senate Bill 241: Impose a 9.9 percent oil severance tax on extraction of oil from California lands and water to raise funds for higher education and state parks. Sen. Noreen Evans, D-Santa Rosa.

— Senate Bill 254: Require mattress sellers to offer collection and recycling of used mattresses. Also, authorize an unspecified administrative fee on mattress manufacturers. Sen. Loni Hancock, D-Berkeley.

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Copyright 2013 – The Sacramento Bee

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