Issue Position: Protect Proposition 13

Issue Position

Date: Jan. 1, 2014
Issues: Taxes

Don't lose your home to higher property taxes.

Sacramento politicians are currently considering seven separate proposals that would make it easier to pass bonds and parcel taxes, which are paid for on property tax bills -- they're those charges at the bottom, for schools, street lights, community colleges, 911 service, etc.

The California constitution, and Proposition 13, require a two-thirds vote of the people to pass bonds and parcel taxes, except for schools. Some years ago, the voters agreed to a constitutional amendment to pass school bonds by a margin of just 55 percent, instead of two-thirds. Since then, many more of them have passed, and if you own a home, you're paying for them on your property tax bill.

Sacramento politicians like that so much that they now want to do the same thing for transportation bonds (Senate Constitutional Amendments 4 and 8), library bonds (Senate Constitutional Amendment 7), community development bonds (Senate Constitutional Amendment 9), parcel taxes (Senate Constitutional Amendment 3), infrastructure bonds (Assembly Constitutional Amendment 8), and bonds for "any general purpose" (Senate Constitutional Amendment 11).

These measures need a two-thirds vote in the Assembly and a two-thirds vote in the state Senate to get on the ballot, but once on the ballot they need only a simple majority to pass. If they pass, any city can put bonds and parcel taxes on the ballot for voter approval, and they'll pass with just 55 percent of the vote instead of the current two-thirds.

Property tax bills will go up after every election.

A few years of that, and people will be losing their homes.

I will vote "No" on all those proposals. All of them. No fine print, no asterisks. Not every candidate in this race will say that.


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