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Contributors
Jon Coupal- Columnist
Jon Coupal
is an attorney and president of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers
Association -- California's largest taxpayer organization with
offices in Los Angeles and Sacramento. [go to website] [go
to Coupal index]
Fires
Light Up Tax Talk
Tax-and-spenders
see revenue in disaster...
[Jon Coupal] 11/12/03
Shameless. That's the only word to describe the opportunists
who are calling for tax increases to pay for the horrendous damage
inflicted by the Southern California wildfires. Just as victims
of this tragedy must be on the watch for scam artists seeking
to exploit their vulnerable situation, taxpayers must be on the
watch for unscrupulous politicians who will seek to exploit the
fires to advance their own tax-and-spend agendas.
It's not like this
hasn't happened before. In the wake of both the Loma Prieta
earthquake and the Northridge
earthquake, the siren song for tax increases was heard loud and
clear emanating from leading newspapers (with a few notable exceptions)
and left-of-center elected officials. Indeed, one editorial cartoon
showed a crushed car bearing the license plate "Prop 13" in
the rubble of a collapsed bridge. The implication was that all
taxpayer protections must be suspended or eliminated in the face
of natural disasters.
But this thinking
is so wrong for so many reasons. First, existing public revenues
are adequate to respond to the damage wrought in Southern California.
Second, raising taxes would have precisely the wrong impact on
a state that is struggling to emerge from economic doldrums.
By any measure, this tragedy inflicted several billion
dollars worth of damage. But few dispute that the lion's share
of the cost will be paid from the following sources: (1) federal
government relief; (2) private insurance proceeds; and (3) voluntary
relief contributions. But to the extent that tax revenues are
needed for the cleanup and response, won't local governments
be on the hook? Wrong again. Governor Davis has issued an order
providing that the State of California will fully (100%) reimburse
local governments for their costs in fighting the fires. For
this reason, we can quickly rule out any excuse to suspend or
repeal local taxpayer protections including the venerable Proposition
13.
Tax-and-spenders are
also seeking to exploit the situation as an excuse to keep
the car tax at
its current high level. (Another recent political cartoon showed
firefighters with the words "car
tax" on their uniforms). Again, this suggestion is without
foundation. To begin with, the car tax is not legally dedicated
for public safety purposes. Car tax proceeds are unrestricted,
and local government officials are not legally obligated to expend
one cent of car tax proceeds for public safety purposes. They
engage in public safety scare tactics so that they can divert
money to their pet programs, programs whose funding would not
likely get voter support if higher taxes were required.
What could be a better example than San Diego,
the site of some of the most horrific fire damage? Not surprisingly,
the political leadership of City of San Diego is already making
noises about a local tax increase to deal with the situation.
But isn't this the same city that pays the San Diego Chargers
millions of dollars for empty seats in the stadium? The fact
is, our local governments waste vast amounts of taxpayer dollars
for overhead, pet projects, redevelopment and some of the most
generous compensation packages in the country. Lack of real accountability
is the problem - not lack of taxpayer dollars.
Taxpayers
would do well to recall Proposition 172, passed in 1993, which
provides local governments with an additional half-cent sales
tax for public safety purposes. As set forth in the ballot argument
in support of Proposition 172, the tax proceeds would, among
other things, provide "guaranteeing funds for fire protection."
We
therefore have to wonder why all the existing taxes that we
pay to state and local governments are not sufficient to provide
adequate public safety services. If politicians truly made public
safety their first priority, there would be adequate funds available
to take care of public safety without having to resort to Chicken
Little cries demanding higher taxes.
Finally, there is
the broader issue of the overall economic impact of any tax
increase. The nation's
economy is beginning to recover and last week the feds released
some of the most encouraging economic news since the 1980s. Even
California is collecting higher revenues than anticipated. Indeed,
the brightening revenue situation allows Governor-Elect Schwarzenegger
to keep his car tax reduction promise and still meet local governments'
demands for the "backfill" that keeps them "whole."
California is faced with two choices.
It can demonstrate real fiscal responsibility by rejecting
the calls for tax increases and let natural economic growth and
an enhanced business climate generate the revenue we need. Or,
it can continue with the tired old policies of the tax-and-spend
crowd and use the fires as an excuse to raise taxes. Fortunately
for taxpayers, the voters of this state answered this question
on October 7th. The old regime is over and the adults now in
charge are unlikely to even consider tax increases.
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