Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Walters: Proposition 19’s Tortuous Journey to the Ballot
dan_walters
By Dan Walters, CalMatters Commentary
Published 4 years ago on
September 30, 2020

Share

Proposition 19 shares one characteristic with most of the other 11 measures on California’s ballot this year: It rekindles a political conflict from years past.

However, Proposition 19 has meandered a particularly convoluted pathway to the ballot, which explains why it wound up with three distinct sections, to wit:

Dan Walters

Opinion

—It would expand current law’s limited right for Californians over 55 to move to new homes while retaining the taxable property values of their previous residences;

—It would erase a provision of property tax law that allows those who inherit expensive homes to retain their relatively low taxable values while converting the homes into income-producing rentals; and

—It would dedicate some of the additional revenue from the loophole closure to local and state firefighting agencies.

The first provision, dealing with transfer of property values, was the subject of a 2018 ballot measure sponsored by the California Association of Realtors. It would have expanded statewide the current right of the over-55 set to transfer values within counties, or to other counties that agreed to accept them. That’s been the law for more than 30 years, thanks to a series of voter-approved ballot measures.

Real estate brokers have an obvious interest in expansion since it would, at least in theory, generate more sales of homes that would produce more sales commissions. However, voters rejected the 2018 measure by a 3-to-2 margin.

The Latter Provision Could Have Undermined Proposition 15

The realtors wanted to try again in 2020 and qualified a new measure, which also included the inherited property loophole closure and a third provision, long debated in tax circles, to require reassessment of commercial property when ownership changes in a series of transactions.

The latter provision could have undermined Proposition 15, a measure sponsored by unions and other liberal interests, that would, if passed, require regular reassessment of all commercial property for tax purposes.

Thereupon, a deal was struck by the realtors, legislative leaders and Gov. Gavin Newsom to replace the initiative with a constitutional amendment that would include the first two provisions, drop the commercial property section and add the firefighting revenue as a political sweetener to take advantage of voters’ concerns about rampant wildfires.

Even so, the legislative version didn’t meet the official June 25 deadline for inclusion in the November ballot, so the Legislature quickly passed another law extending the deadline by a few days through the subterfuge of calling a concurrent special election.

Tax Reform or Tax Increase? Voters Will Decide.

Allowing heirs to keep relatively low property tax values also dates from a series of decades-old ballot measures, but two years ago, an article in the Los Angeles Times revealed that multi-million-dollar homes were being maintained as high-dollar rentals, rather than occupied by heirs.

The article focused on a Malibu home with sweeping oceans views formerly owned by actor Lloyd Bridges which his sons, actors Jeff and Beau, and their sister inherited and retained as a nearly $16,000-per-month rental. But the article also cited numerous other instances in which heirs took advantage of low property tax values to profit handsomely in the rental market.

Its uncertain whether the cosmetically altered proposal, which was designated as Proposition 19, will fare any better than the bare bones 2018 version that voters rejected. While it enjoys wider interest group support, it’s also created a political split between the California Association of Realtors and the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association, which supports the over-55 tax shield but sees the inherited property provision as a “massive, multi-billion-dollar tax increase on California families.”

Tax reform or tax increase? Voters will decide.

[activecampaign form=19]

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

CVS Grant Will Help Make Food Bank Mission About Fresno Jobs as Well as Food

DON'T MISS

Former Dinuba School Principal Faces Life in Prison for DUI Deaths of Mom, Daughter

DON'T MISS

FUSD’s Misty Her to Students: If You’re Not in School, We Can’t Help You Learn

DON'T MISS

Wired Wednesday: Breaking Down the Lawsuit vs. Community Health System

DON'T MISS

Friant Needs $90 Million to Pay for Massive Canal Project. Who Will Pony Up?

DON'T MISS

UCLA Can’t Let Protesters Block Jewish Students From Campus, Judge Says

DON'T MISS

Ukraine’s Surprise Attack Has Forced Russia to Change Plans

DON'T MISS

Californians Will Vote on $18 Minimum Wage. Workers Want $25 and More.

DON'T MISS

Ricardo Lara Deserves Credit for Trying to Solve California’s Home Insurance Crisis

DON'T MISS

Mark Gardner on Giants’ 2014 World Series Title, Why Fresno Turns Out Great Players

UP NEXT

What the Republican Party Might Look Like if Trump Loses

UP NEXT

Newsom Tries Shifting Blame for Homelessness Crisis to Local Officials

UP NEXT

Trump Calls Harris a ‘Communist.’ That Shows How Worried He Is.

UP NEXT

CA’s Perpetual Tax Reform Debate Resumes. Will Anything Change?

UP NEXT

Should Tech Giants Have to Pay California Newspapers for Their Content?

UP NEXT

Judge Kamala Harris on the Merits — Not Which Box She Checks

UP NEXT

The Rising Cost of Living: How Inflation and Stagnant Wages Squeeze Millennial Budgets

UP NEXT

Let’s Examine the Latest Mind-Boggling Acts by CA Leaders

UP NEXT

Trump Pulls Out His Birther Bag of Tricks

UP NEXT

California’s Multibillion-Dollar Bet on Hydrogen Energy Comes With Major Downsides

Wired Wednesday: Breaking Down the Lawsuit vs. Community Health System

2 hours ago

Friant Needs $90 Million to Pay for Massive Canal Project. Who Will Pony Up?

2 hours ago

UCLA Can’t Let Protesters Block Jewish Students From Campus, Judge Says

4 hours ago

Ukraine’s Surprise Attack Has Forced Russia to Change Plans

4 hours ago

Californians Will Vote on $18 Minimum Wage. Workers Want $25 and More.

4 hours ago

Ricardo Lara Deserves Credit for Trying to Solve California’s Home Insurance Crisis

5 hours ago

Mark Gardner on Giants’ 2014 World Series Title, Why Fresno Turns Out Great Players

5 hours ago

Presented With Rise in Border Crossings, Kamala Harris Chose a Long-Term Approach to the Problem

6 hours ago

WHO Declares Mpox Outbreaks in Africa a Global Health Emergency as a New Form of the Virus Spreads

6 hours ago

What the Republican Party Might Look Like if Trump Loses

6 hours ago

CVS Grant Will Help Make Food Bank Mission About Fresno Jobs as Well as Food

The efforts of the Central California Food Bank and the Fresno Mission to feed people in need got the attention of the country’s bigge...

10 mins ago

10 mins ago

CVS Grant Will Help Make Food Bank Mission About Fresno Jobs as Well as Food

47 mins ago

Former Dinuba School Principal Faces Life in Prison for DUI Deaths of Mom, Daughter

1 hour ago

FUSD’s Misty Her to Students: If You’re Not in School, We Can’t Help You Learn

2 hours ago

Wired Wednesday: Breaking Down the Lawsuit vs. Community Health System

2 hours ago

Friant Needs $90 Million to Pay for Massive Canal Project. Who Will Pony Up?

4 hours ago

UCLA Can’t Let Protesters Block Jewish Students From Campus, Judge Says

4 hours ago

Ukraine’s Surprise Attack Has Forced Russia to Change Plans

4 hours ago

Californians Will Vote on $18 Minimum Wage. Workers Want $25 and More.

MENU

CONNECT WITH US

Search

Send this to a friend