1978 California Proposition 13
Proposition 13 is an amendment of the Constitution of California enacted during 1978, by means of the initiative process. The initiative was approved by California voters on June 6, 1978. It was upheld as constitutional by the United States Supreme Court in the case of Nordlinger v. Hahn,. Proposition 13 is embodied in Article XIII A of the Constitution of the State of California.
The most significant portion of the act is the first paragraph, which limits the tax rate for real estate:
The proposition decreased property taxes by assessing values at their 1976 value and restricted annual increases of assessed value to an inflation factor, not to exceed 2% per year. It prohibits reassessment of a new base year value except in cases of change in ownership, or completion of new construction. These rules apply equally to all real estate, residential and commercial—whether owned by individuals or corporations.
The other significant portion of the initiative is that it requires a two-thirds majority in both legislative houses for future increases of any state tax rates or amounts of revenue collected, including income tax rates. It also requires a two-thirds vote majority in local elections for local governments wishing to increase special taxes.
Proposition 13 has been described as California's most famous and influential ballot measure; it received an enormous publicity throughout the United States. Passage of the initiative presaged a "taxpayer revolt" throughout the country that is sometimes thought to have contributed to the election of Ronald Reagan to the presidency during 1980. Yet of 30 anti-tax ballot measures that year, only 13 measures passed.
A large contributor to Proposition 13 was the sentiment that older Californians should not be priced out of their homes through high taxes. The proposition has been called the "third rail" of California politics, and it is not popular politically for lawmakers to attempt to change it.
Purpose
Limit the tax rate for properties
Proposition 13 declared property taxes were to be assessed their 1976 value and restricted annual increases of the tax to an inflation factor, not to exceed 2% per year. A reassessment of the property tax can only be made a) when the property ownership changes or b) there is construction done.State Responsibility
The state has been given the responsibility of distributing the property tax revenues to local agencies.Voting Requirements State Taxes
In addition to decreasing property taxes and changing the role of the state, Proposition 13 also contained language requiring a two-thirds majority in both legislative houses for future increases of any state tax rates or amounts of revenue collected, including income tax rates and sales tax rates.Voting Requirements Local Taxes
Proposition 13 also requires two-thirds voter approval for cities, counties, and special districts to impose special taxes. In Altadena Library District v. Bloodgood, 192 Cal. App. 3d 585, the California Court of Appeal for the Second District determined that the two-thirds voter approval requirement for special taxes under Proposition 13 applied to citizens initiatives.Origins
There are several theories of the origins of Proposition 13. The evidence for or against these accounts varies.Displacement of retired homeowners
One explanation is that older Californians with fixed incomes had increasing difficulty paying property taxes, which were rising as a result of California's population growth, increasing housing demand, and inflation. Due to severe inflation during the 1970s, reassessments of residential property increased property taxes so much, that some retired people could no longer afford to remain in homes they had purchased long before. An 2006 study published in Law & Society Review supported this explanation, reporting that older voters, homeowners, and voters expecting a tax increase were more likely to vote for Proposition 13.School funding equalization
Another explanation is Proposition 13 drew its impetus from the 1971 and 1976 California Supreme Court rulings in Serrano v. Priest, which somewhat equalized California school funding by redistributing local property taxes from wealthy to poor school districts. According to this explanation, property owners in affluent districts perceived that the taxes they paid were no longer benefiting their local schools, and chose to cap their taxes.A problem with this explanation is that the Serrano decision and school finance equalization were popular among California voters. While Californians who voted for Proposition 13 were less likely than other voters to support school finance equalization, Proposition 13 supporters were not more likely to oppose the Serrano decision, and on average they were typically supportive of both the Serrano decision and of school finance equalization.
Regressive tax distributions
A 2020 study by Joshua Mound published in the Journal of Policy History challenged the idea that wealthy property owners' desire to cap their property taxes was the impetus for enacting Proposition 13, instead saying the "tax revolt" was rooted in lower and middle-income Americans' longstanding frustration with unfair and highly regressive tax distributions during the post-World War II decades.The study said pro-growth Kennedy-Johnson “Growth Liberals” cut federal income taxes in the highest brackets in the 1960s while local officials raised regressive state and local taxes, creating a "pocketbook squeeze" that made voters less likely to approve local levies and bonds, which eventually led to the passage of Proposition 13. The study said the tax revolt was not limited to white voters nor associated with rising conservatism associated with the collapse of the "New Deal order" and the election of Ronald Reagan.
Expansion of state government
Another explanation that has been offered is that spending by California's government had increased dramatically during the years prior to 1978, and voters sought to limit further growth. The evidence supporting this explanation is limited, as there have been no studies relating Californians' views on the size and role of government to their views on Proposition 13. It is true that California's government had grown. Between 1973 and 1977, California state and local government expenditures per $1,000 of personal income were 8.2% higher than the national norm. From 1949 to 1979, public sector employment in California outstripped employment growth in the private sector. By 1978, 14.7% of California's civilian work force were state and local government employees, almost double the proportion of the early 1950s.Corruption
During the early 1960s, there were several scandals in California involving county assessors. These assessors were found rewarding friends and allies with artificially low assessments, with tax bills to match. These scandals led to the passage of Assembly Bill 80 in 1966, which imposed standards to hold assessments to market value. The return to market value in the wake of AB 80 could easily represent a mid-double-digit percentage increase in assessment for many homeowners. As a result, a large number of California homeowners experienced an immediate and drastic rise in valuation, simultaneous with rising tax rates on that assessed value, only to be told that the taxed monies would be redistributed to distant communities. Cynicism about the favoritism of the tax system towards the wealthy and well-connected persisted into the 1970s. The ensuing anger started to form into a backlash against property taxes which coalesced around Howard Jarvis, a former newspaperman and appliance manufacturer, turned taxpayer activist in retirement.The measure
and Paul Gann were the most vocal and visible advocates of Proposition 13. Officially named the "People's Initiative to Limit Property Taxation," and known popularly as the "Jarvis-Gann Amendment," Proposition 13 was listed on the ballot through the California ballot initiative process, a provision of the California Constitution that allows a proposed law or constitutional amendment to be offered to voters if advocates collect a sufficient number of signatures on a petition. Proposition 13 passed with roughly two-thirds of those who voted in favor and with the participation of around two-thirds of registered voters. After passage, it became article XIII A of the California Constitution.Under Proposition 13, the annual real estate tax on a parcel of property is limited to 1% of its assessed value. This "assessed value," may be increased only by a maximum of 2% per year, until and unless the property has a change of ownership. At the time of the change in ownership the low assessed value may be reassessed to complete current market value that will produce a new base year value for the property, but future assessments are likewise restricted to the 2% annual maximum increase of the new base year value.
The property may be reassessed under certain conditions other than a change of ownership, such as when additions or new construction occur. The assessed value is also subject to reduction if the market value of the property declines below its assessed value, for example, during a real estate slump. Reductions of property valuation were not provided for by Proposition 13 itself, but were made possible by the passage of Proposition 8 during 1978 that amended Proposition 13. Such a real estate slump and downward reassessments occurred during 2009 when the California State Board of Equalization announced an estimated reduction of property tax base year values due to negative inflation. The property tax in California is an Ad valorem tax meaning that the tax assessed increases and decreases with the value of the property.
Outcome
Effects
Reduction in taxes
In the year after Proposition 13 was passed, property tax revenue to local governments declined by roughly 60% statewide.In 2009, the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association estimated that Proposition 13 had reduced taxes paid by California taxpayers by an aggregate $528 billion.
Other estimates show that Proposition 13 may not have reduced California's overall per-capita tax burden or State spending. The think tank Tax Foundation reported that in 1978, Californians had the third highest tax burden as a proportion of state income of 12.4%. By 2012, it had fallen slightly to the sixth highest rate, 10.9%,.
California has the highest marginal income and capital gains tax rate and is in the top ten highest corporate tax and sales tax rates nationally. In 2016, California had the 17th-highest per-capita property tax revenue in the country at $1,559, up from 31st in 1996. In 2019, WalletHub applied California's statewide effective property tax rate of 0.77% to the state median home market value of $443,400; the annual property taxes of $3,414 on the median home value was the 9th-highest in the United States.
Property tax equity
Proposition 13 sets the assessed value of properties at the time of purchase, with a possible 2% annual assessment increase. As a result, properties of equal value can have a great amount of variation in their assessed value, even if they are next to each other. The disparity grows when property prices appreciate by more than 2% a year. The Case–Shiller housing index shows prices in Los Angeles, San Diego, and San Francisco appreciated 170% from 1987 to 2012 while the 2% cap only allowed a 67% increase in taxes on homes that were not sold during this 26-year period.A 1993 report from the joint University of California and State of California research program, California Policy Seminar, said that a property tax system based on acquisition value links property tax liability to ability and willingness to pay and has a progressive impact on the tax structure, based on income. It said that a revenue-neutral Los Angeles County reform which raises all assessments to true market value and lowers the property tax rate would harm elderly and low-income households.
The think tank Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy considers property tax caps like Proposition 13 poorly targeted and instead advocates for "circuit breaker" caps or homestead exemptions to levy property taxes based on ability to pay; yet in 2018, ITEP ranked California's tax code as the most progressive in the United States, in part due to its marginal income and capital gains rates. Since the wealthy usually own more "intangible" assets like stocks, bonds, or business equity, which are exempt from property taxes, ITEP says regressive state tax distributions that rely on property taxes can worsen inequality. According to ITEP, of all US states in 2018, California's tax code reduced inequality the most.
Tenure of households
By comparing California over the period 1970 to 2000 with other states,Wasi and White estimated that Proposition 13 caused homeowners to increase the duration of time spent in a given home by 9%, and renters to increase their tenure by 18%.
They also estimated that this effect was more pronounced in the coastal cities, with the increase in tenancy by owner-occupiers in the Bay Area being predicted at 28%, Los Angeles 21%, and Fresno 7%.
They speculate that renters may have longer tenure due to less turnover of owner-occupied housing to move into.
Other studies have found that increased tenure in renting can be attributed in part to rent control.
Funding volatility
A 2016 report from the California Legislative Analyst's Office found that property tax revenue to local governments was similarly volatile before and after the passage of Proposition 13. While Proposition 13 stabilized the base, governments would adjust the rate annually to counteract changes to the base prior to Proposition 13.Fiscal impact from new home construction
According to the California Building Industry Association, construction of a median priced house results in a slight positive fiscal impact, as opposed to the position that housing does not "pay its own way". The trade association argues that this is because new homes are assessed at the value when they are first sold. Additionally, due to the higher cost of new homes, the trade association claims that new residents are more affluent and may provide more sales tax revenues and use less social services of the host community.Taxes targeted to services
Others argue that the real reason for the claimed negative effects is lack of trust for elected officials to spend the public's money wisely. Business improvement districts are one means by which property owners have chosen to tax themselves for additional government services. Property owners find that these targeted levies are more palatable than general taxes.Sales disincentives, higher housing costs
Proposition 13 alters the balance of the housing market because it provides disincentives for selling property, in favor of remaining at the current property and modifying or transferring to family members to avoid a new, higher property tax assessment.Proposition 13 reduces property tax revenue for municipalities in California. They are forced to rely more on state funding and therefore may lose autonomy and control. The amount of taxes available to the municipality in any given year largely depends on the number of property transfers taking place. Yet since existing property owners have an incentive to remain in their property and not sell, there are fewer property transfers under this type of property tax system.
California also has high rates of migrants from other countries and states, which has contributed to more demand for housing, and it has low amounts of moderately priced housing. The different tax treatment can make real estate more valuable to the current owner than to any potential buyer, so selling it often makes no economic sense.
Commercial property owners
Owners of commercial real estate benefited under the original rules of Proposition 13: If a corporation owning commercial property was sold or merged, but the property stayed technically deeded to the corporation, ownership of the property could effectively have changed without triggering Proposition 13's reassessment provisions. These rules were subsequently changed; under current law, a change of control or ownership of a legal entity causes a reassessment of its real property as well as the real property of entities that it controls.The application to commercial and rental property can lead to an advantage and profit margin for incumbent individuals or corporations who purchased property at a time when prices were low.
Property transfer loophole
Some businesses have exploited a property transfer loophole in Proposition 13 implementing statutes created by the California Legislature that define what constitutes a change in property ownership. To take advantage of this loophole, businesses only have to make sure that no partnership exceeds the 50% mark in control in order to avoid a reassessment. The Legislature could close this loophole with a 2/3 vote. In 2018, the California Board of Equalization estimated that closing this loophole would raise up to $269 million annually in new tax revenue.There have been several legislative attempts to close the loophole, none of which have been successful. There are also ballot measures that would close the loophole, but as of 2019, none have passed.
Sales and other taxes
Other taxes created or increased
Local governments in California now use imaginative strategies to maintain or increase revenue due to Proposition 13 and the attendant loss of property tax revenue. For instance, many California local governments have recently sought voter approval for special taxes such as parcel taxes for public services that used to be paid for entirely or partially from property taxes imposed before Proposition 13 became law. Provision for such taxes was made by the 1982 Community Facilities Act. Sales tax rates have also increased from 6% to 7.25% and higher in some local jurisdictions.The imposition of these special taxes and fees was a target of California Proposition 218 which passed in 1996. It constitutionally requires voter approval for local government taxes and some nontax levies such as benefit assessments on real property and certain property-related fees and charges.
Cities and localities
Greater effect on coastal metropolitan areas than on rest of state
Proposition 13 disproportionately affects coastal metropolitan areas, such as San Francisco and Los Angeles, where housing prices are higher, relative to inland communities with lower housing prices. According to the National Bureau of Economic Research, more research would show whether benefits of Proposition 13 outweigh the redistribution of tax base and overall cost in lost tax revenue.Loss of local government power to state government
Local governments have become more dependent on state funds, which has increased state power over local communities. The state provides "block grants" to cities to provide services, and bought out some facilities that locally administer state-mandated programs. The Economist argued in 2011 that "for all its small government pretensions, Proposition 13 ended up centralizing California's finances, shifting them from local to state government."Resultant planning changes, cost or degradation of services, new fees
Due to the reduction in revenue generated from property tax, local governments have become more dependent on sales taxes for general revenue funds, which some maintain has resulted in the "fiscalization of land use". The fiscalization of land use means that land use decisions are influenced by the ability of a new development to generate revenue. Proposition 13 has increased the incentive for local governments to attract new commercial developments such as big box retailers and car dealerships instead of residential housing developments. This is the result of commercial development's ability to generate revenue for the general fund through sales tax and business licenses tax. The jobs and ongoing sales tax those stores provide may discourage growth of other sectors and job types that may provide better opportunities for residents. Office and retail development are further incentivized because they do not cost the local governments as much as residential developments in terms of public services. Additionally, cities have decreased services and increased fees to compensate for the shortfall, with particularly high impact fees levied on developers building new houses or industrial outlets. Impact fees are a way to impose the cost of the additional services and infrastructure that new developments will require. These costs are typically shifted to the building's buyer, who may be unaware of the thousands in fees included with the building's cost.Education and public services
Effect on public schools
California's K-12 public schools, which during the 1960s had been ranked nationally as among the best, have deteriorated substantially in many surveys of student achievement.Some have disputed the attribution of the decline to Proposition 13's role in the change to state financing of public schools, because schools financed mostly by property taxes were declared unconstitutional in Serrano vs. Priest, and Proposition 13 was then passed partially as a result of that case. California's spending per pupil was the same as the national average until about 1985, when it began decreasing, which resulted in another referendum, Proposition 98, that requires a certain percentage of the state's budget to be directed towards public education.
Prior to implementation of Proposition 13, the state of California saw significant increases in property tax revenue collection "with the share of state and local revenues derived from property taxes increasing from 34% at the turn of the decade to 44% in 1978." Proposition 13 caused a sharp decrease in state and local tax collection in its first year.
One measure of K-12 public school spending is the percentage of personal income that a state spends on education. From a peak of about 4.5% for the nation overall, and 4.0% for California, both peaking in the early 1970s, the nation overall as well as California spent declining percentages on public education in the decade from 1975-1985.
For the longer period of 1970-2008, California has always spent a lower percentage than the rest of the nation on education.
UCSD Economics professor Julian Betts states: "What all this means for spending is that starting around 1978-1979 we saw a sharp reduction in spending on schools. We fell compared to other states dramatically, and we still haven't really caught up to other states." From 1977, in California there has been a steady growth of class sizes compared to the national average, "which have been decreasing since 1970." The shortage in funds translated to decreased spending per student in the years following passage of Proposition 13. During the 1970s, school spending per student was almost equal to the national average. Using discount rate, "measured in 1997-1998 dollars, California spent about $100 more per capita on its public schools in 1969-1970 than did the rest of the country." Since 1981-1982, California consistently has spent less per student than the rest of the U.S. as demonstrated by data collected by the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis and by the Public Policy Institute of California This has resulted in increased pupil-to-teacher ratios in K-12 public schools in California. Professor Betts observes that "pupil-teacher ratios start to skyrocket in the years immediately after 1978, and a huge gap opens up between pupil-teacher ratios here and in the rest of the country, and we still haven't recovered from that."
California's voters approved higher income and capital gains tax rates on the state's wealthiest residents to increase K-12 school funding: Proposition 30 passed in 2012 which raised tax rates on income and capital gains over $250,000 for single filers and $500,000 for joint filers, with most of the resultant revenue going to schools. These measures have significantly closed the K-12 spending gap between California and the national average. Pupil-teacher ratios have decreased since the passage of Proposition 30. California K-12 public school teachers earned the second-highest average salaries amongst teachers of all states in 2019.
In addition to the Serrano v. Priest decision, in 2013, California lawmakers created the Local Control Funding Formula, which provides greater resources to school districts with student populations having higher needs, being determined by the rate of children in poverty or foster care and the rate of English language learners in the district. LCFF has provided an additional 20% or more in "supplemental funding" to disadvantaged school districts and can make them better funded than school districts receiving the state-required minimum "basic aid" funding.
California has excelled in higher education since the passage of Proposition 13 by some measures; in 2019, there were five California universities in the U.S. News & World Report Best Colleges ranking top 25 and ten in the top 50; most of these ten universities are public.
Popularity
Proposition 13 is consistently popular among California's likely voters, 64% of whom were homeowners as of 2017. A 2018 survey from the Public Policy Institute of California found that 57% of Californians say that Proposition 13 is mostly a good thing, while 23% say it is mostly a bad thing. 65% of likely voters say it has been mostly a good thing, as do: 71% of Republicans, 55% of Democrats, and 61% of independents; 54% of people age 18 to 34, 52% of people age 35 to 54, and 66% of people 55 and older; 65% of homeowners and 50% of renters. The only demographic group for which less than 50% said that Proposition 13 was mostly a good thing was African Americans, at 39%.The survey also found that 40% of Californians, and 50% of likely voters said that Proposition 13's supermajority requirement for new special taxes has had a good effect on local government services provided to residents, while 20% of both Californians and likely voters said it had a bad effect, and the remainder felt it had no effect.
At the same time, a majority of both Californians and likely voters opposed lowering the supermajority threshold for local special taxes.
Third rail
Proposition 13 is often considered the "third rail" of California politics, which means that politicians avoid discussions of changing it.In the 2003 California recall election in which Arnold Schwarzenegger was elected governor, his advisor Warren Buffett suggested that Proposition 13 be repealed or changed as a method of balancing the state's budget. Schwarzenegger, believing that such an act would be inadvisable politically and could end his gubernatorial career, said, "I told Warren that if he mentions Proposition 13 again he has to do 500 sit-ups."
Gavin Newsom, when asked about the fairness of Proposition 13 in a 2010 interview with The Bay Citizen, said: "The political realities are such that Democrats, not just Republicans and Independents, are overwhelmingly opposed to making adjustments in terms of the residential side of Prop. 13. On the commercial and industrial side, there seems to be a lot more openness to debate...Of course, it's a difficult time to do that...when you're trying to encourage manufacturing back into your state, and you already have a cost differential between states that border us, you don't want to now increase their burden in terms of property tax on that commercial and industrial space."
In 2011, California Governor Jerry Brown was quoted as saying that it wasn't Proposition 13 that was the problem, but "It was what the Legislature did after 13, it was what happened after 13 was passed" because the legislature reduced local authorities' power. In a later interview in 2014, he lamented that he hadn't built up a "war chest" with which to campaign for an alternative to Proposition 13. Governor Brown said he'd learned from his failure in the mid-1970s to build a war chest that he could have used to push an alternative to Proposition 13. Governor Brown was definitive that he would not seek to change the law, a third rail in California politics. "Prop. 13 is a sacred doctrine that should never be questioned," he said.
Amendments
1978 Proposition 8
Proposition 8 allows for a reassessment of real property values in a declining market.[|1986 Proposition 58]
Proposition 58 allows homeowners to transfer their principal residence to children without a property tax re-assessment, as well as the first $1 million in assessed value of other real property. It passed with 76% of the vote.Between Proposition 58 and [|1996 Proposition 193], which extends Proposition 58 to grandparents, a 2017 report from California's Legislative Analyst's Office found that roughly one out of 20 houses statewide received the exemption in the decade ending in 2015, at an average rate of one out of every 200 houses per year. They estimate total foregone yearly property tax revenue for all exemptions ever received at $1.5 billion in 2015, or about 2.5% of total statewide property tax revenue. The report said that while the exemption made it possible for some to live in their parent's house, it likely incentivized the conversion of inherited houses into rental property or other uses. The report said the exemption probably created downward pressure on rents while causing more Californians to be renters rather than homeowners. The LAO report did not provide a modified estimate of foregone tax revenue that considered extra state and federal income tax revenue on inherited rental property conversions.
[|1986 Proposition 60]
Proposition 60 allows homeowners over the age of 55 to transfer the assessed value of their present home to a replacement home if the replacement home is located in the same county, is of equal or lesser value, and purchased within 2 years of sale.1988 Proposition 90
Proposition 90 is similar to 1986 Proposition 60 in that it allows homeowners over the age of 55 to transfer the assessed value of their present home to a replacement home if the replacement home is located in a different county, provided the incoming county allows the transfer.1996 Proposition 193
Proposition 193 extended 1986 Proposition 58 by allowing grandparents to transfer to their grandchildren their primary residence and up to $1 million in other real property without a property tax re-assessment, when both parents of the grandchild are deceased. It passed with 67% of the vote.1996 Proposition 218
Proposition 218, called the "Right to Vote on Taxes Act," is an initiative constitutional amendment approved by California voters on November 5, 1996. Proposition 218 was sponsored by the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association as a constitutional follow-up to Proposition 13.The proposition established constitutional limits on the ability of local governments to levy benefit assessments on real property and property-related fees and charges such as those for utility services to property. The assessment and property-related fee and charge reforms contained in Proposition 218 were in response to California local governments' use of revenue sources that circumvented the two-thirds vote requirement to raise local taxes under Proposition 13.
It also requires voter approval before a local government, including a charter city, may impose, increase, or extend any local tax. It also constitutionally reserves to local voters the right to use the initiative power to reduce or repeal any local tax, assessment, fee or charge, including provision for a significantly reduced petition signature requirement to qualify a measure on the ballot.
2000 Proposition 39
Proposition 39 lowered the required supermajority necessary for voters to impose local school bond acts from two-thirds of the votes cast to 55%.2010 Proposition 26
Proposition 26 added a constitutional definition of "tax" for purposes of the two-thirds legislative vote requirement for state taxes under Proposition 13.Attempts to change Proposition 13
Since its passage in 1978, there have been many attempts to change Proposition 13 through legislation, legal challenges, and additional ballot measures. In 1992, a legal challenge was considered by the United States Supreme Court, which subsequently ruled 8–1 that Proposition 13 was constitutional.Legal challenges
''Amador Valley Joint Union High School District v. State Board of Equalization'' (1978)
Amador Valley Joint Union High School District v. State Board of Equalization was a California Supreme Court case in which the aforementioned school district challenged the constitutionality of Proposition 13. In the ruling, the state's high court confirmed that an initiative cannot "revise" the constitution; Proposition 13, however, was an amendment to the California Constitution and not a revision.''Nordlinger v. Hahn'' (1992)
Stephanie Nordlinger had purchased a property in the Los Angeles area in 1988 and, under the provisions of Proposition 13, was required to have the property reassessed at a new value. The reassessed value of Nordlinger's property raised her tax rates by 36%, while her neighbors continued to pay significantly lower rates on their property. Disheartened by the disparity in taxation, Nordlinger viewed this reassessment as favoritism in the eyes of the law and elected to bring charges up on the Los Angeles County Tax Assessment office and its primary assessor, Kenneth Hahn.Nordlinger subsequently sued the Los Angeles County Tax Assessor Kenneth Hahn on the grounds of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The Supreme Court held, in Nordlinger v. Hahn, that Proposition 13 was constitutional. Justice Harry Blackmun, writing the majority opinion, noted that California had a "legitimate interest in local neighborhood preservation, continuity, and stability" and that it was acceptable to treat owners who have invested for some time in property differently from new owners. If one objected to the rules, they could choose not to buy.
Thirty years after purchasing her house, Nordlinger, now a senior citizen on a limited income, paid $3,400 a year in property taxes on the house, which had increased in value to $900,000.
Other legal challenges
In December 2011, Charles E. Young, former University of California, Los Angeles chancellor, brought a lawsuit with a team of lawyers headed by William Norris, a retired federal judge of the United States 9th Circuit Court of Appeals. They unsuccessfully sued to overturn the Proposition 13 requirement that a two-thirds vote of the Legislature is required to increase state taxes.Recent attempts to change Proposition 13
Legislative attempts to close the property transfer loophole (2014, 2015, 2018, and 2020)
The property transfer loophole was almost closed in 2014 by a bipartisan coalition in the state legislature but the effort died after progressive politicians, organized labor, and community groups refused to support the effort. In 2015 and 2018, Republican efforts to fix this loophole were stalled by Democratic state legislators in legislative committee. Another Republican attempt to close the loophole was made in 2020. Democrat Don Perata, former California senate leader, said this loophole is left open by his party to create justification for ending Proposition 13.ACA-1 (2019-2020)
Assembly constitutional amendment 1 would have lowered the two-thirds vote threshold for special taxes, including sales or parcel taxes, to fund subsidized housing or government infrastructure to 55%. The bill was introduced by state assemblymember Cecilia Aguiar-Curry. It failed on the assembly floor.SCA-3 (2019-2020)
Senate constitutional amendment 3 would alter Proposition 58 by requiring reassessment at full cash value upon transfer of property to a child or grandchild, unless the property is subsequently and continuously used as a primary residence. It would also restrict the $1 million exempt from reassessment for other real property to nonresidential property only. The bill was introduced by state senator Jerry Hill. As of 2020, the bill is in the inactive file.SCA-5 (2019-2020)
Senate constitutional amendment 5 would lower the two-thirds vote for local school district parcel taxes to 55%. The bill was introduced by state senators Jerry Hill and Ben Allen. As of 2020, it is in the inactive file.2018 Proposition 5
Proposition 5 would have extended 1986 California Proposition 60 and 1988 California Proposition 90 by providing property tax savings to all homeowners who are over age 55 when they move to a different home. It was sponsored by the California Association of Realtors.California's Legislative Analyst's Office estimated that this would cost local governments about $100 million per year over the first few years, growing to $1 billion per year over time.
It was defeated on November 6, 2018, with approximately 58% of voters not in favor.
Future attempts to change Proposition 13
2020 California Association of Realtors measure
The California Association of Realtors sponsored another measure similar to their prior initiative, the failed 2018 Proposition 5, that will appear on the November 2020 ballot. This measure would provide reassessment exemptions to all homeowners over the age of 55 moving within the state, for a total of 3 lifetime moves. It would also restrict Proposition 58 and Proposition 193 to solely inherited primary residences, with an exemption cap of $1 million in value at the time of death, and would require the heir to continually live in the residence or face reassessment. Unlike the $1 million exemption in Propositions 58 and 193 that is based on assessed value of property, the $1 million exemption for primary residence reassessment would be based on market value. Any value beyond $1 million would be reassessed at full market rate. Since this amount would not be indexed to inflation, its relative value would decline over time. The entire taxable value of inherited primary residences would furthermore have no 2% cap on assessment growth and instead would be subject to increases in taxable value at market rate.The measure would require reassessment when 90% of a property's ownership effectively changes, closing the property transfer loophole.
Local governments could gain tens of millions of dollars in property tax revenue per year, likely growing over time to a few hundred million dollars per year. Local schools could see similar revenue gains. State and local government revenue could increase by tens of millions of dollars per year. Administration costs for county assessor offices could increase by tens of millions of dollars per year.
2020 California Schools and Local Communities Funding Act of 2018
The California Schools and Local Communities Funding Act of 2018 is an initiative constitutional amendment eligible to appear on the November 2020 California statewide ballot that would raise taxes by amending Proposition 13 to require the reassessment of commercial and industrial properties at market value, including commercial and industrial property owned by a natural person. Residential properties are excluded from this potential policy, and would continue to be reassessed under the original requirements of Proposition 13. Property tax rates would not change, and there would be a qualified exception for some small businesses. This measure will appear on the ballot for the 2020 California elections as Proposition 15.The measure's five largest donors are the California Teachers Association Issues PAC, SEIU California State Council, Chan Zuckerberg Advocacy, the San Francisco Foundation, and the California Federation of Teachers COPE PROP/Ballot Committee. The measure is opposed by a coalition of current and former elected officials, statewide organizations, regional organizations and businesses.
According to the California Legislative Analyst's Office and the California Assessor's Association, the initiative could potentially generate an additional $6-$10 billion of tax revenue per year, which would go towards additional funding of local governments and public schools, after reimbursing the State for reductions in personal income tax and corporate tax revenue caused by the deductibility of the property tax under existing law and reimbursing counties for the hiring of up to 900 new assessors statewide at a total cost of $517-$639 million a year. This could therefore entail an additional $2.4-$4 billion a year for California public schools and $3.6-$6 billion a year for local governments. The LAO also noted that this new property tax revenue would be significantly more volatile than historical property tax revenues.
Some supporters of the initiative say most states in the U.S. assess commercial properties at market value, and that this reform would make it easier for local governments to get the necessary funding for their projects. Some in opposition say that local governments can raise money successfully from voters with most local tax increases on the ballot succeeding. Some opponents of the initiative, such as former Board of Equalization member George Runner, argue the initiative would harm consumers and the economy by significantly increasing business owners' operating costs, which would be passed on to customers. Some commentators have noted how the initiative would not provide funding for affordable housing development and would further lower the incentive for governmental approval of needed residential development in favor of more-taxable commercial development. Despite this, pro-housing YIMBY groups in California have supported the split roll campaign.
Opponents say the measure targets the large commercial beneficiaries of Proposition 13 which would weaken the political coalition defending the law, invariably leading to a full repeal of Proposition 13. "We're next on the menu," said the president of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association, who also said: "California has the highest income tax rate in America, we have the highest sales tax in America, we have the highest gas tax in America." and that "Even with Proposition 13 protections, California has higher property taxes than two-thirds of the nation."
Some people contend this is a way for state and local governments to pay off their significant unfunded pension liabilities rather than reforming pensions that they feel are overly generous and adopted not because of market necessity, but because of unions' political power and bad legislative choices.
County assessors say the measure will lead to an unmanageable workload which will result in expenditures exceeding revenues for many years. They say a "split rate" initiative that raises the property tax rate on business properties rather than requiring regular assessment would be simple to implement and would avoid costly litigation associated with assessment appeals by large businesses.
According to polls by the Public Policy Institute of California, public support for this act has been declining, with 46% supporting the idea in January 2018, down from 60% in January 2012.
In November 2019, a PPIC poll found 46% of likely voters favored the initiative, 45% were against it, and 9% were undecided.
Citing weak polling, on August 13, 2019, Schools and Communities First announced they were creating a modified initiative for circulation. The new initiative required a higher total signature threshold of around 1 million due to the time of its creation.
On May 29, 2020, the new measure qualified to appear on the November 2020 ballot after signature gatherers collected a gross total of 1.7 million voter signatures in support. As of the approval date, the top contributors to the split roll effort were the unions California Teacher's Association and Service Employees International Union while the contributions of Mark Zuckerberg and Priscilla Chan were $1.9 million. The new measure would raise $6.5 billion to $11.5 billion a year, depending on the strength of real estate markets, after refunding $500 million to $1 billion of income tax losses and new administrative fees related to the measure. Similar to the prior initiative, 40% of new revenue would be allocated towards K-12 public schools while 60% would be earmarked for local governments.
The updated measure would not apply to all residential and agricultural property as well as any commercial property holdings of a common owner with a combined market value under $3 million, while also exempting $500,000 of combined tangible small business personal property and fixtures.
The measure is opposed by a coalition of business groups that raised $2.6 million for campaigns against the measure. The California Farm Bureau also opposes the measure.
Archival collections
- Special Collections and Archives, The UC Irvine Libraries, Irvine, California.
Other
- a few weeks before the 1978 election in this sound recording from the Commonwealth Club records at the Hoover Institution.