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Sacramento
Report , April 2004 THE
SPLIT ROLL TAX INITIATIVE The truth is that rental property owners are neither devils nor angels. They are business people who sell a product. The commercial or business nature of landlords/ housing providers will
be put on full display this fall. In November, California voters will
decide the Split Roll Tax Initiative that is being circulated by the California
Teachers Association and universally regarded as a shoe-in to make the
ballot.
The Split Roll Tax Initiative is a proposed constitutional amendment sponsored by the California Teachers Association (CTA) and Robert Reiner. It would scuttle the tax protection provisions of Proposition 13 and significantly increase taxes for all commercial property, including residential rental property valued over $700,000. The initiative defines commercial residential property as that
portion of a building that contains one or more dwelling units that are
not owner occupied. As to such property, it maintains the current
property tax and imposes an additional ad valorem property tax on
the assessed value of the property. The rate increases with the assessed
valuation of the property from a rate of .10 ($700,000-$799,999) to .55
($1,000,000 or more).
Taxes will increase on residential rental properties that have assessed values of more than $700,000. This includes rented single-family homes and condominiums. For properties assessed at $700,000, the increase will be an additional $700 per year. For properties with an assessed value of $1million or more, the tax burden will increase by an additional $5,500 for every million dollars of assessed value. For properties currently assessed below the $700,000 threshold, the major impact will be felt at point of sale. That is when properties will be reassessed and buyers who face new tax loads will undoubtedly try to reflect their added burdens in their offers. Owners in rent control cities would have a really big problem. They cannot
pass the cost of new taxes through to sitting tenants unless the local
rent control law allows a pass through. Berkeley owners, for example,
would have to absorb the costs for sitting tenants. Nor, can rent controlled
owners pass through increased costs under vacancy decontrol. Those units
are already renting at market prices and try as one might, owners cannot
charge rents that are higher than market.
The proponents of the measure argue that it is necessary to increase funding for pre-schoolers and teachers. What they dont tell voters is who pays for the tax. In the case of apartment tax increases, that would be, among others, the pre-school operators, teachers, and other long term apartment residents who rent below market and cannot afford to buy Californias medium priced $400,000 plus homes. Unlike owners who may be able to take tax deductions on some of the loss, the tenant who pays for the increase just eats it. And it is a big bite. On a hypothetical eight-unit building valued at $1 million, the tax increase under the CTA Split Roll Initiative would be $5,500 per year. That translates into rent increases of approximately $57 per month and would necessitate a 5.7% increase on an average asking rent of $1,000 per month. This number will be compounded annually. Teachers and pre-school operators who are long term tenants with below market rents and who rank amongst the 75% of California residents who cannot afford to purchase a home will be hurt badly by this measure. I wonder if CTA and Rob Reiner thought this through. They raise taxes on the very people they say they want to help. Is this the kind of thinking that led Archie Bunker to call him Meathead? I am sure that many people want to improve our schools. And, in fact, some readers of this column may think that raising taxes is morally the right thing to do. But, if that is the case, why did CTA and Rob Reiner not include new taxes for homeowners in the initiative? Dont homeowners who have kids in school benefit from the measure? The answer is simple. The proponents didnt include homeowners because they know that homeowners would vote the measure down. Bottom line, this is just another deal that tries to pass things on to business people. If it succeeds, it will be another nail in the coffin of what was once a thriving and prominent state.
Over the next several months, we will report more about the CTA Split Roll Tax Initiative and efforts to defeat it and protect owners from its impact. Suffice it to say that this will be a huge battle that will unify California businesses in unprecedented ways. California apartment owners represented by The McConnell Group will play a significant role. For now, you can view the full text of the measure on the Attorney Generals website: www.caag.state.ca.us/initiatives/activeindex.htm . Greg McConnell heads The McConnell Group, a California Advocacy and Consulting firm that represents and advises apartment associations, property management companies, and individual owners throughout California. Please visit www.themcconnellgroup.com . |