HomeMy WebLinkAbout7.2 League of Calif Cities CITY CLERK
File # [-~-~ ~ ~-,~~
AGENDA STATEMENT
CITY COUNCIL MEETING DATE: March 2, 2004
SUBJECT: League of California Cities'. Ballot Initiative
Report Prepared by Joni L. Pattillo, Assistant City Manager
ATTACHMENTS: 1) Ballot Language
2) Resolution
RECOMMENDATION: Adopt the attached Resolution that supports the Statewide Ballot
Initiative to require Voter Approval before State Government may
take Local Tax
Funds.
FINANCIAL STATEMENT: None
BACKGROUND:
An update was supplied by Stacey Wells, East Bay Representative for the League of California Cities at
the December 16, 2003, City Council meeting on the State Budget and the proposed Ballot Initiative. City
Council's direction to Staff was to bring back a resolution for its consideration once the Ballot language
was finalized. The Initiative will be known as the "LOCAL TAXPAYERS AND PUBLIC SAFETY
PROTECTION ACT." In order to have this item placed on the November 2004 Ballot it will need
598,105 signatures by June 1, 2004. The key elements of the Initiative are:
Requires two-thirds vote of Legislature and voter approval for any reduction, based on
January 1, 2003 levels, of local governments' vehicle license fee revenues, sales tax
powers and revenues, and proportionate share of local property tax revenues.
Permits Legislature to create tax exemptions and reduce vehicle license fee revenues
without voter approval only if legislation reimburses local government for lost
revenues.
provides that local government may, with limited exceptions, suspend performance of
state mandate if State fails to reimburse local government within 180 days of final
determination of state-mandated obligation.
COPIES TO: Stacey Wells, League of CA Cities
ITEM NO.
Summary of estimate by Legislative Analyst and Director of Finance of fiscal impact
on state and local governments. Over time, the initiative would have the following
major fiscal effects: Higher and more stable local government revenues than otherwise
would haVe been the case, possibly in the range of several billion dollars annually.
Significant changes to state finance, potentially including higher state taxes than
otherwise would have been the case, or lower spending on state programs. The
magnitude of the state fiscal effect would be commensurate with the measure's impact
on local government.
Recommendation: Staff recommends the approval of the attached Resolution that supports the Statewide
Ballot Initiative to require Voter Approval before State Government may take Local Tax Funds.
THE LOCAL TAXPAYERS AND PUBLIC SAFETY PROTECTION ACT
SECTION ONE. Short Title.
These amendments to the California Constitution shall be known and may be
cited as the LOCAL TAXPAYERS AND PUBLIC SAFETY PROTECTION ACT.
SECTION TWO. Findings and Purposes
(a) The People of the State of California find that restoring local control over local
tax dollars is vital to insure that local tax dollars are used to provide critical local services
including police, fire, emergency and trauma care, public health, libraries, criminal
justice, and road and street maintenance. Reliable funding for these services is essential
for the security, well-being and quality of life of all Californians.
(b) For many years, the Legislature has taken away local tax dollars used by local
governments so that the State could control those local tax dollars. In fact, the Legislature
has been taking away billions of local tax dollars each year, forcing local governments to
either raise local fees or taxes to maintain services, or cut back on critically needed local
services.
(c) The Legislature's diversion of local tax dollars from local governments harms
local governments' ability to provide such specific services as police, fire, emergency and
trauma care, public health, libraries, criminal justice, and road and street maintenance.
(d) In recognition of the harm caused by diversion of local tax dollars and the
importance placed on voter control of major decisions concerning government financ, e,
and consistent with existing provisions of the California Constitution that give the people
the right to vote on fiscal changes, the People of the State of California want the right to
vote upon actions by the State government that take local tax dollars from local
governments.
(e) The Local Taxpayers and Public Safety Protection Act is designed to insure
that the People of the State of California shall have the right to approve or reject the
actions of state government to take away local revenues that fund vitally needed local
services.
(f) The Local Taxpayers and Public Safety Protection Act strengthens the
requirement that if the State mandates local governments to implement new or expanded
programs, then the State shall reimburse local governments for the cost of those
programs.
(g) The Local Taxpayers and Public Safety Protection Act does not amend or
modify the School Funding Initiative, Proposition 98 (Article XVI, section 8 of the
California Constitution).
(h) Therefore, the People declare that the purposes of this Act are to:
(1) require voter approval before the Legislature removes local tax dollars
from the control of Local Government, as described in this measure;
(2) insure that local tax dollars are dedicated to local governments to fund
local public services;
(3) insure that the Legislature reimburses local governments when the
State mandates local governments to assume more financial responsibility
for new or existing programs; and
(4) prohibit the Legislature from deferring or delaying annual
reimbursement to local governments for state-mandated programs.
SECTION THREE. Article XIIIE is hereby added to the California Constitution to read
as follows:
ARTICLE XIIIE Local Taxpayers and Public Safety Protection Act
Section 1. State-wide Voter Approval Required.
(a) Approval by a majority vote of the electorate, as provided for in this section,
shall be required before any act of the Legislature takes effect that removes the following
funding sources, or portions thereof, from the control of any Local Government as
follows:
(1) Reduces, or suspends or delays the receipt of, any Local Government's
proportionate share of the Local Property Tax when the Legislature
exercises its power to apportion the Local Property Tax; or requires
any Local Government to remit Local Property Taxes to the State, a
state-created fund, or, without the consent of the affected Local
Governments, to another Local Government;
(2) Reduces, or delays or suspends the receipt of, the Local Government
Base Year Fund to any Local Government, without appropriating
funds to offset the reduction, delay or suspension in an equal amount;
(3) Restricts the authority to impose, or changes the method of
distributing, the Local Sales Tax;
(4) Reduces, or suspends or delays the receipt of, the 2003 Local
Government Payment Deferral; or
(5) Fails to reinstate the suspended Bradley-Bums Uniform Sales Tax
Rate in accordance with Section 97.68 of the Revenue and Taxation
Code added by Chapter 162 of 2003 Statutes; or reduces any Local
Government's allocation of the Property Tax required by Section
97.68 while the Sales Tax Rate is suspended.
(b) A vote of the electorate, as provided in this section, shall also be required if
an act of the Legislature that establishes classifications or exemptions from the Local
Property Tax or the Local Sales Tax does not include a continuous appropriation to
reimburse Local Governments for the actual loss of revenue from those classifications or
exemptions.
(c) Prior to its submission to the electorate, an act subject to voter approval under
this section must be approved by the same vote of the Legislature as is required to enact a
budget bill and shall not take effect until approved by a majority of those voting on the
measure at the next statewide election in accordance with subdivision (d).
(d) When an election is required by this section, the Secretary of State shall
present the following question to the electorate: "Shall that action taken by the
Legislature in [Chapter of the Statutes of ], which affects local revenues, be
approved?
Section 2. Definitions
(a) "Local Government" means any city, county, city and county, or special
district.
(b) "Local Government Base Year Fund" means the amount of revenue
appropriated in the 2002-2003 fiscal year in accordance with Chapters 1 through 5,
commencing with section 10701 of Part 5 of Division 2 of the Revenue and Taxation
Code, adjusted annually based upon the change in assessed valuation of vehicles that are
subject to those provisions of law. In the event that the fees imposed by those provisions
of law are repealed, then the Fund shall be adjusted annually on July 1 by an amount
equal to the percentage change in per capita personal income and the change in
population, as determined pursuant to Article XIIIB.
(c) "2003 Local Government Payment Deferral" means the amount of revenues
required to be transferred to Local Government from the General Fund specified in
subparagraph D of paragraph 3 of subdivision (a) of section 10754 of the Revenue and
Taxation Code in effect on August 11, 2003.
(d) "Local Property Tax" means any Local Government's January 1, 2003
proportionate share of ad valorem taxes on real property and tangible personal property
apportioned pursuant to the Legislature:s exercise of its power to apportion property
taxes as specified in Article XIIIA, section 1. "Local Property Tax" also means any
Local Government's allocation of the ad valorem tax on real property and tangible
personal property pursuant to Article XVI, section 16.
(e) "Local Sales Tax" means any sales and use tax imposed by any city, county,
or city and county pursuant to the Bradley-Bums Uniform Sales and Use Tax (Chapter 1
of Part 1.5 of Division 2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code) in accordance with the law
in effect on January 1, 2003.
(f) "Special District" means an agency of the State, formed pursuant to general
law or special act, for the local performance of governmental or proprietary functions
with limited geographic boundaries, including redevelopment agencies, but not including
school districts, community college districts, or county offices of education.
(g) "State" means the State of California.
Section 3. Interim Measures
(a) The operation and effect of any statute, or portion thereof, enacted between
November 1, 2003 and the effective date of this Act, that would have required voter
approval pursuant to Section 1 if enacted on or after the effective date of this Act (the
"Interim Statute"), shall be suspended on that date and shall have no further force and
effect until the date the Interim Statute is approved by the voters at the first statewide
election following the effective date of this Act in the manner specified in Section 1. If
the Interim Statute is not approved by the voters, it shall have no further force and effect.
(b) If the Interim Statute is approved by the voters, it shall nonetheless have no
further force and effect during the period of suspension; provided, however, that the
statute shall have force and effect during the period of suspension if the Interim Statute or
separate act of the Legislature appropriates funds to affected local governments in an
amount which is not less than the revenues affected by the Interim Statute.
SECTION FOUR. Article XIIIB Section Six (6) is hereby amended as follows:
SEC. 6. (a) Whenever the Legislature or any state agency mandates a new program or
higher level of service on any local government, the State shall annually provide a
subvention of funds to reimburse such local government for the costs of such program or
increased level of service, except that the Legislature may, but need not, provide such
subvention of funds for the following mandates:
(-a) (1) Legislative mandates requested by the local agency affected;
(-b-) (2) Legislation defining a new crime or changing an existing definition of a
crime; or
¢--) (3) Legislative mandates enacted prior to January 1, 1975, or executive orders
or regulations initially implementing legislation enacted prior to January 1, 1975.
(b) The annual subvention of funds required by this section shall be transmitted to the
local government within 180 days of the effective date of the statute or regulation or
order by a State officer or agency that mandates a new program or higher level of
service, or within 180 days of a final adjudication that a subvention of funds is required
pursuant to this section. For purposes of this section, the Legislature or any State
agency or officer mandates a new program or higher level of service when it creates a
new program, requires services not previously required to be provided, increases the
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frequency or duration of required services, increases the number of persons eligible for
services, or transfers to local government complete or partial financial responsibility for
a program for which the Statepreviously had complete orpartialfinancial responsibility.
(c) If during the fiscal year in which a claim for reimbursement is filed for a subvention
of funds, the Legislature does not appropriate a subvention of funds that provides full
reimbursement as required by subdivision (a), or does not appropriate a subvention of
funds that provides full reimbursement as part of the state budget act in the fiscal year
immediately following the filing of that claim for reimbursement, then a local government
may elect one of the following options:
(1) Continue to perform the mandate. The local government shall receive
reimbursement for its costs to perform the mandate through a subsequent appropriation
and subvention of funds; or
(2) Suspend performance of the mandate during all or a portion of the fiscal year
in which the election permitted by this subdivision is made. The local government
may continue to suspend performance of the mandate during all or a portion Of
subsequent fiscal years until the fiscal year in which the Legislature appropriates
the subvention of funds to provide full reimbursement as required by subdivision
(a). A local government shall receive reimbursement for its costs for that portion
of the fiscal year during which it performed the mandate through a subsequent
appropriation and subvention of funds.
The terms of this subdivision do not apply, and a local government may not make the
election provided for in this subdivision, for a mandate in effect on January 1, 2004 that
either requires safe working conditions for local government employees or establishes
procedural rights arising from and directly relating to local government employment.
(d) For purposes of this section, "mandate" means a statute, or action or order of any
state agency, which has been determined by the Legislature, any court, or the
Commission on State Mandates or its designated successor, to require reimbursement
pursuant to this section.
SECTION FIVE. Construction.
(a) This measure shall be liberally construed to effectuate its purposes, including
providing adequate funds to Local Government to fund local services such as police, fire,
emergency and trauma care, public health, libraries, criminal justice, and road and street
maintenance.
(b) This.measure shall not be construed either to alter the apportionment of the ad
valorem tax on real property pursuant to Section 1 of Article XIIIA by any statute in
effect prior to January 1, 2003 or to prevent the Legislature from altering that
apportionment in compliance with the terms of this measure.
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(c) Except as provided in Section 3 of Article XIIIE added by Section Three of this Act,
the provisions of Section 1 of Article XIIIE added by Section Three of this Act apply to
all statutes adopted on or after the effective date of this Act.
SECTION SIX. If any part of this measure or its application to any person or
circumstance is held invalid by a court of competent jurisdiction, the invalidity shall not
affect other provisions or applications that reasonably can be given effect without the
56invalid pr56ovision or application.
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RESOLUTION NO. - 04
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL
OF THE CITY OF DUBLIN
SUPPORTING A STATEWIDE BALLOT INITIATIVE
TO REQUIRE VOTER APPROVAL
BEFORE STATE GOVERNMENT MAY TAKE LOCAL TAX FUNDS
WHEREAS, state'government annually seizes over $800 million in city property tax funds
(ERAF) Statewide, costing cities over $6.9 billion in lost revenues over the past 12 years and seriously
reducing resources available for local public safety and other services; and
WHEREAS, in adopting the state budget this year the Legislature and Governor appropriated
local vehicle license fee backfill and redevelopment property tax funds that are needed to finance Critical
city services such as public safety, parks, street maintenance, housing and economic development; and
WHEREAS, the deficit financing plan in the state budget depends On a local property and sales
tax swap that leaves city services vulnerable if the state's economic condition fails to improve; and
WHEREAS, the adopted state budget assumes an ongoing structural budget deficit of at least $8
billion, Putting city resources and services at risk in future years to additional state revenue raids; and
WHEREAS, it is abundantly clear that state leaders will continue to use local tax funds to balance
the state budget unless the voters limit the power of the Legislature and Governor to do so; and
WHEREAS, the voters of California are the best judges of whether local tax funds should be
diverted, confiscated, shifted or otherwise taken to finance an ever-expanding state government; and
WHEREAS, the General Assembly of Voting Delegates of the League of California Cities at its
September 10, 2003 meeting voted to sponsor a statewide ballot initiative to empower the voters to limit
the ability of state government to confiscate local tax funds to fund state government; and
WHEREAS, the League has requested that cities offer support for a November 2004 ballot
initiative that will allow voters to decide whether state government may appropriate local tax funds to
fund state government operations and responsibilities.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the City Council of the City of Dublin hereby
expresses its strong support for a statewide ballot initiative to allow voters to decide whether local tax
funds may be taken, confiscated, shifted, diverted or otherwise used to fund state government operations
and responsibilities; and
BE IT FURTItER RESOLVED, that the City Council and staff are authorized to provide
impartial informational materials on the initiative as may be lawfully provided by the city's
representatives. No public funds shall be used to campaign for or against the initiative; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that the residents of the City are encouraged to become well
informed on the initiative and its possible impacts on the critical local services on which they rely; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that the City Manager (or City Clerk) is hereby directed to send
a copy of this Resolution to the Executive Director of the League of California Cities.
PASSED, APPROVED AND ADOPTED this 2na day of March, 2004.
AYES:
NOES:
ABSENT:
ABSTAIN:
Mayor
ATTEST:
City Clerk
K2/G/3.2_04/reso-ballotmeasure.doc (Item 7.2)