SACRAMENTO
REPORT
By Greg
McConnell, Legislative Advocate
It amuses me to hear the debate
about the appropriate name for people
who rent residential units. On one
end of the spectrum is the term
"landlord" which some
of the more hostile tenant activists
equate to "greedy bloodsucker."
The moniker used at the other end
of the spectrum is "housing
provider", a.k.a., "benevolent
benefactor sent from high above."
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.
SPLIT ROLL
TAX - A BRIEF DESCRIPTION
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).
According to CTA, this measure
is necessary to raise revenues for
a new pre-school program and K-12
education, including teacher salaries.
One third of the revenues are dedicated
to the pre-school program. The remaining
two-thirds goes to K-12 education.
HOW SPLIT
ROLL AFFECTS APARTMENT OWNERS
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 $1 million
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.
Owners in non-rent controlled cities
will be able to pass some of their
costs through to tenants who have
long tenancies and pay below market
rents.
SPLIT ROLL'S
IMPACT ON TENANTS
The proponents of the measure argue
that it is necessary to increase
funding for pre-schools and teachers.
What they don't 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
California's medium priced $400,000
plus homes. 1
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?
Don't homeowners who have kids in
school benefit from the measure?
The answer is simple. The proponents
didn't 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.
DEFEATING
THE SPLIT ROLL TAX INTIATIVE
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
General's website.
Greg McConnell heads The McConnell
Group, a California Advocacy and
Consulting firm. The McConnell Group
represents and advises apartment
associations, property management
companies, and individual owners
throughout California.
For more information please visit
www.themcconnellgroup.com.
( This article is copyrighted and
cannot be republished without the
consent of the author.)
1 (California Association of Realtors
puts that number at 75% of the population)
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