Tag Archive for: COST

COST Video Forum Congressional District 2 California

This Q&A webinar, hosted by the Coalition of Sensible Taxpayers, provides an excellent opportunity to learn about the candidates running for the United States Congress District 2 seat. Hear from incumbent Congressman Jared Huffman and challengers Chris Coulombe and Tief Gibbs, in this impartial forum moderated by the Honorable Leah T. Wilson, Executive Director of the California Bar Association.

This Forum features all the candidates who filed financial reports with the Federal Election Commission by January 29, 2024 (i.e., those who already have some campaign funding).

Voters should have already received ballots for the March 5 election by the date of this event.

Attendees are invited to submit questions in advance as well as during the forum. The outcome of this election impacts everyone in the county and across the United States.

To sign up for this informational assembly and to suggest questions in advance, please go to our website at costmarin.org.

Be smart! This election is important!
Get educated before you vote.

 

Mimi Willard on the Charlie Siler Show MMWD Rate Hike May 22

Mimi Willard and Paul Premo of the Coalition of Sensible Taxpapers are joined by Charlie Duggan of the Marin Municipal Water District to discuss the pros and cons of a proposed rate increase for Marin County customers.

COST Threatens Lawsuit Over MMWD Rate Hike in MarinIJ

A taxpayer group put the Marin Municipal Water District on notice Thursday, saying it faces “legal peril” if it approves a proposed water rate and fee hike next week.

“It effectively notifies the water district of multiple potential violations of the law if they approve the new fee and rate hike as proposed at the rate hearing on May 28,” Mimi Willard, founder and president of the Coalition of Sensible Taxpayers, or COST, wrote in an email. “I can’t comment on what will be our next step if MMWD proceeds. What I can say is that MMWD can neutralize many of the legal issues if they don’t approve the rate/fee as proposed.”

The water district board of directors is set to vote Tuesday to approve a four-year water rate and fee hike, which includes a new “capital maintenance fee” on customers’ yearly property tax bills. More here

Recent Court Decision Likely Unleashes Additional Spate of Local Taxes in CA

https://marinpost.org/blog/2017/9/3/recent-court-decision-likely-unleashes-additional-spate-of-local-taxes-in-ca

California’s “Citizens United”

A game-changing decision issued by the California Supreme Court appears to eviscerate taxpayer protections provided under Proposition 13 and Proposition 218 (the Right to Vote on Taxes Act) that require a 2/3rds majority vote to pass tax measures. The result could be a tax tsunami funded by special interests masquerading as individuals.

This is a watershed moment.

With both these bombshell court cases – Citizens United v. FEC at the Federal level, and California Cannabis Coalition v. City of Upland – individual citizens’ rights are diminished by a decision that increases the power of unions, corporations and ultra-rich individuals.

In California Cannabis Coalition v. City of Upland, the court determined that the local initiative process does not have to comply with Proposition 218. Pursuant to the court’s decision, a local initiative seeking voter approval for a tax or fee may need to garner only a 50% majority vote rather than the higher 66.66% percentage required of a tax ballot measure under proposition 218.

Why does this matter?

Of particular concern is the prospect that special interest groups could capitalize on this decision by placing “local initiatives” on the ballot, ostensibly sponsored by citizen groups, but in fact backed by well-financed promoters.

As the hurdle to passage drops from Proposition 218’s super-majority requirement to a simple majority, more tax measures could be approved and our tax burdens increased.

Proposition 218, enacted to strengthen Proposition 13, mandates that most new “special” local taxes and fees be approved by voters via ballot measures. Those measures are placed on the ballot by a revenue-seeking entity (e.g., school district, transportation agency, municipality, etc.) and take the form of a parcel tax, sales tax, bond, fee, or other special assessment. Approval of a special tax requires approval by 2/3 of voters, except for school bonds, which need only 55%. (General services measures, in which there are no restrictions on the use of the funds, require only a simple majority vote.)

Taxpayer advocates such as Jon Coupal, President of Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association (which represented Upland in the latter stages of its legal battle) instantly decried the recent California court decision’s potentially explosive implications. In the wake of the court ruling, all it may take for well organized special interests to get a new tax approved would be to hire a signature gathering firm to front for a “citizen group” – followed up with a deep-pocketed PR campaign to sway voters

The opportunity to end run Proposition 218 is obvious.

This type of professionally engineered maneuver would also circumvent the softer taxpayer protections provided by the current process under which local jurisdictions and agencies develop new tax measures. These include the requirement for public hearings; campaign contribution disclosures; and constituents’ ability to (at least occasionally) “throw the bums out.”

It’s not difficult to imagine a scenario in which voters are persuaded to approve a ballot measure concocted and promoted by dark money, or one in which a local jurisdiction colludes with allied special interests (e.g., public employee unions, construction trades, investors or financiers) to raise taxes to fund operations, pension liabilities or major capital projects.

Any action to redress the California Cannabis decision’s impact on taxpayers will almost certainly be spearheaded by Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association. HJTA’s President, Jon Coupal, will be the featured speaker October 19 at a very timely Taxpayer Town Hall hosted by Marin’s Coalition of Sensible Taxpayers, 7-8:30PM at Corte Madera Community Center. Coupal’s talk will tie statewide developments to the spate of new taxes affecting Marin residents.

HJTA has already announced – in an August 28 press release — its readiness to legally challenge potential abuses of proposition 218 prompted by the court’s decision:

“If local initiatives are exempt from critical taxpayer protections, then public agencies could easily deny taxpayers their rights by colluding with outside interests to propose taxes in the form of an initiative, then submitting a tax under a lower vote threshold than that currently mandated by the constitution. The worst case scenario would be if a local government were to rely on this case as legal authority to impose a tax without any election at all. However, if that were attempted, we would commence a new lawsuit immediately.”

HJTA also signaled that a Constitutional Amendment – via ballot initiative – may be required to put the genie back in the bottle, restoring the protections of Propositions 13 and 218.

Regrettably the “fixes” – legal challenges and/or Constitutional Amendment – could take years to unfold. And, the wheels of justice grind slowly. A legal challenge can’t even start until an appropriate case emerges.

A ballot initiative to “fix” the court’s decision (e.g., by constitutionally instituting the 2/3rds majority for Citizen tax initiatives) would be very hard fought. With well-funded special interests and perhaps individual rights groups lined up against taxpayer advocates, it’s unclear whether an initiative could garner enough votes to restore Proposition 218’s protections.

In the interim, be prepared for a wave of new tax measures from sponsors emboldened by the apparent lowering of the hurdles to passage.

A new taxpayer revolt may ultimately climax this saga. The intervening chapters could be drawn out, painful, and have some potentially irreversible consequences to those struggling to hang on to the California dream.

Tell McGuire and Levine Defend OUR Right to Vote on New Taxes. Nix SB231

If SB-231 Passes, You are Powerless to Prevent New Property Taxes for Stormwater.

Contact Assembly Member Marc Levine and Senator Mike McGuire ASAP. An Assembly vote just scheduled for Monday 6/26 threatens to remove your right to vote on new taxes — in this case, the imposition of new local storm water taxes that would normally be required to garner approval from 2/3 of voters.

Per Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association, this legislation could cost homeowners hundreds of dollars each year – some estimates are that the new charges could be over a thousand dollars!

Urge Levine and McGuire to vote NO on SB-231.

If SB-231 passes, the only way to prevent the imposition of excessive storm water taxes/fees would be via formal written protests from a majority of all property owners (an insurmountable hurdle). If you objected to the recent big rate hikes imposed by Marin Municipal Water District — which property owners were helpless to prevent — you should be very concerned about SB-231.

SB-231 is the latest in a series of 2017 CA state legislature bills that undermine voters’ rights to approve new taxes and fees and to recall elected officials.

TELL LEVINE AND McGUIRE TO REPRESENT US!

TO PROTECT OUR DEMOCRATIC RIGHTS

THEY SHOULD VOTE “NO” ON SB-231.

ACTIONS TO TAKE:

Email the Office of Assembly Member Marc Levine TODAY, before the Assembly vote scheduled for Monday June 26.
Email: assemblymember.levine@assembly.ca.gov
Marin — 415-479-4920
Sacramento – 916-319-2010
Tell Levine to vote NO on SB-231. He needs to protect our right to vote on new taxes and fees.

Also Call or email the Office of Senator Mike McGuire
Marin (recommended) – 415-479-6612
Sacramento – 916-651-4002
Email: senator.mcguire@senate.ca.gov
Tell McGuire to vote NO on SB-231. He to protect our right to vote on new taxes and fees.
FURTHER INFORMATION:

The Coalition of Sensible Taxpayers joined many other taxpayer advocacy groups, municipalities, and government associations in formally endorsing the letter below drafted by the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association. Read the letter below to learn what’s at stake.

STATE ASSEMBLY FLOOR ALERT OPPOSITION TO SENATE BILL 231 (Drafted by HJTA, and Endorsed by CO$T)

This bill is slated to be taken up on the Assembly Floor on Monday June 26th.
Changing the longstanding definitions of sewer and stormwater will create uncertainty among municipalities, guarantee litigation and lead to thousands of dollars of new assessments on property owners who will be deprived of their ability under Proposition 218 to have meaningful input as to the nature, extent and amount of those levies.

Taxpayers, businesses interests, and local governments have joined together to op- pose SB 231. Unquestionably, this will lead to higher property taxes for home and small business owners and will also be passed along to renters.

Proposition 218 was a state Constitutional Amendment approved by voters in 1996. The initiative imposes various voter and/or property owner approval procedures prior to being subject to local exactions. Property related fees, as defined, for water, sewer and refuse collection services are not subject to the more stringent approval requirements for the simple reasons that, historically, local governments imposed these fees well before 1978 and the passage of Prop 13. (Prop 218 was meant to reverse the circumvention of Prop 13 by the imposition of various fees, charges, taxes and assessments that hadn’t previously existed). Importantly, fees for “storm water runoff” were rare or non-existent prior to Prop 13.

SB-231 purports to overturn a published appellate court decision
which involved the interpretation of constitutional language

In 2002 the City of Salinas decided to approve a stormwater assessment without a vote of the people. They argued that sewer and stormwater for purposes of treatment were essentially both sewer and decided a vote was not needed under Proposition 218. In the case HJTA v. Salinas the 4th District Appellate Court ruled that stormwater was in fact distinct from sewer service and thus a ballot election was required. The court used both the constitutional language in Prop 218 as well as existing statutory language as the basis for its decision, put in place by Proposition 218 supporters fol- lowing its approval.

The very same Omnibus Act language that SB 231 seeks to amend makes a clear distinction between sewer and drainage systems. Under current law, a drainage system “means any system of public improvements that is intended to provide for erosion control, landslide abatement, or for other types of water drainage.” It was this language that the Court used to make its decision. Needless to say, unsettling a published appellate court decision via state statute is not only unwise, but in this case it violates the California Constitution.

No one denies that storm water runoff programs are a legitimate public service. But it is important to remember that Proposition 218 already permits for municipalities to raise new revenue they need to fund stormwater programs. They simply have to put the issue to the people paying the bills. This can be accomplished either through a majority vote benefit assessment process or even a two thirds vote special district.

Should SB 231 be approved and signed by Governor Brown, the results will be needless litigation and potentially thousands of dollars of new costs place on taxpayers.

Video of the May 16 MMWD Rate Hike Meeting

The meeting lasted from 7:30 pm to 11:00 pm. These videos represent the first two hours. Please visit the related pages on this website to learn more about the Marin Municipal Water District rate hikes.

 

KWMR Interviews Mimi Willard

Listen to a podcast of CO$T founder, Mimi Willard, on KWMR’s Pieces of Peace/Right Now   March 2, 2017 From Point Reyes Station.


LINK HERE


Show host Susan Santiago interviews CO$T’s founder, Mimi Willard. This is an excellent opportunity to learn more about the potential tax and fee increases challenging Marin residents; what’s driving them; and the alternative solutions.