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Voters in several states face
variety
of ballot measures on state taxes
By Pat
Curry Bankrate.com
When voters cast their ballots on Nov. 7, they
won't just be making decisions on who will represent them in the
White House, Congress and their state legislatures. In several states,
they also will be saying "yes" or "no" to tax
questions covering everything from abolishing inheritance taxes
to property tax exemptions of cemetery plots.
Taxes are a hot topic this year, as they have
been since the initiative and referendum process was first used
in Oregon in 1904. In 17 states, a total of 34 tax-related measures
have qualified for the ballot, according to the Initiative and Referendum
Institute, a non-profit, non-partisan education and research organization
dedicated to the initiative and referendum process. (For a complete
list of statewide initiatives and referendums, visit the organization's
Web
site.) Many of those are sponsored by state legislatures because
amendments to the state constitution need voter approval, but a
significant number have been proposed by citizens.
According to an article in Investor's Daily
News, tax revolt is alive and well, with anti-tax measures passing
at a rate of 67 percent since 1996. That's up from 43 percent during
the tax revolt of the late 1970s that started with California's
passage of Proposition 13 to cut property taxes and make it harder
to raise local taxes.
It began in California
"Starting in 1978 with Proposition 13 in California, that
re-energized the initiative movement," says M. Dane Waters,
president of the Initiative & Referendum Institute. "It
showed people how they can bypass an entrenched legislature to give
them tax relief. It prompted other initiatives. Since then, 10
to 20 percent of initiatives that are certified for the
ballot are tax-related."
A proposed amendment in Arkansas would abolish
the state and local sales and use tax on used goods and prohibit
the increase of taxes without voter approval at a general election.
As is frequently the case with ballot initiatives, this proposal
was thrown out by the Arkansas Supreme Court on Oct. 24. Proponents
plan to take their fight to the U.S. Supreme Court, hoping to have
it reinstated.
It's a big tax year for Oregon residents, who
will consider a similar measure to require voter approval for most
new and increased taxes and fees, retroactive to 1999.
"If that passes, then all the local tax
fees approved by people would have to be revoted on," Waters
says. "That's one to watch. It would really shake things up."
Plus, they'll vote on a referendum that would
return excess general fund revenues to the taxpayers, and consider
two proposals to change the limitations on how much federal income
tax residents can deduct on their state tax returns.
Next door, Washington residents will vote on
such items as property tax limits and exempting vehicles from property
taxes.
Alaskans will vote on annual limits in property
assessments, and a ban that would keep "certain municipalities"
from setting property tax rates above 10 mills, and repeal a law
requiring the same millage rate on all properties.
The "cap on the property tax is pretty
intense," Waters says. "Several cities and towns are concerned
it's poorly written. There's a big movement in Alaska to consolidate
cities and towns to consolidate services, and there's a concern
that the way the initiative is worded, it'll keep communities from
consolidating."
Fixing Proposition
13
In other major tax-related ballot items, Californians will be
asked to close a loophole in Proposition 13, and redefine many fees
as taxes that require a two-thirds vote of the legislature.
Massachusetts residents will vote on a reduction
of the state income tax from 6 percent to 5 percent, and in Montana
and South Dakota, voters will determine the fate of the state's
inheritance taxes.
Traditionally, the bulk of citizen-sponsored
tax initiatives have dealt with local property taxes, says Todd
Donovan, a professor of political science at Western Washington
University who has written four books on the initiative and referendum
process.
"In Oregon, Washington, and California,
they tended to be tremendously successful," Donovan says. "Local
governments have been dramatically changed as a result. The next
generation -- in the 1990s and now -- are activities trying to go
after not just the taxing powers but the spending powers with expenditure
limitation formulas."
They know what they're
doing
Voting against tax increases is an easy choice for most voters,
Donovan says, because it affects their wallet. The harder choice
comes in considering the long-term impact. Even then, Donovan says,
voters are well equipped to make informed decisions.
"People say had the voters known the long-term
implications (of Proposition 13), they never would have passed it,"
he says. "That couldn't be further from the truth. It's 22
years old, and they continually strengthen the provisions and refuse
to soften the provisions. So they don't regret what they did. The
people got what they wanted. It makes politics much more interesting."
Bill Raabe, a professor of accounting at Samford
University in Birmingham, Ala., and the author of several taxation
textbooks, agrees that the current spate of tax-related initiatives
is tied to the economic prosperity that's led to the surpluses.
"Because the economy has been good for
awhile, people look at their tax returns and say 'I'm paying how
much in tax?'" he says.
Raabe, who is strongly opposed to tax caps and
freezes, notes that "in a suburb or a county with not that
many voting booths, on a rainy day, it only takes a handful of people
to put an idea through, and most of them are terrible ideas. I don't
think you can handcuff government this way. When the economy slows
down, the role of government is to pick up the slack in my opinion
and that takes revenue. Because of these bills, if the revenue isn't
there, it's going to be pretty ugly."
Colorado residents will consider an initiative
that would require voter approval for any new legislative tax. It's
much like one already passed by Washington state residents.
"It's interesting because the voters now
will be expressly asked to approve tax increases on a program-by-program
basis," Donovan says. "Ours was similar. It wasn't just
this sort of anti-tax motivation. People really liked the provision.
They think they're just as competent at making policy as the legislature
and they want a role in that decision-making."
Pat Curry is a free-lance writer
based in Georgia
-- Posted Oct. 26, 2000
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