Message-ID: <12208794.1075861501761.JavaMail.evans@thyme> Date: Thu, 1 Nov 2001 08:18:19 -0800 (PST) From: richard.costigan@asm.ca.gov Subject: FYI - LA Times story on sales tax increase Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-From: Costigan, Richard X-To: X-cc: X-bcc: X-Folder: \JDASOVIC (Non-Privileged)\Dasovich, Jeff\Inbox X-Origin: Dasovich-J X-FileName: JDASOVIC (Non-Privileged).pst Sales Tax to Rise by a Quarter of a Cent Finance: A 1991 law triggers a reduction in good times and kicks it back up during slowdowns. The state deficit means a higher rate on Jan. 1. By JULIE TAMAKI TIMES STAFF WRITER November 1 2001 SACRAMENTO -- Gov. Gray Davis' administration is expected to confirm today that state sales taxes will rise next year by a quarter of a cent, a development eagerly awaited by Republicans who want to make taxes an issue in next year's elections. A 1991 law enacted by Davis' Republican predecessor provided that in good times--when the state budget surplus tops 4% of the general fund for two years straight--the state sales tax automatically drops by one-fourth of 1% for one year. That reduction kicked in for the first time in January. Now the year is almost up, and state finance officials must determine by today whether the higher rate will reappear next year. Their decision, however, is a foregone conclusion, because there is no surplus, lawmakers already have approved a budget that counts on the additional tax money and state revenues are running more than $1 billion below projections. The sales tax rate throughout nearly all of Los Angeles County will rise to 8.25%. The rate in Orange, Riverside and San Bernardino counties is expected to climb to 7.75%. Sales tax in Ventura County is expected to increase to 7.25%. Even with the hike, which will take effect Jan. 1 and add roughly $1.2 billion to California coffers in 2002, the state's budget deficit for the fiscal year is projected to be $8 billion to $14 billion. The tax is a political headache for Davis, who took credit when the tax rate fell in January. That was due, he said, to his administration's commitment to fiscal responsibility in addition to the strong economy. Republican lawmakers, who fought this summer to maintain the lower rate, blame the uptick on deficit spending by their Democratic counterparts. "The budget the governor signed spent over $79 billion when we were only taking in $75 billion," Senate Republican Leader Jim Brulte of Rancho Cucamonga said. "This is why the quarter-cent tax is triggering back on." Republicans contend California taxes are set to rise just as federal lawmakers contemplate an economic stimulus package that has Washington Republicans pushing for steep tax cuts. "We ought to be generating an economic stimulus that is complementary to what is being done on the federal level," Assembly Republican Leader Dave Cox of Fair Oaks said. GOP candidates running for state offices next year will be encouraged by party leaders to raise the tax increase as an issue in their campaigns, said James Fisfis, a spokesman for Cox. "We expect candidates to talk about it, particularly as the economy continues to slump," Fisfis added. Senate Budget Committee Chairman Steve Peace, an El Cajon Democrat, lauded the trigger that controls the tax as the best way to allow voters to hold on to a portion of a large budget reserve when times are good. When times are tough, the trigger causes the tax to reappear. "It's exactly how Pete Wilson designed it to work," Peace said. The issue of stimulating the economy is clearly a sensitive one for Davis. On Wednesday, administration officials held a teleconference with reporters to trumpet financing by the state's Infrastructure Bank to help a biomedical center in San Francisco double in size. Davis did not participate but said in a recorded message that the project shows that the state is helping to spark the economy and create new jobs in important fields. Davis is scheduled to convene an economic summit of California business leaders and politicians Friday at the Walt Disney Co. movie studios in Burbank. The governor has warned most state agencies to prepare for 15% budget cuts, imposed a hiring freeze and ordered a $150-million reduction in state spending in the current fiscal year. A budget deal struck earlier this year between Republicans and Democrats presumably made it easier for a quarter-cent tax cut to kick in by requiring the state finance director to determine two things: The reserve at the end of the fiscal year must be at least 3% of general fund revenues, excluding money generated from the quarter-cent sales tax, and general fund revenues from May to September must exceed the forecast, which they have not.