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if prop 13 was gone


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2018 Nov 8, 9:06am   14,900 views  111 comments

by Hircus   ➕follow (1)   💰tip   ignore  

if prop 13 was killed ...what would the new typical tax rate be in CA? Assume we kept the total amount of tax revenue the same.

Right now, you have this huge dichotomy in taxes - someone pays 2k per yr, while their neighbor pays 16k for a comparable house.

I think right now we pay about 1% of the assessed value in CA unless there's special junk like melo roos or w/e they're called. But, 1% would be way too much if everyone were paying it and the assessed value was updated yearly without any yearly growth caps.

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28   RWSGFY   2018 Nov 14, 10:24pm  

PrivilegedtobeWhite says
DASKAA says
PrivilegedtobeWhite says
Don't tax based on the value, but on the type and size of the parcel of land.


Right: let's tax the same amount per sq foot of land in Palo Alto and in the middle of Mojave desert. It's the only fair way to do it!
Do you read? TYPE and size.


OK, change it to "in the small city in the middle of Mojave desert". Better?

Still insist that parcels of the same size and type (residential, commercial) should be taxed the same per sq foot at both locations?

PS. Watch it with the personal attacks: it's not kosher here.
29   anonymous   2018 Nov 14, 10:39pm  

DASKAA says
OK, change it to "in the small city in the middle of Mojave desert". Better?
No

DASKAA says
Still insist that parcels of the same size and type (residential, commercial) should be taxed the same per sq foot at both locations?
Never insisted that about location. Why couldn't location play into it as well? So, type, size and location. Or, the alternative is the pathetic system we have now.
30   just_passing_through   2018 Nov 14, 10:47pm  

WookieMan says
No one HAS to live in CA. If you can't afford it, get the fuck out.


That's what our local politicians say when people complain they won't let us build. That and CA is full.
31   Eric Holder   2018 Nov 14, 11:53pm  

PrivilegedtobeWhite says
Don't tax based on the value, but on the type and size of the parcel of land.


PrivilegedtobeWhite says
Never insisted that about location. Why couldn't location play into it as well? So, type, size and location.


OK, who's going to decide the "fair land tax" based on "type, size" and, now, also a "location"? A committee of friendly ocasio-cortezes?
32   anonymous   2018 Nov 15, 7:03am  

Who decides local taxes today?

I get it. You have a law unfairly favoring you and you don’t want to lose it, but the key word there is “unfair”. It’s easy to forget about people getting screwed when you benefit, so you’ll keep blindly fighting against new ideas to fix it.

The facts are this. Taxes levied today are to pay for expenses of today, not of 20 years ago.
33   RWSGFY   2018 Nov 15, 7:30am  

PrivilegedtobeWhite says
Who decides local taxes today?

I get it. You have a law unfairly favoring you and you don’t want to lose it, but the key word there is “unfair”. It’s easy to forget about people getting screwed when you benefit, so you’ll keep blindly fighting against new ideas to fix it.

The facts are this. Taxes levied today are to pay for expenses of today, not of 20 years ago.


Today the taxes are based on transaction price and rules governing the increase. The rules were set by voters in a tax revolt. But at least we have rules. Going from the system based on rules to the system based on "fairness by fiat" and not anchored even to market price is the road to abyss. This is why your "solution" is not a solution. And it keeps changing from post to post, lol.
34   Eric Holder   2018 Nov 15, 12:19pm  

MegaForce says
In CA, is because the base that the tax is charged against can't change beyond what it was set at at the time of the property's purchase. And the rate is constitutionally capped to 1%. A reassessment of the the property tax payment thus can only be made a) when the property ownership changes or b) there is construction done.

So a house that was bought for $200k would pay 1% at most on that $200k value for all time until it was sold or construction was done.


I challenge this. Real-life example: a house in AlCo bought in 2013 for ~$800K had property taxes set at ~$8.5K at that time. Current property tax ~$12.5 with Zillow showing zestimate at ~$1.2M (I know, I know) . Hardly a "1% at most on $200K value for all time". It seems that the current system does pretty good job tracking the raising prices.
35   anonymous   2018 Nov 15, 12:26pm  

DASKAA says
PrivilegedtobeWhite says
Who decides local taxes today?

I get it. You have a law unfairly favoring you and you don’t want to lose it, but the key word there is “unfair”. It’s easy to forget about people getting screwed when you benefit, so you’ll keep blindly fighting against new ideas to fix it.

The facts are this. Taxes levied today are to pay for expenses of today, not of 20 years ago.


Today the taxes are based on transaction price and rules governing the increase. The rules were set by voters in a tax revolt. But at least we have rules. Going from the system based on rules to the system based on "fairness by fiat" and not anchored even to market price is the road to abyss.
Huh? No one said we wouldn’t have rules. I’m suggesting we have different rules. Your argument above is convoluted and makes no sense. Why is detaching from market price the “road to the abyss”? lol. Because you say so?
36   Eric Holder   2018 Nov 15, 12:42pm  

PrivilegedtobeWhite says
Why is detaching from market price the “road to the abyss”?


Because it opens the door to assigning taxes and fees based purely on government fiat. And with pinko one-party government rule we have in CA it is exactly that - road to abyss. We are already firmly on that road with highest electricity rates in the nation and shittiest electric transmission infrastructure causing forest fires like a fucking clockwork, highest gas taxes in the nation and shittiest roads, highest per-pupil spending in the nation and schools among the shittiest, highest state income taxes and not much to show for them, etc.

So, what are the "rules detached from the market price" you propose? Use two 3-bedroom houses of the same size and on the same-sized plots in Palo Alto, CA and Mojave, CA as an example. I'm genuinely curious of what people talking about "fairness" really mean.
37   Strategist   2018 Nov 15, 7:19pm  

Eric Holder says
We are already firmly on that road with highest electricity rates in the nation and shittiest electric transmission infrastructure causing forest fires like a fucking clockwork

Another reason to go solar.

Eric Holder says
highest gas taxes in the nation

Yet another reason to go solar and EV - electric vehicle.

Eric Holder says
highest per-pupil spending in the nation and schools among the shittiest

Another reason to eliminate unions.

Eric Holder says
shittiest roads

Another reason to eliminate government pensions.

Eric Holder says
highest state income taxes and not much to show for them

Another reason to eliminate welfare queens, government pensions, and democrats.
38   Strategist   2018 Nov 15, 7:24pm  

Patrick says
Right: let's tax the same amount per sq foot of land in Palo Alto and in the middle of Mojave desert. It's the only fair way to do it!


@DASKAA Where do you get the idea that those bits of land should be taxed the same?

No one is suggesting that.

Taxes should be proportional to land market values.


DAASKA, how much do you think you can get in taxes from a 1 acre lot worth $1K in the middle of the desert?
39   marcus   2018 Nov 15, 8:53pm  

Quigley says
FortWayneIndiana says
Because at old age people should pay less.


Who knew ? Fort Wayne is a socialist ?

Why shouldn't they just sell their million dollar home and live somewhere cheaper. Why are they so entitled ?

Oh yeah. Some republicans only like the kind of socialism that goes to the corporations and the wealthy.
40   marcus   2018 Nov 15, 8:55pm  

Hircus says
if prop 13 was gone


Housing would be much cheaper in California.

Who would have predicted that people will pay a premium for lower RE taxes.
41   BayArea   2018 Nov 15, 9:30pm  

marcus says
Quigley says
FortWayneIndiana says
Because at old age people should pay less.


Who knew ? Fort Wayne is a socialist ?

Why shouldn't they just sell their million dollar home and live somewhere cheaper. Why are they so entitled ?

Oh yeah. Some republicans only like the kind of socialism that goes to the corporations and the wealthy.


Never thought I’d agree with you on anything but you are absolutely correct here sir.
42   lostand confused   2018 Nov 16, 1:23am  

liberals, liberals
Paying lesser taxes is the same as taking from the government. LOL liberals-this country is doomed.
43   anonymous   2018 Nov 16, 7:22am  

Eric Holder says
PrivilegedtobeWhite says
Why is detaching from market price the “road to the abyss”?


Because it opens the door to assigning taxes and fees based purely on government fiat. And with pinko one-party government rule we have in CA it is exactly that - road to abyss. We are already firmly on that road with highest electricity rates in the nation and shittiest electric transmission infrastructure causing forest fires like a fucking clockwork, highest gas taxes in the nation and shittiest roads, highest per-pupil spending in the nation and schools among the shittiest, highest state income taxes and not much to show for them, etc.

So, what are the "rules detached from the market price" you propose? Use two 3-bedroom houses of the same size and on the same-sized plots in Palo Alto, CA and Mojave, CA as an example. I'm genuinely curious of what people talking about "fairness" really mean.
First off, Prop13 is completely unfair for the aforementioned reasons in this thread. Pinning it to market value is unfair for the "poor granny" reasons we've talked about, but more importantly, how does an increase in market value increase government expenses so that they would need more taxes? It makes no sense. Taxes should be levied based upon government need to spend them, not because the market goes ape-shit. If the market tanks, does that mean the government's expenses go down to maintain infrastructure? No. This is why taxes should be assessed in a different way...tying to the market makes no logical sense.

What I propose is that every municipality determine a flat fee to levy on homeowners based upon the defined characteristics: size of land, type of land (residential vs commercial), location, etc. I don't know all of the characteristics...that would have to be determined. But in a nutshell, what are the factors of a property that determine the cost to the municipality? I don't know why this would be that hard to calculate. It wouldn't be perfect, but it would be a hell of a lot better than tying it to market value, which has NOTHING to do with the cost to run a municipality.
44   HeadSet   2018 Nov 16, 7:46am  

What I propose is that every municipality determine a flat fee to levy on homeowners based upon the defined characteristics: size of land, type of land (residential vs commercial), location, etc.

Add to that the number of school age children.
45   RWSGFY   2018 Nov 16, 8:03am  

PrivilegedtobeWhite says
What I propose is that every municipality determine a flat fee


Property taxes are collected at county level, not municipal. Unincorporated areas have no "municipality" per se.
46   FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden   2018 Nov 16, 8:09am  

Government pensions would grow, gentrification would balloon. People would be fucked by unions filled with bunch of low iq entitled chest pounding pension spiking assholes.
47   FortWayneAsNancyPelosiHaircut   2018 Nov 16, 9:12am  

APHAman says
Why do Virtue Signalling right wingers always want big government to come in and interfere with The Market?


You are confusing sane people with left winger socialists. I can't help you there, that's a you problem.
48   anonymous   2018 Nov 16, 2:58pm  

DASKAA says
PrivilegedtobeWhite says
What I propose is that every municipality determine a flat fee


Property taxes are collected at county level, not municipal. Unincorporated areas have no "municipality" per se.
Wow, you’re smart. Did I miss any punctuation too? So what about responding to the important aspects to what I said?
49   anonymous   2018 Nov 16, 2:59pm  

HeadSet says
What I propose is that every municipality determine a flat fee to levy on homeowners based upon the defined characteristics: size of land, type of land (residential vs commercial), location, etc.

Add to that the number of school age children.
Why?
50   Eric Holder   2018 Nov 16, 3:17pm  

PrivilegedtobeWhite says
DASKAA says
PrivilegedtobeWhite says
What I propose is that every municipality determine a flat fee


Property taxes are collected at county level, not municipal. Unincorporated areas have no "municipality" per se.
Wow, you’re smart. Did I miss any punctuation too? So what about responding to the important aspects to what I said?


This is not important? The proposal is essentially to stop collecting property taxes at county level in lieu of collecting some Gosplan-calculated fee completely divorced from the property's value, but it completely misses to mention what will replace the revenue stream the county will lose with property taxes going away. Let me guess: another "carefully-calculated fee, not linked to property values"?
51   MrBark   2018 Nov 16, 4:07pm  

I pay $2400/year property taxes on a $650k home, based on an appraised value of $220k. If prop 13 disappeared tomorrow, I would be paying around $6000/year. I'd be pissed, but I'll look at the positives... I wouldn't be 'forced' to keep my current home until I die. Since I'd be paying the same as everyone else, I would be able to actually move into a 'dream home' instead of a home I just bought from my parents for the tax benefits. On the other hand, it would be terrible to rip old folks from their communities and their support networks they've developed over their lifetimes.
52   anonymous   2018 Nov 16, 6:01pm  

Eric Holder says
PrivilegedtobeWhite says
DASKAA says
PrivilegedtobeWhite says
What I propose is that every municipality determine a flat fee


Property taxes are collected at county level, not municipal. Unincorporated areas have no "municipality" per se.
Wow, you’re smart. Did I miss any punctuation too? So what about responding to the important aspects to what I said?


This is not important? The proposal is essentially to stop collecting property taxes at county level in lieu of collecting some Gosplan-calculated fee completely divorced from the property's value, but it completely misses to mention what will replace the revenue stream the county will lose with property taxes going away. Let me guess: another "carefully-calculated fee, not...
Wow. You guys love having property tax linked to market value. Let me guess...you pay very little each year while your neighbors pay a lot, and you get to enjoy others paying more for services that you benefit from. Again, I understand why you want to keep Prop 13 because it unfairly benefits you, but it's still wrong no matter how you spin it.
53   Strategist   2018 Nov 16, 7:59pm  

PrivilegedtobeWhite says
First off, Prop13 is completely unfair for the aforementioned reasons in this thread. Pinning it to market value is unfair for the "poor granny" reasons we've talked about, but more importantly, how does an increase in market value increase government expenses so that they would need more taxes? It makes no sense. Taxes should be levied based upon government need to spend them, not because the market goes ape-shit. If the market tanks, does that mean the government's expenses go down to maintain infrastructure? No. This is why taxes should be assessed in a different way...tying to the market makes no logical sense.


Something like realtors demanding the same percent commission wether it's a 100K property, or a $million property. They aren't working 10 times as much for the higher priced property.
54   FortWayneAsNancyPelosiHaircut   2018 Nov 16, 8:02pm  

Is it fair to have an old person pay same taxes as a person who is in their prime earning years?
Society doesn't exist for the sole fucking purpose of paying taxes so that greedy unions can ran their pensions up.

Prop 13 = more government money, less private sector. That's it.
55   Sunnyvale94087   2018 Nov 16, 10:04pm  

Eric Holder says
I challenge this. Real-life example: a house in AlCo bought in 2013 for ~$800K had property taxes set at ~$8.5K at that time. Current property tax ~$12.5 with Zillow showing zestimate at ~$1.2M (I know, I know) . Hardly a "1% at most on $200K value for all time". It seems that the current system does pretty good job tracking the raising prices.


When a property sells, the house is supposed to be assessed at "fair market value." However, if the transaction price were — for whatever reason — low, the house might get bumped up when the assessor actually goes to look at the house. Another possibility is that the house was upgraded by the new resident in such a way that the house is re-assessed at "fair market value" after the upgrade. Either of these situations would result in an increase higher than the 2% increase mandated by Prop 13.

Here's a counter-example to yours. This house just sold, so I hope I won't be picking anybody out for ridicule.
https://www.zillow.com/homes/for_sale/Sunnyvale-CA-94087/19614224_zpid/97549_rid/37.349032,-122.024039,37.346418,-122.029339_rect/17_zm/1_rs/
You'll see that the most recent tax record shows assessed value of $85k and $1446 paid in taxes for the year. It just sold for $1.95 million, so the new owner will be assessed about $21K tax per year. So, it definitely doesn't seem as though "the current system does pretty good job tracking the raising prices." This tax hike is common in this area; there are plenty of $2M homes that pay taxes on assessed value of $100k.
56   Strategist   2018 Nov 17, 7:07am  

Prop 13 hurts people who move around too much, and benefits those who stay put. It's as simple as that.
It only ends up benefiting the old folks because they had the opportunity to buy 30 years ago vs a 30 year old couple trying to buy today. The new generations will have their turn to benefit when the time comes.
57   anonymous   2018 Nov 17, 7:55am  

FortWayneIndiana says
Is it fair to have an old person pay same taxes as a person who is in their prime earning years?
Uh, Yes. If old people didnt properly save during their earning years, that’s their fault. One’s property tax should have nothing to do with how much they currently make. Why should someone with more money, THAT THEY EARNED, pay more than someone else? Should they pay more gas taxes too? How about higher DMV vehicle fees? Let’s just keep going because hey, they have more money.
58   FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden   2018 Nov 17, 8:59am  

They are not responsible for you overpaying and making dumb financial decisions.

Sorry boys , you chose to pay a lot for your house hence your tax is higher. Personal responsibility buddy. That’s fair in my book.

PrivilegedtobeWhite says
FortWayneIndiana says
Is it fair to have an old person pay same taxes as a person who is in their prime earning years?
Uh, Yes. If old people didnt properly save during their earning years, that’s their fault. One’s property tax should have nothing to do with how much they currently make. Why should someone with more money, THAT THEY EARNED, pay more than someone else? Should they pay more gas taxes too? How about higher DMV vehicle fees? Let’s just keep going because hey, they have more money.
59   FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden   2018 Nov 17, 9:01am  

Left operates on jealousy. Repeal prop 13 they say, so that grandma be forced out of her house. Immoral society of selfish liberal pervs.
60   RC2006   2018 Nov 17, 11:11am  

Fortwaynemobile says
Left operates on jealousy. Repeal prop 13 they say, so that grandma be forced out of her house. Immoral society of selfish liberal pervs.


What would be funniest about this if it did happen is that it would fuck liberals over more than anyone else. White areas of LA would see their taxes quadruple and housing values crash and it would even be worse in the bay area.
61   FortWayneAsNancyPelosiHaircut   2018 Nov 17, 12:16pm  

PrivilegedtobeWhite says
FortWayneIndiana says
Is it fair to have an old person pay same taxes as a person who is in their prime earning years?
Uh, Yes. If old people didnt properly save during their earning years, that’s their fault. One’s property tax should have nothing to do with how much they currently make. Why should someone with more money, THAT THEY EARNED, pay more than someone else? Should they pay more gas taxes too? How about higher DMV vehicle fees? Let’s just keep going because hey, they have more money.


No one is forcing you to buy a house today and overpay for it. That's your choice, no one is holding a gun to your head and says you must pay insane amount or else. So no, you are wrong buddy.
62   FortWayneAsNancyPelosiHaircut   2018 Nov 17, 12:17pm  

RC2006 says
Fortwaynemobile says
Left operates on jealousy. Repeal prop 13 they say, so that grandma be forced out of her house. Immoral society of selfish liberal pervs.


What would be funniest about this if it did happen is that it would fuck liberals over more than anyone else. White areas of LA would see their taxes quadruple and housing values crash and it would even be worse in the bay area.


I know that too. Liberals don't understand that, they are still chasing "equality" without realizing full consequences of that equality. Soviet Union, North Korea, Venesuela all went that route. Somehow it don't click in their heads that they are trying for same.
63   Hircus   2018 Nov 17, 12:52pm  

I feel we should:
1) change how we calculate tax bills
2) make changes that maintain tax bill stability, but make tax bills more fair by making people carry their own weight instead of making others pay for them

#1
I don't think property tax should be a % of the market value. Rising housing costs don't change municipal costs very much, although they do a bit as the local cost of living influences the cost of labor.

IMO Property tax should be mostly fixed and grow to reflect the current cost of service, maybe with some ala carte aspects like paying proportionally extra for services your household uses etc... I still like the idea of having a cap on how much a tax bill can spike in a single year, because price stability is important. But, the cap should not be set so low that tax bills fall behind costs in the long run.

#2
I do personally think that there should be some special provisions that help keep families/people together. The "elderly on fixed income" getting price shocked out of their home is real and IMO something we can work around. Social connections, such as family and friends, are so important to people such that I think it's worth some small degree of free-market distortion to help foster it.

I think this "something that helps keep people together" almost necessitates policies which bias to make it easier to stay in an area once you're there. I don't think such policies necessarily need to collect less tax to accomplish this. For example, an elderly person who cant keep up with the rising cost of taxes could instead be granted a partially deferred tax bill via a lien on their home, and when they die, the house can be sold to square up. Or, the family can inherit the house and keep it, and just pay the tax bill. By "partially deferred", I mean we should decide on a max-yearly-increase level, say 2%, and if one year the bill rose 3%, then they pay the 2%-increased bill that year, and the remainder of the increase can be paid via the lien.

Children who inherit a home is a similar situation, but one that I'm somewhat less sympathetic with. I don't like the idea making them immediately pay the full outstanding tax bill, but I think maybe a home inheritance should trigger a transition period, where the amount of tax they need to pay progressively increases, allowing them ample time to make strategic moves to adjust their financial situation to either pay the tax and keep the sentimental home, or sell. The tax lien strategy could continue to be employed in this situation. Like, maybe make the accommodation period last until they're 30 or something, allowing a child a low pressure period where they can focus on establishing a career.

These are just rough ideas. Again, personally I'm in favor of price stability, but I don't like the idea of making people pay the bill for others.
64   Patrick   2018 Nov 17, 1:56pm  

Fortwaynemobile says
Left operates on jealousy.


@Fortwaynemobile I think you are right about that. Communism was motivated more by jealousy than by unfairness.

SJW intolerance is also motivated by jealousy:

* women are jealous of men
* ugly women are jealous of beautiful women
* minorities are jealous of white people

Jealousy is another extremely old story:

Now Abel kept flocks, and Cain worked the soil.
3 In the course of time Cain brought some of the fruits of the soil as an offering to the LORD.
4 And Abel also brought an offering—fat portions from some of the firstborn of his flock. The LORD looked with favor on Abel and his offering,
5 but on Cain and his offering he did not look with favor. So Cain was very angry, and his face was downcast.
6 Then the LORD said to Cain, “Why are you angry? Why is your face downcast?
7 If you do what is right, will you not be accepted? But if you do not do what is right, sin is crouching at your door; it desires to have you, but you must rule over it.”
8 Now Cain said to his brother Abel, “Let’s go out to the field.” While they were in the field, Cain attacked his brother Abel and killed him.
65   Sunnyvale94087   2018 Nov 17, 2:44pm  

Hircus says
I feel we should:
1) change how we calculate tax bills
2) make changes that maintain tax bill stability, but make tax bills more fair by making people carry their own weight instead of making others pay for them

That's my thinking as well, but your numbers might be a little off.

For the record, I don't want anybody to pay any taxes for anything. However, in the real world, there is some amount of tax revenue that needs to be raised, so let's figure out how to raise it more "fairly" if possible. Also, of course, the biggest change I'd like to see is that government is made much more efficient and much smaller — resulting in far lower tax revenue requirements.

I also think it's "more fair," if people's taxes (from whatever source) are proportional to the government services that they use. So, for example, using property taxes to pay for LOCAL roads, fire department, LOCAL police, library, etc. sounds like a reasonable use of property taxes. To that extent, why should one house have property taxes of $1300 per year while the house right next door and of identical quality is taxed at $22,000 per year while receiving the exact same local services? Taxes in general are inequitable, but that just takes the cake.

I'd also be totally up for income taxes being a flat tax.

Hircus says
max-yearly-increase level, say 2%


A steady assessed increase of 2% is exactly what Prop 13 does. Unfortunately, when Prop 13 happened, assessments were rolled back by a couple years and then the 2% increases started. This was also during the late 1970s, so inflation was double-digits. We were also already completely off the gold standard and so even "low" inflation years were way higher than 2%. For an example using an inflation calculator, a house costing $45k in 1975 should now be worth $211k in 2018 just according to inflation. However, with 2% increases, the Prop 13 house value is only $105k. Meanwhile, someone buying that house now in my neighborhood would be paying taxes based on a $2M purchase price. When Prop 13 went into effect, the inflation rate was north of 10%, so setting a 2% increase cap was rediculous.

I'd suggest that the total amount collected state-wide under the current system should be noted. We'll call that the "target collection amount." Then, each year that target is increased by a cost of living inflator (or some such amount). That might be somewhere between 1% and 4% depending on how inflation is running. Then, each house is assessed at "fair market value" and the sum of all assessed values is used to calculate the single tax rate each person pays so that the total hits the target.

So, if house prices double overall in the state then the rate everyone pays is cut in half so that the target is met. Put another way: if everyone's assessment doubled, then everyone would pay ... no more than the did before the doubling. The state would see steady and predictable tax revenues keeping up with inflation; homeowners would see somewhat steady and predictable taxes in keeping with inflation. The only "flaw" would be if only a tiny part of the state saw a housing price boom; those people would have higher assessed values but the overall tax rate wouldn't come down so much (assuming only a small number of people were affected by the boom). However, the general trend in California is that housing prices go up and down all over and all together.

An obvious solution (which you mentioned) to "keeping granny in her home" is to allow any tax increases over the very tiny Prop 13 amount to be put as a lien on the house until granny dies. The people who would see a large increase if Prop 13 ended are also the exact same people whose house prices have massively increased — so they have plenty of spare equity.
Let's see how this works for Granny in my neighborhood:
• Bought house in the 1970s
• Prop 13 happened and house was given an assessment of $45k in 1975
• With Prop 13 house assessed at $105k now (in 2018), so taxes of about $1300

With change so that every house is assessed to market value but tax rate is reduced to hit target rate:
• House is reassessed at $2M
• Instead of property tax rate of 1%, the rate for EVERYONE is set to 0.6% (this figure taken from another poster on this thread a few days ago). That would collect — state wide — the same amount of revenue
• Granny's yearly property tax is now 0.6 x $2M = $12,000
• Granny pays her usual $1300 and the county puts a lien on her house of 12,000 - 1,300 = $10,700.
• Granny goes on this way year after year after year. She lives for 40 more years and dies at age 105.

Does Granny lose her house while living it it? Let's see... 40 years $10,700 per year is $428,000 in back taxes. But the ONLY reason her taxes are "so high" is that her house is worth $2M. Even if she never paid off a single penny of principal on her house, her finances look like this: $45k initial mortgage + $500k "ATM" style cash outs + $428k in back taxes gives less than $1M of lien. She still has $1M equity.

Another thing to note is that there is no need for a sudden shock if switch away from Prop 13. It could be gradually phased out over 10 years. During that period of time, under-assessed houses would be gradually assessed each year such that over 10 years they would finally get back to properly-assessed value.
66   lostand confused   2018 Nov 17, 3:41pm  

Why not look at cutting pensions? Hiring contractors for municipal work?? That should solve your money problem.

Where I live village managers make 250k a year-LOL -give us money/taxes for the children-LOL!!!!!!!!!!!!!! It never stops-it is like afire-the more fuel you give, the more it burns and get out of control before burning the whole thing down.
67   FortWayneAsNancyPelosiHaircut   2018 Nov 17, 8:06pm  

Sunnyvale94087 says
Hircus says
I feel we should:
1) change how we calculate tax bills
2) make changes that maintain tax bill stability, but make tax bills more fair by making people carry their own weight instead of making others pay for them


That's kind of what prop 13 did. Taxes were going through the roof because government unions were giving themselves pension raises left and right. It's easy, everyone in government gets the same CALPERS system, so everyone in decision making gets to benefit from rising taxes. The system was very bad. Prop 13 as tax revolt put a cap on it at least.

Because government didn't need taxes from real estate, they just wanted it to give themselves raises. While working people were losing housing, and could no longer afford basic necessities in order to pay taxes. It's one thing paying taxes, it's another to be burdened into poverty in order to make government live in the lap of luxury.

I'm all for cutting government, private sector can do a lot of this much more efficient and with much better accountability. I think they should even completely remove taxes on 65+ old primary residence folk, and they should lower taxes on current buyers to a neighborhood average. That won't be easy to pass, unions though will go up in arms about it.

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