Politics & Government
Speak Up: Should It Be Easier to Pass Taxes and Bonds?
Two proposed amendments to the state Constitutional would lower the voter threshold for funding measures.

Special districts and other local agenciesΒ may find it easier forΒ local communities to pass funding measures if two proposed amendments to the state Constitution move forward.Β
The proposals would lower the threshold of votes required to approve bonds and special taxes from two-thirds to 55 percent.
Assembly Constitutional Amendment 8 passed the state Assembly on SaturdayΒ with a 54-25 vote. ACA 8Β would letΒ communities pass infrastructure bond measures with the same 55 majority that now applies to school bonds.Β
The state Senate will take up ACA 11 on Wednesday. It would make similar changes to the votes required to pass special taxes.Β
The changes are inspired, in part, by theΒ narrow failure of Measure J in Los Angeles last year. It would have continued aΒ half-cent sales tax that pays for transit improvements, but fell just short of the required two-thirds vote withΒ 66.11 percent of voters in favor of the measure.Β
In San MateoΒ County, a county tax to support the Parks and Recreation DepartmentΒ failed in June 2008Β butΒ would have passedΒ if the vote threshold were lower.Β Measure OΒ garnered more thanΒ 60 percent of the vote, but missed the two-thirds mark.
βOur infrastructure investment need exceeds what the state budget can provide, and state bonds cannot be a substitute for local initiative and responsibility,β said Rep.Β Bob Blumenfield, a Democrat from the San Fernando Valley who authored ACA 8.Β
ACA 8 and 11Β wouldΒ includeΒ new accountability actions for local bond and revenue measures,Β according to the California Special Districts Association. These are the requirements:Β
- Specify all purposes of tax proceeds to voters;
- Include annual independent audits of the proceeds collected and programs funded;
- Establish a citizensβ oversight committee to review all expenditures and financial audits.
If approved by the Senate, the constitutional changes would then go on the ballot for California voters to decide on.
What do you think? Should it be easier to pass bonds and special taxes forΒ roads, bridges, sewers, or fire stations?
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