Renewed tax rankles some as ‘illegal’
Eron Ben-Yehuda
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- Taxes may be inevitable. But the kind the city
recently imposed shouldn’t be, officials say.
“The taxpayers will go nuts if they find out we’re charging taxes that
are illegal,” Councilman Tom Harman said.
On Aug. 16, the council voted 5-2 to continue to collect a property tax
at a fixed rate of about 5 cents per $100 of assessed value. Along with
Harman, Councilman Dave Sullivan objected.
The money helps pay for retirement benefits of city employees. The tax
will raise about $7 million this year and, because property values are
rising, about $7.5 million next year, said John Reekstin, the city’s
director of administrative services.
Reekstin says the city’s charter -- the equivalent of a constitution for
municipalities -- gives the council the authority to continue to impose
the levy for pensions.
“I feel very comfortable with the way we’re using the money,” he said.
But the councilmen, as well as a member of the city’s volunteer finance
board, resident Chuck Scheid, argue that state law requires the tax be
approved by two-thirds of the city’s voters.
The source of the dispute dates back to 1978 when voters passed
Proposition 13 and, at the same time, amended the charter, according to a
memo dated July 27 by City Atty. Gail Hutton. The memo remained
confidential until the council unanimously approved its release to the
public Monday.
While the proposition made levying taxes more difficult, the charter
amendment seemed more permissive, allowing the levying of property taxes
“sufficient to meet all obligations of the City for the retirement system
in which the City participates ...” the memo shows.
Scheid calls the apparent contradiction in the people’s will a “slight
dichotomy.” At most, he argues, the city could only use the money from
the property tax to pay for retirement benefits earned by employees prior
to 1978. But the city uses the money to pay for pensions earned since
that time as well, he said.
Hutton considers the council’s risk of getting into trouble for imposing
the tax to be “low” because only those taxpayers that legally challenge
the city and win in court will have to be paid refunds, according to the
memo.
But Scheid hopes to create a groundswell of public outrage that will make
the council reconsider.
“It is going to take a while but I am going to make the residents of
Huntington Beach very well aware of how staff and the city council are
trying to screw them this time,” he said.
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