Bed tax measure a bit sleepy
Jennifer Kho
COSTA MESA -- Amid the whirlwind of the City Council election race,
the city’s sole ballot initiative has provoked little discussion.
Residents haven’t brought up Measure O at any of the candidate forums
or City Council meetings, but council candidates have different opinions
about it.
The measure, if passed by two-thirds of city voters, would allow the
council to raise the city’s hotel tax -- among the lowest in the county
paid by overnight customers -- from 6% to 8%. The extra funds would help
pay for new parks and open spaces.
Visitors at seven major hotels -- which are members of the Costa Mesa
Conference & Visitors Bureau -- could pay up to 10% in bed taxes because
those hotels already assess themselves with an additional levy. However,
the conference and visitors bureau supports Measure O.
“It’s a tax on people who stay in our hotels, not on residents, and
the money will go directly toward the hard cost of buying land and using
it for park space, not toward salaries or overhead,” said Councilman Joe
Erickson. “Costa Mesa residents, when they travel elsewhere, are probably
paying higher bed taxes than when residents of other cities stay here.
We’re greatly built out and very rarely have the opportunity to buy
parkland, but the city needs to have money on hand when there is a chance
to buy it.”
The City Council in July voted 4-1 to put the measure on the ballot.
Councilwomen Heather Somers and Libby Cowan, who are both running for
reelection, voted to put the measure before Costa Mesa voters.
Mayor Gary Monahan, the only dissenting voice on the council, said he
is opposed to charging visitors for new parks in the city.
“I think the city is in very good shape financially and I don’t
believe we need to raise taxes at this point and time,” he said. “One of
the strong points of our tourism bureau and hotel industry has been the
low bed tax and I think we’re shooting ourselves in the foot here. ...
People are coming here and spending money and we’re talking about
charging them more for it.”
Candidates Chris Steel and Dan Worthington said they are opposed to
the measure, while candidates Joel Faris and Ronald Channels are in favor
of it.
Planning Commissioner Tom Sutro, who is one of the candidates, said he
supports the measure but hopes the tax is not raised to 8% all at one
time. Candidate William Perkins is undecided on the measure and other
candidates were unavailable for comment at press time.
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