Budget leaves yachts to mull
Deirdre Newman
The state legislature has passed Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s budget,
but a bill that’s part of the budget package could bring rough
conditions for the yacht industry in Newport Beach.
The Assembly passed the $105.3-billion state budget Wednesday and
the Senate gave its approval Thursday. Schwarzenegger is expected to
sign it Saturday.
The bill affecting the yacht industry extended the time yacht
buyers have to keep their boats out of state to avoid paying sales
tax. They can’t bring their boats to California for 90 days if
they’re bought somewhere that doesn’t have sales tax under current
law. The new bill extends that time period to one year.
Republicans prevailed in getting an exception for yacht owners to
be able to bring their boats into California during that year for
maintenance only.
That’s some consolation to J.R. Means, president of Bayport Yachts
in Newport Beach.
“We supported a six-month [period],” Means said. “Let’s
compromise. Let’s not whack us because we’re an easy target. Let’s
compromise and get something that’s good for the state and good for
us. And the Democrats in the Assembly didn’t want to work with us.”
Republican Assemblyman John Campbell said he supported the
six-month period and will continue to work to change the bill, even
after it was passed Wednesday night by the Assembly. He doesn’t see
the bill as an issue of taxes but as an issue of jobs, he said.
“However long you make [the extension], that’s how long people
will take to avoid a tax,” Campbell said. “They’re not going to pay a
tax they don’t have to pay when they can go to a jurisdiction
[without sales tax] like Oregon. All you’re going to do is cost jobs
because in Newport Beach and other places, there are people who fix
these boats, repair them, refurbish them, sell them -- all those
things.”
Democrats, however, have said yacht owners should have to share
the burden of the budget crisis like everyone else, said Nick
Velasquez, a spokesman for Democratic Assembly Speaker Fabian Nunez.
“The [Democrats’] concern was millionaires, who own yachts and are
able to get around the law by not paying their fair share of taxes by
parking their yachts in Puerto Vallarta, were not having to suffer as
well as people who were suffering the most from the budget crisis,
like losing their job or being denied from higher education,” Nunez
said.
The one-year extension will only last for two years and will then
revert to the 90-day period. A study will be conducted during this
time to see how effective the one-year extension is, Campbell said.
The overall budget negotiations took place in a mostly
noncombative atmosphere during the 12-hour marathon session in the
Assembly, Campbell said.
“It never got bitter, never got ponderous,” Campbell said. “It
really didn’t. I think people were determined on both sides to pass a
budget.”
For Assemblyman Ken Maddox, this was the first budget he has voted
for in his six years in the Assembly.
“This one did not have massive amounts of wasteful spending, but
it did protect important government functions,” Maddox said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.