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California is Robbing the Poor to Pay Thurston Howell III

DAve-Jones.gif By Assemblymember Dave Jones

I recently saw an advertisement for a yacht that looked really nice. The yacht’s name said it all. “No Worries” was a true beauty, 44 feet long. But a $300,000 boat isn’t in the family budget.

Nor is it for most Californians. Especially not the state’s working poor, who struggle to pay for essentials like rent, food, utilities, and child care.

The California Budget Project estimates that for a two-parent family it takes $72,343 per year to meet basic expenses. California has about two million working families that make less than half that income.

So I was obviously frustrated last year when, while the state’s gloomy fiscal situation forced the Legislature to freeze important services to poor and middle-class families, some of my Republican colleagues in the State Senate insisted that the State Budget continue a tax break for yacht buyers. And they held up the budget for an extra month to do so.

This year, I thought, things would be different, mostly because our budget shortfall was projected at more than $14 billion over the next 18 months. Surely the egregious yacht tax loophole would be closed – that should be one of the easiest fiscal decisions of the year. Governor Schwarzenegger proposed doing so in his initial budget proposal in January, an encouraging sign.

So in late February the Legislature did the fiscally responsible thing and made a number of painful mid-year budget cuts that, when coupled with other cost-cutting moves, shaved our projected budget shortfall down to around $8 billion, still large but representing sound progress.

However, in doing so my Republican colleagues in the State Assembly decided that while they were prepared to cut education funding and health care for the poor, they just couldn’t stomach closing the yacht tax loophole. Too painful, apparently, to the Thurston Howell IIIs of the world. So they refused to provide the 2/3 vote necessary to close the yacht tax loophole. In doing so they robbed the poor to help subsidize tax avoidance by rich yacht owners. Are those the values we want reflected in our state budget? Those aren’t my values, that’s for sure.

The yacht tax loophole works like this. If you buy a yacht three miles offshore and keep it outside of the state for 90 days before bringing it back in, you can escape paying sales or use tax on the purchase. Just sail southward and choose one of the many “90-day yacht clubs” available in Ensenada, Mexico, then stash the boat there.

This is a loophole literally big enough to sail a yacht through. And the same loophole applies to airplanes and recreational vehicles, or RVs. A couple of years ago we closed the loophole temporarily and the independent Legislative Analyst’s Office studied the change. They found that closing the loophole made sense and didn’t harm our economy. What could be easier, right? Wrong.

We should immediately close the yacht tax loophole for good. If we can’t make this simple change then how will we ever find the courage to close our remaining budget gap without decimating education and health care? It could be another long, hot summer in Sacramento without a state budget, I fear.

Voters deserve to know if their representatives are with wealthy yacht owners or working families as we try to tackle our budget deficit. Before we make it cheaper to buy yachts and hide them to avoid paying taxes, the Legislature should ensure that poor families can afford to make ends meet.

Dave Jones (D-Sacramento) represents the 9th Assembly District in the California Legislature.

Posted on March 06, 2008

Comments

Aw geez - come on Assemblymember Dave Jones. Your article here, and in particular the headline, is just blatant political grandstanding. Most people don't understand this 90 day "loophole" on yachts and the impact it has on jobs, the economy in the state, etc. So you come out writing this article proposing yourself as this Robin Hood type of guy who wants to stop the big "rich" people from skating on taxes. Sounds real noble on the surface for the average Joe who doesn't understand the whole story. And you blatantly take advantage of their ignorance by writing this story.

But reality is something different. You conveniently don't mention what the elimination of this "loophole" really means: the marine industry will plummet causing many of the thousands of jobs dependent on it to vanish. The trickle down effect throughout the industry and other businesses not even in the industry is significant - MUCH more significant than the money gained by the state.

So a literally untold number of jobs will be lost if this 90 day rule goes away and also an untold hit on coastal cities reliant on the marine industry.

If you honestly wanted what's best for the state, maybe you'd do something about our bloated educational system where per pupil spending, adjusted for inflation, has almost tripled in the last 30 years which has resulted in the significantly inferior educational system of today. Triple the spending for a lower quality product.

Oh, but wait, it's not politically correct to attack our educational system. Let's go after Thurston Howell III and his martini sipping fat cats. Oh, puuleeeeeze! You're another typical politician who does whatever is necessary to get votes and not do what's in the best interest of the state. Whatever happened to straightforwardness and honesty?

Posted by: Ed Better at March 9, 2008 05:34 PM

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