City may lose millions in taxes
- Share via
Jenny Marder
Huntington Beach stands to lose $3.7 million in car tax revenue under
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s plan to reimburse drivers who paid the
tripled license fee.
When the December car-tax payment came from the state on
Wednesday, it was a mere $220,000 instead of the $1 million the city
normally gets, said Bill McReynolds, the city’s senior administrative
analyst.
From January through March, Surf City isn’t likely to get a
payment at all, which city officials say will severely cut into vital
services.
Statewide, $600 million is being withheld from cities and counties
to refund drivers who paid the higher tax passed by former Gov. Gray
Davis.
Right after taking office in November, Schwarzenegger rolled back
the car tax that had went up the month before. He promised to protect
local governments from losing money.
Losing the car tax, which makes up about 8% of the city’s general
fund revenue, would be devastating, Assistant City Administrator Bill
Workman said.
Cities and counties under the state constitution are entitled to
the car tax money to pay for core services such as roadwork, traffic
signals, street lighting, police patrols and emergency services.
“This is very serious, and we’re advocating as hard as we can and
trying to get the word out about the very serious nature of the loss
of money that’s been flowing into the city for the past 60 years and
paying for very basic core services,” Workman said.
Huntington Beach is working with other cities to reclaim the
money.
“What we find so curious is that the state basically gave away our
money despite the constitutional requirement that the [vehicle
license fee] go to cities and counties to help pay expenses,” Workman
said.
The City Council voted unanimously at its Nov. 3 meeting to
support a November 2004 ballot initiative, sponsored by the League of
California Cities, that would put voters in charge of whether local
tax dollars could be used to fund state services.
Workman said the measure would protect cities from this kind of
state interference.
“[The state] is coming to take the city’s money to make itself
whole, which is very disappointing,” Workman 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.