|
MUNICIPAL LEAGUE OF
KING COUNTY
OPPOSES Initiative 960
Requiring two-thirds
legislative approval or voter approval for tax increases, legislative approval
of fee increases, certain published information on tax-increasing bills, and
advisory votes on taxes enacted without voter approval
November 6, 2007
General Election Ballot
SUMMARY AND BACKGROUND
Sponsor Tim Eyman describes
Initiative 960 as “one part clean up bill, two parts public disclosure.” The
initiative is intended to reinforce the earlier Initiative 601, passed in 1993,
which set state spending limits at the average rate of increase in the state
population and inflation during the previous three years and required a
two-thirds vote to raise taxes. Much of I-960 is designed to return to some of
the I-601 provisions which have since been amended and is aimed at making it
more difficult, both procedurally and politically, for the legislature to raise
taxes and fees. The initiative contains four major provisions:
Supermajority to Raise Taxes: The
two-thirds vote requirement for tax increases included in I-601 has been
suspended by the legislature during two biennia to require only a simple
majority. The state spending limit has been interpreted as applying only to
taxes which flow to the general fund. I-960 would prohibit suspension of the
vote requirement for two years, and would apply to tax revenue flows to any fund
or account inside or outside the general fund.
Advisory Votes for Tax Increases: Any
tax increase enacted without a voter referendum would be subject to an advisory
vote of the people at the next general election. The initiative specifies that
each tax measure would be given at least two pages in the voters’ pamphlet and
would include a thirteen-word description of the measure, a 10-year cost
projection, and a list of all the Senators and Representatives, their contact
information, and how they voted on the tax increase. The prescribed two pages
would include no information on the reason or need for the tax increase and no
pro or con statements.
Legislative Approval of All Fee
Increases: The legislature would have to adopt by vote every fee increase or new
fee imposed by any state agency. It would no longer be able to delegate
fee-setting to state agencies as it does now.
Public Notice Regarding Tax Bills:
I-960 would require the Office of Financial Management to estimate the ten-year
cost to taxpayers of any bill introduced in the legislature that would raise
taxes or fees. Currently the cost impact of every bill is estimated for 6 years
and included as a fiscal note. The state would also be required to set up an
email alert system to distribute these cost projections and notify subscribers
when hearings are scheduled and how legislators have voted on the tax bills.
ARGUMENTS FOR I-960:
Initiative proponents make the
following arguments for I-960:
-
Requiring a two-thirds vote of
the legislature for all tax bills is only closing a loophole from I-601 and
returns to its original voter intent.
-
An advisory vote for adopted tax
measures will not be necessary if the legislature refers all tax measures to
the voters, as the proponents think they should.
-
The advisory vote will also
discourage use of the emergency clause to avoid a referendum and will
reserve its use for true emergencies.
-
The email alert system for tax
bills and the two pages in the voters’ pamphlet for advisory votes will give
voters the opportunity to register their approval or disapproval of any tax
increases.
-
Allowing state agencies to set
fees is taxation without representation. Elected officials who can be held
accountable should set the fees.
ARGUMENTS AGAINST I-960:
Opponents make these arguments:
-
The initiative is too rigid.
Unlike I-601, it leaves no flexibility to set up funds for emergencies or
one-time needs without a two-thirds vote of the legislature.
-
It is too costly. It will cost at
least $1.8 million each biennium, with the majority of the costs falling to
local governments who will have to print longer ballots and two pages in the
voters’ pamphlet for each advisory vote.
-
The prescribed format for the
advisory vote text lacks adequate contextual information to explain tax
increases to voters, and instead appears punitive in intent, enumerating the
representatives who voted for the increase.
-
Because the advisory votes would
be non-binding, they could fuel more voter disaffection.
-
The initiative will bog down
government. There are as many as 500 fees charged by the state, increasing
any of them would have to be considered by the legislature. Voters have
plenty of opportunity to protest new or increased fees through the hearings
required in agency rule-making, and also at the legislature when agency
budgets are being considered.
-
Public disclosure is important,
but the state already has an excellent electronic tracking system for all
its legislation which can be used by the voters.
RECOMMENDATION and RATIONALE
The Municipal League of King County OPPOSES
Initiative 960.
Requiring a two-thirds vote of the
legislature for passage of any tax bill gives too much power to the minority –
the one-third of the legislators who oppose the tax. The supermajority and
advisory vote provisions of I-960 indicate that the proponents of the initiative
do not trust representative government, and want all tax decisions to be made
directly by the people through referendum. Representative government is based on
allowing a majority of our elected officials to make decisions for us. If we are
displeased with their decisions, we can work to defeat them at the next
election. The advisory vote, required even when a tax has been adopted by
two-thirds of the legislature, is designed more to intimidate legislators than
to engage the public in meaningful debate. Because the vote is nonbinding and
held after the tax has been adopted, it will confuse and discourage voters.
Other provisions of I-960 are also
troublesome. Requiring all fees to be approved by the legislature would distract
our legislators from higher legislative priorities. We believe that agency
administrative procedures are the appropriate method for adopting fees. For
these reasons, the Municipal League oppose Initiative 960.
|