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Proposition 13: Should Businesses Pay More?

Gym owner Noah Kinner, who says the predictability he gets from Prop. 13 helps him stay in business in the neighborhood, is shown in this undated photo.
Sean Havey for California Dream
Gym owner Noah Kinner, who says the predictability he gets from Prop. 13 helps him stay in business in the neighborhood, is shown in this undated photo.

A measure that would fundamentally alter Proposition 13 already has enough signatures to qualify for the November 2020 ballot. It’s known as “split roll” and here’s how it would work:

California property owners – whether homes or businesses — have benefited equally for 40 years from the passage of Prop. 13. That measure limits annual increases on property taxes.

Now a progressive group, including housing advocates and teachers unions, wants to split homes and businesses onto separate tax rolls.

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Owners holding more than $2 million in commercial property would no longer be taxed based on the original price they paid. Instead, they would pay based on the property’s regularly re-assessed market value.

“This would generate over $10 billion a year for our schools and local communities, without having to continue to increase taxes on individuals,” says Ben Grieff, campaign director for Evolve California, one of the groups pushing for the “split roll measure.”

On this block in North Oakland, where we’ve been examining the legacy of Prop. 13, business owners have seen some of the same impacts of homeowners. Newer entrepreneurs often end up paying much more in property tax than established business owners, in part because those who’ve owned property the longest benefit the most.

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Noah Kinner owns a gym at the end of the block. It’s in an industrial building that once housed a biker bar. This is Kinner’s second gym location, and his first time owning commercial property. He says many of the people who come here to work out live close by.

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As long as the market value of Kinner’s building stays below $2 million, he would not be subject to the proposed split roll changes. But the way Oakland prices keep rising, he wonders how long he’d be able to qualify as an exempt small business.

"I know the value of the building has appreciated significantly since we bought it,” Kinner says. “But that doesn't translate into anything for me and my day-to-day business."

Under Prop. 13, Kinner’s property tax bill works pretty much the same way it does for his neighbors who own homes. It’s based on the price he paid for the building back in 2015 — not its market value today.

Considering all the other costs associated with running his gym, Kinner appreciates the stability.

If he lost that predictability, he says, staying open would be trickier. “If every year my valuation — like the Bay Area — is exceeding the rate that I'm able to grow my business, then I'm just incentivized to sell.”

Noah Kinner works on a laptop in this undated photo.
Sean Havey for California Dream
Noah Kinner works on a laptop in this undated photo.

Why supporters are for split roll

The idea of taxing commercial property differently than homes appeals to many Californians. Oakland resident Samuel Drew, who lives near the gym, likes the idea of keeping Prop. 13 in place for homeowners. But he says many businesses don’t need it.

"I think it's good for working people, to lower their taxes,” Drew says. “But when you're making millions and billions, it just doesn't hit me as fair."

However, statewide support for split roll has been declining, according to polling from the Public Policy Institute of California (PPIC). Sixty percent of likely voters were in favor of split roll back in 2012. That support has dropped to 46 percent today.

PPIC president Mark Baldassare says public support is likely to dip when the economy is strong and the state’s budget is healthy.

“I think that many voters look to the split roll as a possibility to help the state out of a financial crisis,” Baldassare says. “But we're not in a financial crisis at the moment.”

Perhaps the biggest selling point for proponents of split roll is how much it would raise in new tax revenue. A USC study found that it could bring in an additional $11.4 billion per year statewide.

"That could pay for a lot of services, healthcare workers and teachers,” says USC researcher and study co-author Jennifer Ito. Alameda County alone would take in about $550 million more each year, she says. “Every county in California would get additional revenue to go toward our local government and schools.”

Split roll backers question why Prop. 13 lets large, older corporations benefit from much lower tax assessments than newer companies right next door.

For instance, Intel owns a plot of land in the heart of Silicon Valley with an assessed value of about $2.50 per square foot. Meanwhile, just across the street, a professional office center is sitting on land with a recently assessed value of about $126 per square foot.

Split roll critics say employers already pay enough

But taxpayer groups say split roll would only make the cost of doing business in California more burdensome.

“If you talk to business owners and ask them if they're getting a pretty good deal on taxes in California, they will unanimously say no,” says David Kline with the California Taxpayers Association.

Business groups often describe property taxes as one bright spot for companies in a state that otherwise levies some of the highest taxes in the country.

A 2018 split roll analysis from the California Legislative Analyst’s Office concluded that raising business taxes relative to other states could “influence some businesses' decisions about whether to expand in or move to California.” But overall effects on the health of the state’s economy would be uncertain, according to the report.

Kline says if split roll passes, it’s not clear other taxes would come down.

“This particular initiative doesn't have any tax cuts to the sales tax or income tax to mitigate the problem,” he says. “It just has a punitive tax specifically targeted at California employers.”

Prop. 13 has benefited some long-term property owners in this rapidly changing Oakland neighborhood.

Timothy Mom, who has been running his donut shop since 1990 and pays his landlord $135 a month for property taxes, is pictured in this undated photo.
Sean Havey for California Dream
Timothy Mom, who has been running his donut shop since 1990 and pays his landlord $135 a month for property taxes, is pictured in this undated photo.

Just down the street from Kinner’s gym, there’s a donut shop. Cambodian immigrant Timothy Mom has been running it since 1990. He rents the space, but he pays property taxes to his landlord as part of his lease agreement. Mom says that bill comes out to about $135 a month.

He says that he’d have a much harder time starting his donut shop in this neighborhood today, especially if his taxes were tied to current property prices.

"Right now, it's very expensive to open a new business,” Mom says. “I believe that."

RELATED PROJECT: The Block That Prop. 13 Built