CA Senate preserves big corporate tax breaks that benefit some cities (2024)

CA Senate preserves big corporate tax breaks that benefit some cities (1)

In summary

California cities funnel $1 billion in online sales taxes back to wealthy corporations, but the state Senate killed a bill that would change the rules for those arrangements. The vote came down to whether senators represent a city with a major retailer in a tax-sharing agreement in their districts.

Some of the most liberal and conservative members of the state Senate agreed recently that if you buy an iPhone in Los Angeles it shouldn’t help pay for police in Cupertino.

But the bipartisanship wasn’t enough to pass a bill that would change the rules allowing corporations wide discretion to choose who gets their online sales taxes, forcing cities to compete by offering companies huge tax kickbacks to win their favor.

“When we’re talking about how much you’re losing in tax dollars, let me tell you, it’s over $1 billion … given back to companies,” Sen. Steve Glazer, the bill’s author, told his colleagues on the Senate floor late last month. “One billion dollars that would go to public services in all of our jurisdictions.”

The opposition to Glazer’s Senate Bill 1494 was also bipartisan, some of it from senators who represent cities that benefit from the current rules. Cupertino, for example, gives 35% of the taxes it collects from Apple – about $4.5 million per year – back to the company. Still, nearly three quarters of the city’s sales tax revenue comes from Apple, according to Bloomberg Tax, which has extensively covered the issue.

As shoppers have switched to buying goods on their smartphones and computers, officials have debated for years about where sales tax revenue should go for purchases made online. Should it be the location of the buyer or the seller? Currently, it’s the seller. And companies have significant discretion about choosing their “point of sale” for tax purposes. This gives the companies that promise local jobs and municipal revenue boosts from warehouses, offices or retail centers tremendous bargaining power over local governments as they negotiate agreements that funnel sales tax money the cities collect back to the corporations.

For Glazer, a Democrat from Orinda, the agreements with local governments that kick back sales taxes to the firms are fundamentally unfair. He believes that if Californians buy something online, they expect taxes to go to the local government where the transaction took place – not to some city that could be hundreds of miles away. He told his Senate colleagues it creates a perverse system of “winners and losers.”

“Ninety-three percent of the cities are losers,” he said. “I can tell you that if you live in cities like Los Angeles, you’re a loser; San Francisco, Oakland, you’re a loser; San Diego, you’re a loser.”

A bipartisan group of 17 lawmakers, some of whose districts include cities that were in Glazer’s “loser” category, voted to support his bill on May 23. The supporters included liberal Sen. Scott Wiener, a Democrat from San Francisco who has a 100% rating from the Sierra Club and 0% from the California Chamber of Commerce, and conservative Sen. Brian Dahle, a Republican from the state’s rural northeast corner with a 100% rating from the chamber and 0% from the Sierra Club.

Dahle, who lost a bid for governor in 2022, split with the California Taxpayers Association on this vote even though he sides with the anti-tax group’s position on bills nearly 90% of the time, according to the CalMatters Digital Democracy database.

“We hear every day on this floor about disadvantaged communities and people not getting a fair break in California and the rich getting richer and the poor getting poorer,” he said on the Senate floor. “Think about this: This is not a tax increase or decrease. This is about distribution. These multibillion dollar companies in California are robbing your community and putting in that tax base that I pay in (Lassen County) in their pockets, getting even more rich off the backs of a tax.”

But the arguments from the likes of Glazer and Dahle weren’t enough for the bill to pass the 40-member chamber. It got 17 votes in support and just 11 votes against, but 12 senators did not vote, which counts as a “no.”

Learn more about legislators mentioned in this story.

Brian Dahle

Republican, State Senate, District 1 (Redding)

Susan Talamantes Eggman

Democrat, State Senate, District 5 (Stockton)

Steven Glazer

Democrat, State Senate, District 7 (Orinda)

Dave Cortese

Democrat, State Senate, District 15 (Campbell)

Kelly Seyarto

Republican, State Senate, District 32 (Murrieta)

As CalMatters has reported, lawmakers regularly avoid voting on controversial bills to avoid angering colleagues or to eliminate a record of their opposition on sensitive matters. There is no distinction for legislators who abstain or are absent.

Many of the opposing senators have communities that benefit from the tax agreements, or they sided with cities and counties that argue the tax agreements are valuable tools that help disadvantaged communities promote economic development and create jobs.

Gov. Gavin Newsom vetoed a similar Glazer bill in 2019, making the same arguments.

Not surprisingly, Cupertino’s senator, Dave Cortese, a Democrat, voted “no.”

Sen. Susan Talamantes Eggman, a Democratic former Stockton city councilmember, also cast a “no” vote. She told her colleagues that the current tax system doesn’t necessarily benefit just wealthy Silicon Valley communities.

“This bill is about what local governments can do with the resources they have,” she said. “So I’ll tell you some of the winners, and you tell me if they’re the big guys or not. City of Dinuba, city of Fresno, city of Merced … city of Tracy, city of Stockton. You know who those folks are? The little guys that live on that corridor, that breathe that diesel, that smell that gas, that have a lot of our jobs taken.”

CA Senate preserves big corporate tax breaks that benefit some cities (2)

She noted that Stockton alone receives about $1.5 million to $2 million a year from such an agreement. She didn’t say which company, and her office didn’t respond to CalMatters’ request for clarification. Stockton officials also didn’t respond to CalMatters’ request.

But Glazer told CalMatters those sorts of arguments are shortsighted since changing the tax system would funnel $1 billion in tax kickbacks that corporations receive from these agreements to communities across the state. It frustrated him that the influential League of California Cities opposed the bill, since the organization’s lobbyists regularly complain to lawmakers that “our cities are struggling and our cities are suffering” from lack of revenue, Glazer said.

“You’ve given more than $1 billion away of public money to these wealthy corporations,” Glazer said. “How can you come up here to Sacramento complaining about not having money?”

The League of California Cities told lawmakers in a letter opposing the bill that the proposed regulations were unnecessary since its members had agreed to place a cap on the corporate kickbacks, “provide enhanced transparency and public review, and make equitable changes” to how the taxes are distributed.

Sen. Kelly Seyarto, a Republican and former Murrieta mayor, said the tax-sharing agreements allow little communities like his to compete with bigger cities to lure in major business developers. He told the Senate’s Local Government Committee in April that if the Glazer’s bill would have passed, they wouldn’t be able to.

“And for smaller communities like the one I came from,” he said, “that’s death.”

Related

CalMattersis a Sacramento-based nonpartisan, nonprofit journalism venture committed to explaining how California's state Capitol works and why it matters. It works with more than 130 media partners throughout the state that have long, deep relationships with their local audiences, including Embarcadero Media.

CA Senate preserves big corporate tax breaks that benefit some cities (2024)

FAQs

What is the largest source of income for the state of California? ›

The personal income tax is the state's largest revenue source and is expected to comprise 65.9 percent of all General Fund revenues in 2022-23.

Who pays the most taxes in California? ›

Contrary to the oft-repeated claim that high- income Californians pay an unfair amount of taxes, it is actually California's low-income families who pay the largest share of their incomes in state and local taxes.

How much revenue does California generate through taxes? ›

2022 State Tax Revenue
Total Taxes ($ million)Rank
Arkansas12,76822
California280,8282
Colorado21,71133
Connecticut22,4777
51 more rows

What are the major sources of revenue in the California budget system? ›

California largely relies on three revenue sources — the personal income tax, the sales and use tax, and the corporation tax.

What city makes the most money in California? ›

Atherton is considered the wealthiest city in California. It has a median household income of about $594,651.

What is the biggest contributor to the economy of California? ›

In 2020 (most recent annual data), California's largest industry sectors were: Finance, Insurance, Real Estate, Rental, and Leasing (19.0%% of state GDP); Trade, Transportation, and Utilities (14.5%); Professional and Business Services (14.2%); Manufacturing (11.8%); Information (10.5%); Education and Health Services ( ...

Is California the highest taxed state? ›

Highest taxed states

In fact, the states with the highest tax in the U.S. in 2021 are: California (13.3%) Hawaii (11%) New Jersey (10.75%)

How much tax do millionaires pay in California? ›

California income tax increase for 2024

The payroll tax expansion increases the state's top income tax bracket from 13.3% to 14.4%. The new 14.4% tax rate applies to income over $1 million. That exceeds other notoriously high-tax states by far. New Yorkers making more than $25 million are taxed at a 10.9% rate.

What is the billionaire tax in California? ›

Assembly Bill 259 would have imposed an annual tax beginning on or after January 1, 2024, and before January 1, 2026 at a rate of 1.5% of a resident's worldwide net worth in excess of $1 billion or in excess of $500 million in the case of a married taxpayer filing separately.

What is the largest expense in the California state budget? ›

Under the enacted 2023-24 state budget:
  • 7 in 10 General Fund and special fund dollars support three categories of spending: health and human services (37.2%), K-12 education (25.4%), and higher education (7.4%).
  • 6% of General Fund and special fund dollars support corrections, primarily the state prison system.
May 14, 2024

How much debt does California have? ›

In the fiscal year of 2022, California's state debt stood at about 145.03 billion U.S. dollars. Comparatively, the state's debt was 57.17 billion U.S. dollars in 2000. The national debt of the United Stated can be found here.

Which US state generates the most revenue? ›

California

How do cities make money besides taxes? ›

Common revenue collection tactics include: tax collection, code enforcement, application fees, bond issuance, utility fees, and prioritizing economic development. Read on about how GovPilot can help Municipalities Can Drive Local Economic Development.

What is the main source of income in California? ›

Services, labour, and taxation. Services are the dominant economic sector in California. Tourism is a consistent source of income. More than one-fourth of the state's land area is preserved as recreational areas, national seashores, or wildlife refuges.

When was the last time California had a surplus? ›

It is worth noting that two straight years of historically large deficits come after similarly historic surpluses — California had a nearly US$100 billion surplus as recently as 2022.

Where does California make most of its money? ›

Services, labour, and taxation. Services are the dominant economic sector in California. Tourism is a consistent source of income. More than one-fourth of the state's land area is preserved as recreational areas, national seashores, or wildlife refuges.

What is California main revenue? ›

The California State General Fund has three primary sources of revenue: 1) personal income taxes (PIT); 2) sales and use taxes (SUT); and 3) corporation taxes. The largest source by far is personal income tax (which include capital gains revenue in addition to wages), followed by sales taxes and corporation taxes.

What is a California source of income? ›

If you are a nonresident with a business, trade, or profession that conducts business both within and outside California, the income generated from business you conduct within California is California source-income and is taxable in the state. Real estate sales.

What is California's biggest resource? ›

Gold is still the major source for metal wealth, making up 99 percent of all the metal extracted in the state.

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