Early voting for the November election begins outside the Bill Graham Civic Auditorium (99 Grove Street) on October 5. This is also the date when vote-by-mail ballots will begin to be mailed. Mail-in ballots can be returned through Election Day, November 3, but we suggest mailing in ballots sooner.
HANC, as a 501(c)(3) non-profit, cannot endorse candidates. We can endorse or oppose ballot measures, and have endorsed the following ballot measures:
Measure
|
Description
|
|
B
|
Splits Sanitation and Streets from DPW ; creates commissions to oversee both departments
|
YES
|
C
|
Removes citizenship requirement for City Boards, Commissions and Advisory Bodies
|
YES
|
E
|
Amends City Charter to remove minimum police staffing requirement
|
YES
|
F
|
Business Tax Overhaul; Provides backup funding for June 2018 Prop C (child care) and for November 2018 Prop C (homeless services)
|
YES
|
G
|
Allows 16- and 17-year olds to vote in municipal elections
|
YES
|
H
|
Changes Planning Code for Neighborhood Commercial Districts
|
NO
|
I
|
Increases Real Estate Transfer Tax for Sales Over $10M
|
YES
|
K
|
Authorizes the City to Develop up to 10,000 units of affordable housing
|
YES
|
L
|
Additional tax on businesses where the highest-paid employee is paid more than 100 times as much as the median employee
|
YES
|
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By Tes Welborn, HANC President
Prop 15 was put on the ballot by a record-breaking 1.7 million people who believe that wealthy corporations need to pay their fair share. “For more than 40 years, California has endured a contorted property tax system that punishes home buyers, chills housing construction and rewards businesses who skate by when assessments are set. Proposition 15 would ease the worst of these abuses while protecting homeowners and small businesses.” --SF Chronicle
Californians have seen our schools and universities go from the best in the nation, to quality and spending near the state of Mississippi’s abysmal levels. Prop 13.
Proposition 13 largely froze homeowner taxes, a boon to many older and/or cash-strapped Californians. Unfortunately, since properties now could only be reassessed upon sale, long-term holders like commercial and industrial land owners could escape reassessment. They also could structure deals to avoid reassessment. The result: Businesses enjoyed low taxes while new homeowners faced higher taxes. The classic example is that Disneyland pays less property tax than most home owners.
Prop. 15 offers a solution to this unfairness. It calls for splitting the rolls, with residential property staying within the present protections while it sets more timely assessments for large business holdings. The heart of the original law still will protect homeowners from steep tax boosts.
The proposed change may net as much as $6.5 billion to $11.5 billion! These vast sums would be split 60% for local government and 40% for schools. For small businesses, it would exempt commercial properties worth $3 million or less. This helps protect small businesses such as restaurants and stores, often with small profit margins.
Read more ...