| 
           | Once again, Borenstein has it wrong. 
             
·          It would not be the  “highest property transfer tax in the state.” It would actually be less than  either Oakland or Berkeley. 
 
·          The incremental tax on a  $500,000 sale would be $4,000 (.008 x $500,000), not the $8,050 that Borenstein  claims. 
 
·          Borenstein states, “Two  years ago, Richmond leaders persuaded voters to approve a sales tax hike by  suggesting the money would go to road repairs. Instead it was gobbled up by  ongoing expenses.” Measure U was a general tax. That it was somehow hijacked is  an urban myth that anti-tax advocates like Borenstein continue to spread. The City’s website before  the election stated: “What is Measure U? A  ballot measure proposing a one-half cent sales tax to maintain and enhance  essential city services, such as public safety, public health and  wellness programs, city youth programs and street paving.” The actual  title for Measure U that appeared on the ballot contained 36 words, only two of  which mentioned “street paving.” (Shall the City of Richmond adopt a one-half  cent transactions and use (sales) tax, to fund and maintain essential city  services, such as public safety, public health and wellness programs, city  youth programs and street paving?) In fact, the first year’s proceeds  from Measure U were used for all these things (“essential city services, such  as public safety, public health and wellness programs, city youth programs and  street paving”). The budget for street maintenance in this year (FY 2015-16)  was substantially increased from FY 2014-15. The East Bay Times could  have looked at the budget (http://www.ci.richmond.ca.us/DocumentCenter/View/34458)  and found, for example, that the number of “city blocks resurfaced” rose from  80 to 96, and the number of potholes filled from 2,100 to 3,000. The Pavement  Condition Index (PCI) was projected to rise from 62 to 63. The only thing the  City did not do, with an abundance of caution, was to immediately float a bond  for street repairs that would have tied up Measure U revenue for many years to  come. 
 
Although  not a factual error, Borenstein’s implied criticism, “Measure M money  would probably go toward city employee compensation,” makes no sense. Most  of what cities do is done by paying city employees to do it, like cops,  firefighters, librarians and street repair workers. They have to be paid, and  that’s “employee compensation.” If Borenstein knows where we can buy public  safety or better streets without paying someone, I would like to hear it. 
 
As I have  said many times, I appreciate Borenstein’s one-man war against unpaid pension  tax liabilities. Almost every government agency in California is going to have  to deal with this inconvenient truth. Richmond is not unique. 
 
But  meanwhile, we have a city to run and a budget to balance, and our consultant  from the National Resource Network, Russ Branson, has recommended the transfer  tax increase as one tool to make it work. Note the slide below, “Looking toward  voter-approved tax rate increases, such as the documentary transfer tax, could  provide the City the opportunity to meet its long-term financial goals.” 
 
The  transfer tax only affects property owners, which leaves out about half of  Richmond’s population. And it is not paid annually like property taxes; it is a  one-time tax that is paid only when there is a sale. 
 
As a  critic, Borenstein enjoys the luxury of only having to deal with only one-half  of the municipal finance challenge. The other half, what to cut to get to  Borenstein’s tax slashing utopia, is the really hard work. Just once, I hope  Borenstein would help us out by suggesting exactly what services should be cut  to balance the budget and pay off pension liabilities. 
 
Vote for  Measure M. See http://tombutt.com/forum/2016/16-10-9.html.            
               
              
                
              
              
              
                        
              
            Borenstein:  Richmond tax would be 15 times statewide norm
             
                
              Borenstein:  Richmond tax would be 15 times statewide norm  
              By Daniel Borenstein | dborenstein@bayareanewsgroup.com  
              PUBLISHED:  October 20, 2016 at 9:07 pm | UPDATED: October 21, 2016 at 9:56 am 
               
              The Richmond  City Council wants to charge homeowners the highest property transfer tax rate  in the state, nearly 15 times what most Californians pay. 
               
              Measure M on the  Nov. 8 ballot would grab homeowners’ hard-earned equity to compensate for  Richmond officials’ inability to competently manage city finances. 
   
  In most of the state, the sale of a $500,000  house would generate a $550 transfer tax to cover the government cost of  paperwork. In Richmond, if Measure M passes, the fee for that same $500,000  sale would be $8,050. 
   
    
              Richmond  Mayor Tom Butt (Anda Chu/Bay Area News Group)  
               
              Mayor Tom Butt  portrays this as a way to stick it to the man, the greedy banks that foreclose  on homes. In fact, it would hurt most hardworking men and women trying to  invest in the dream of homeownership. 
               
  In a recent widely distributed e-mail, Butt  claimed that “96 percent of homeowners are paying nothing and are not affected  by real estate transfer taxes.” 
               
              That’s just  wrong. Real estate transfer taxes affect all property owners who sell their  homes before they die. The money comes right out of the buyer’s or seller’s  equity, the funds remaining after the mortgage is paid off. 
               
              It’s ironic this  plan comes from Richmond, where city officials previously unsuccessfully  floated a questionable scheme to  bail out homeowners underwater on their mortgages. Measure M would effectively  add thousands of dollars more debt to struggling homeowners. 
               
              Richmond, a  working-class city with large pockets of poverty, already has some of the  highest annual property tax rates in the East Bay. 
               
              That’s in part  because property owners pay for the West Contra Costa school district’s  excessively expensive construction program and the city’s unusual and costly tax to fund public employee  pensions. 
               
              Now City Council  members want to add insult to injury by taking an exceptionally large cut of  proceeds from property sales. 
               
              Butt  concocted this scheme, which was supported by the Richmond Progressive  Alliance council members. Vinay Pimplé and Nat Bates  were the only council members opposed. 
               
              In most  California cities, the proposed tax would be illegal. Most cities operate under  general state laws for municipalities that limit the transfer tax rate to $1.10  for every $1,000 of sale price. 
               
              But cities with  their own charters, like Richmond, are not bound by that. They can set higher  transfer taxes. Twenty-seven cities have done so. 
               
              Richmond already  has a rate of $8.10 per $1,000 of sale price. Of that, $7 goes to the city and  $1.10 goes to the county. 
               
              Measure M asks  voters to increase the city’s share to $10 per $1,000 of sale price for  property that sells for less than $400,000. 
               
              And for property  that sells for more, the city rate would be $15 per $1,000 of sale price.  Combined with the county share, the total would be $16.10 per $1,000. 
               
              According to  Richmond officials, 71 percent of the properties sold in 2015  went for more than $400,000. 
               
              The only other  cities in the state that charge such high fees are Oakland and Berkeley. San  Francisco charges less than half the $16.10 rate for properties under $5  million, but exceeds it for higher sale prices. 
               
              Butt says the  city needs the tax to shore up city finances. Indeed, city officials must come  up with more revenues and cut expenses. They need to close a $15  million gap over the next four years to have minimal budget reserves for  emergencies. 
               
              And that doesn’t  allow for making minimum annual payments on retirement debt, fixing  crumbling roads or performing proper upkeep of city buildings and parks. Those  huge liabilities will keep growing if city officials continue  to ignore them. 
               
              Two years ago,  Richmond leaders persuaded voters to approve a sales tax hike by suggesting the  money would go to road repairs. Instead it was gobbled up by ongoing expenses. 
               
              Now they want  more taxes. This time Butt says Measure M money would probably go toward  city employee compensation. He’s dropped any pretense it will be used  otherwise. 
               
            Meanwhile, city  officials apparently just want to hope the mounting debt will go away — or  they’ll propose another tax for that.
  | 
            |