This is an archive of a past election. See http://www.smartvoter.org/ca/cc/ for current information. |
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Measure D Transaction and Use Tax City of Richmond Majority Approval Required
See Also:
Index of all Measures |
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Information shown below: Fiscal Impact | Impartial Analysis | Arguments | | |||||
Shall a ½ percent sales tax in the City of Richmond be approved?
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Arguments For Measure D | Arguments Against Measure D | ||
As the State continues to take-away funding that has paid for critical local services and our local schools, we must take action to protect our community. That is why, through a unanimous vote of the city council, Measure D has been placed on the ballot.
Because this is an official emergency, the voters of Richmond are able to vote for Measure D. Measure D will enable our community to fund services that have been undermined due to state takeaways. These include:
Measure D funding is protected from future State takeaways, and will ensure that those services in Richmond that we depend upon will survive and be available to the People of Richmond. In these times of budget crisis, very few other communities have this chance to protect local services. Please join community leaders throughout Richmond by Voting YES on Measure D. Jeffrey B. Ritterman, Richmond City Councilmember Bill Lindsay, Richmond City Manager Roxanne Brown-Garcia, Kennedy High School Principal Bruce Harter, West Contra Costa Unified School School District Superintendent
We all know that sales taxes are regressive with those on lowest incomes suffering the most. Why raise a tax that hurts the unemployed, those on fixed incomes like senior citizens, and penalizes local businesses? Unfortunately for Richmond's citizens, this tax and its companion Measure C are attempting to bypass state law in order to make it easier to pass this tax increase. The California Constitution states that any tax that is for a specific purpose must pass by a 2/3 vote. Since Measure C indicates how this tax increase will be used, the tax will be challenged legally. Nobody should want to waste scarce dollars on lawyers and court costs. Given the state of the economy and the threat of a legal challenge, this is not the time to permanently raise sales taxes in the City of Richmond. Vote No on Measure D! Contra Costa Taxpayers Association Kris Hunt, Executive Director | This measure will make Richmond's sales tax one of the highest in the state, kill jobs and make the city vulnerable to costly litigation.
Public interest lawyers have already said they will sue Richmond if this tax is approved because city officials have failed to comply with a requirement in the California Constitution that any tax designated to a specific purpose be approved with no less than a 2/3 vote of the people. A "yes" vote on this sales tax increase could be costly to Richmond for attorney fees, refund claims, and even lost property tax revenue under Prop. 62, a law that allows the state to withhold property tax revenues from cities that pass illegal taxes. Measure D is bad for Richmond because:
This is not the time to permanently raise sales taxes in the City of Richmond - which already has one of the highest tax rates in California - because it will hurt residents, local businesses and city finances. Vote No on Measure D! Contra Costa Taxpayers Association Kris Hunt, Executive Director
At a time when the State is sucking local budgets dry in an attempt to balance its own budget on the backs of local taxpayers, Measure D is a way to protect local services such as:
Please join us in Voting YES on Measure D. Jeff Ritterman, Richmond City Councilmember Bill Lindsay, Richmond City Manager Charles Ramsey, West Contra Costa Unified District Board President Bruce Harter, West Contra Costa Unified School School District Superintendent |