Page 6 Portland Observer, March 23,1983 Sales tax opposition grows (Continued fro m page I column 6) bale, and il would make lax fo rm * more complex. Businett would tave if included in the tale» tax p la n . B u x in e » now pays over h a lf o f O regon property taxes, and would get the same o f an across-the-board rollback. Busincu (an d farm e rs) w o u ld pay tax on goods they need, but th a t w ou ld come to only 20 to 40 percent o f the to ta l. So business w ou ld get over h a lf the benefits, w hile paying less than half the coat, and some o f that w ou ld be passed to consumers as higher prices. Under two o f the tales tax plans, landlords w ould receive tax relief. Renters w ould have to depend on landlords* willingness to p a u on the savings. When C alifo rn ia’s Proposi­ tion 13— a tax lim itation m e a s u re - passed in 1978, few saw their rents drop. I t ’ s not clear whether a tales tax would be more regressive than pre­ sent property taxes. M any observers believe p ro p e rty taxes are a lto re­ gressive. A study o f who pays prop­ erty tax according to income will be out in the next week from the Legis­ lative Revenue O ffice. W ho pays and who benefits under each o f the three tax plans it sum­ marized in the following chart. (Sev­ eral Salem observers believe the Lo­ cal Governm ent plan it most likely to pass, since it's the least regressive and doesn't include business.) in 1969 to 37 percent today. As in­ flation has kicked wage earners into higher tax brackets, and rates fo r business (and the w ell-to -d o ) have stayed the same, business’ share o f income taxes has fallen from 13 per­ cent in 1978 to 9 percent today (this is due also to falling profits), he said later Baugh &lso Mud tatei K x revenues vary wildly with the business cycle. During booms people borrow, and spending exceeds income, but in de­ pressions people save, and cut spending to the bone. Since sales taxes depend on spending on big- ticket items, he said, states that de­ pend on sales taxes, such as C a li­ fo rn ia and W a s h in g to n , are in a worse bind than Oregon. California is iu u in g lO U t. Baugh pointed out th a t the unem ployed co n tin u e to pay tales tax, unlike the income tax. State Sen. M a rg ie H endrickscn (D-Eugene), said that as more wom­ en become the sole breadw inner— ’ ’ the fem inization o f p o v e rty ,"— women are especially affected by the sales lax. Ron Herndon o f the Black United Front has criticized the tax for hav­ ing the same effect on racial m inori­ tie s The O USST coalition will hold an anti-sales tax rally at the State Capi­ tol A p ril 13th, at noon. A forum on the sales tax and o ther legislative issues, sponsored by the C itizen s P a rty and in c lu d in g the Black U n ite d F ro n t and O regon F a ir Share, w ill be held M arch 27, 4-6 W h o Pays Business Consumera ( Homeowners / Rentera) Revenue Local Government Pien Courtney- Van Vliet Plan Taxpayers for a Better Economy Plan 0 2-4 % (2-8% tnltidRy) 8410 mNion (eat.) 4% 4% 4% 8800 million (eat.) 6% 6% 6% •7-800 mAion (set.) 40-60% 40-60% Lendtorde- - a t ---------- - ■ ------ oiecretion No rebel Schooin 4046% 4046% Landlords' discretion 26% Schools Who Benefits Business Homeowners Rentara No relief 60% 60% Income tax peyera Government No relief A llo c a i governments The opp o sitio n A t a rally at the O range H a ll on M arch 12th, the O U S S T co alitio n criticized the talcs tax plans as un­ fair and an unstable revenue source, and supported altern atives. C o m ­ m u n ity g ro up leaders and D e m o ­ cratic legislators addressed a crowd o f 130 at the hastily called event. State A F L - C I O treasurer Bob Baugh said Oregon’s tax system has already become more regressive in the past decade. H e said tax favors given business by the L e g is la tu re have led to business’ share o f prop­ erty revenues falling from 68 pecent p .m ., at the Friends H a ll, 4312 SE Stark. But State Rep. C arl Hosticka, (D - Eugenc), who favors raising income taxes on high incomes, cites studies that say local taxes arc seventh o f tw elve concerns when business makes investment decisions. Local governments want a stable revenue source to replace the p o li­ tically v o la tile p ro p e rty tax (b usi­ ness’ second co n cern , B ornem an says). Shaken by frequent voter re­ jections o f property levies, and three close calls on drastic tax lim itatio n initiatives, local governments want to sec "perm anent and predictable p ro perty tax r e li e f . . .t o avoid the passage o f a Measure 3-type propo­ sal." according to a p re » release ex­ plaining their tax plan Sales tax supporters em phasize their plans would also put limits on spending and taxes in to the state constitution. Critics say these limits would lim it state and local govern­ ments' flexibility to deal with future growth and emergencies. T h e L eg islature A recent Eugene K e g a le r-G u ard poll fo un d most state representa­ tives in the " N o t N o w ," " M ig h t S upport," and "Leaning Tow ards" the sales tax categories. Opposition is stronger in the state senate. Despite a D em o cratic m a jo rity , and opposition from the state Dem­ ocratic P a rty , there is p ro bably a m ajority in the House willing to re­ fer a sales tax to the voters. The tax divides both p arties, w ith leading supporters including Reps. C o u rt­ ney and V era K a tz ( D -P o r tla n d ), and opponents in c lu d in g W a lly P riestley ( D -P o r tla n d ) and D ick Springer (D -P o rtlan d ). W ith strong lobbies on both sides, passing the decision to a special election next November may seem the easiest out. Tho v o ters Voters heavily rejected sales taxes six times fro m 1933 to 1969. Polls show most would now favor a sales tax to offset property taxes, but the m ajority has fallen from 37 percent in favor to 37 percent against, last July, to 32 percent to 44 percent in a recent poll. Passage o f a tax will de­ pend on how well the fairness and relief issues are handles, and whe­ ther the m edia b litz business and government could put in to a cam ­ paign would overwhelm the volun­ teer d oo r-to-door e ffo rt by oppon­ ents. Other tax proposals Balaa ta x su p po rters O rg an ized support fo r the sales tax comes mostly from big business and local government. Rick Borne- man. spokesperson for the pro-busi­ ness O reg o nian s fo r a B etter Economy, says business' main con­ cern is the state income tax, which is the second highest in the country. H e says executives are convinced that the income tax is soaking up in­ vestment funds, and keeping new business out o f the state. Bwrty Cstxn. P'oçngtor Fvgtu.lng wig« by MAOMI SIMS. ANDAS DOUOLAS, BILUC » NATALIS COLS Several alternatives to the sales tax stand before the legislature. Slate Rep. W ally Priestley favors p ro p e rly tax re lie f by m eans o f a "homestead exemption” on the first 313,000 o f assessed valu atio n . An aide says this apporach w ould con­ centrate re lie f on homes in the S3O.OOO-S7O.OOO range, while taxes w ou ld rise on homes above 3123.000. Rep. H o s tic k a and Sen. H en- dricksen w ant to cut income taxes fo r 63 percent o f O regonians, in ­ clu din g most households m akin g 3 3 0 ,0 0 or less. Taxes fo r those m akin g m ore w ou ld rise, as tax brackets would widen from the pre­ sent 4-10 percent range to 3-13 per­ cent. Susan Sow ards, an aide to Sen. Hendrickscn, says tax brackets haven’t changed since 1963, and so now with inflation nearly all taxpay­ ers are in the 10 percent bracket be­ fore deductions. She says the Hen- dricksen-H osticka plan w ould ad­ dress this im balance, and recover some o f the Reagan tax cuts on the w ealthy. Sowards says the income tax plan isn’t necessarily opposed to the sales tax. Democratic leaders such as House M ajo rity Leader G rattan Kerens (D - Eugene) and Senate Revenue chair Jack Ripper (D -N o rth Bend) favor a stand-pat approach: cut 3240 m il­ lio n fro m G o v . A tiy e h 's budget, and don't change the tax structure. Cuts would come mostly from state workers' raises, a new prison, and property tax relief. M ore cuts in tax relief would risk passage o f a M ea­ sure 3-type measure. Most members o f the O USST co­ a litio n support the H en d ricksen - Hosticka and Priestley measures in­ stead o f the sales tax. FOR YOUR TAX DOLLAR: More Teaching — less management I SI v o to J IM STA N O R IN 6 Portland School Board #6 fK llW À ' C l EANH2S 1001 NE Broadway 30% Discount Atrtiss troni Lloyd Center Comer of 10th and Broadway Spring Cleaning NOW T H R U A P R IL 16th, 1983 on ALL Dry Cleaning Mon.-Fri. Sat. 10-2 1 Day Service Dry Cleaning NOW OPEN . . . New, pretty, and very good, but reasonable! High Society R estaurant 517 NE Killingsworth Your Hosts Robert end Roil OPEN FOR BREAKFAST, LUNCH & DINNER 7 DAYS NENNA Rag 3 1 - 32- $24« $15°° MRS. C*s WIQS . 707 N.R. Premont 281-6829 Cteeed 8m. 8 M m . 0M H Teee. « m l e t 1lt>0 M l ta M M M l Rash Roofing Co. 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