City schedules tax vote
The City Council settled on Dec. 13 as the date for a special
election to determine if Laguna will temporarily increase the sales
tax by a half cent to supplement the city’s general fund.
A special council meeting was held Sept. 16 to gauge public
opinion on the proposed special election and consider the ordinance
putting the tax increase on the ballot, which required the unanimous
vote of the council.
“The bottom line: Let the community decide,” Mayor Pro Tem Steven
Dicterow said.
Dicterow and Councilwoman Toni Iseman served on a council
subcommittee that researched the proposed tax increase and
recommended it.
If passed, the tax increase will raise $8.5 million for the city.
Under election rules mandated by the state, a two-thirds majority
vote would have been needed to pass the increase if the city
stipulated exactly how the money would be used. Only a bare majority
will be needed because the use of the funds was not restricted for a
specific purpose, although the council could and did state its
intentions.
The council plans to use the first $6 million to restore city
programs and projects that would otherwise be reduced, eliminated or
delayed to complete emergency repairs to Bluebird Canyon, devastated
by a landslide June 1. The remaining $2.5 million will establish an
emergency and disaster reserve fund.
The term of the tax increase is six years. If the target amount is
reached earlier, the tax can be eliminated by the council, but it
cannot be extended without another vote of the people.
“I don’t like raising taxes, but we are not voting to raise taxes,
we are voting to let the people decide,” Mayor Elizabeth
Pearson-Schneider said.
However, she strongly favors a larger “rainy-day” reserve fund
than the $500,000 which former Councilman Wayne Peterson pushed into
the city budget years ago. The tax increase would beef up the
emergency fund.
“I want to ensure that residents are not impacted this way by
future disasters and that no council has to face what we faced,”
Pearson-Schneider said.
Funds for immediately needed repairs to city infrastructure and
safety projects have been siphoned from other programs.
Estimated total costs for temporary and permanent repairs of the
slide area range from $12 million to $15 million.
City Manager Ken Frank said the city must protect its residents,
and that includes mitigation of obvious hazards and safe egress from
disaster-endangered neighborhoods.
“We don’t have the option of walking away from Flamingo,” Frank
said, “but we do have options for funding the repairs. We can sell
property, cut programs or raise taxes.
“Our recommendation is a combination. That way everybody shares
the pain.”
Public response at the meeting to the tax increase was generally
favorable, perhaps prompted by what Frank called the “Brownie
Rebellion” -- opposition to the sale of the two lots on which the
Girl Scout House had stood for 50 years.
“Does anyone even know what the [current] tax is?” asked resident
Bonnie Hano, who supported the temporary tax increase.
Hano said it was unlikely that people would balk at an additional
25 cents on a $50 restaurant check or purchase.
Laguna Beach Visitors Bureau President Karen Philippsen said as
many members as possible had been contacted, and restaurant
management connected with hotels said the tax increase was not a
major concern.
The three top generators of sales tax in Laguna are the Montage
Hotel and Spa, Surf & Sand and Las Brisas restaurant, Frank said.
A show of support from Las Brisas was enough to bring tears to the
eyes of the stoic city manager.
The Laguna Beach Taxpayers Association, to whom tax increases are
usually anathema, voted to stay neutral on the tax issue.
“We are opposed to waste and we are for efficient use of money
collected through taxes,” association Vice President Bobbi Cox said.
Chamber of Commerce board member Dennis Myers said the chamber
could not endorse the tax increase.
“This should be solved with a property tax,” Myers said.
Residents, not visitors, should bear the burden, Myers said,
perhaps through a citywide assessment district.
“I oppose the sales tax,” former chamber President and local
bookstore owner Tom Ahern said. “Customers can shop anywhere, and
this will have a negative effect on business. We should cut the cost
of government instead. It is fat. It is bloated.”
QUESTION
Do you support a sales tax increase to help the city pay for
disasters? Write us at P.O. Box 248, Laguna Beach, CA, 92652, e-mail
us at o7coastlinepilot@
latimes.com f7or fax us at 494-8979. Please give your name and
tell us your home address and phone number for verification purposes
only.
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