New USC Report Exposes Deep Inequities in California’s Property Tax System

A new report by the USC Program for Environmental and Regional Equity (PERE), confirms deep inequities in the current commercial property tax system and the potential of significant revenue gains by closing Prop 13’s corporate tax loopholes and addressing its systemic flaws.

Over the last two years, USC PERE analyzed commercial property tax records between 2004 and 2013 with a rigorous methodology to calculate county level revenue estimates.

Here is what they found:

  • California schools and local government services would receive $9 billion in additional revenues in 2019-2020 by reassessing commercial properties at fair market value
  • By 2019-2020, the 12 counties where California Calls anchor organizations engage community members would realize $6.6 billion in new revenue, including $2.9 billion for Los Angeles County alone.
  • Per capita benefits are broadly shared between urban and rural regions and across northern, southern and coastal counties, ranging from $44 in Lake County to $858 in San Francisco.

These new estimates – along with the findings that homeowners have paid the lion’s share of local taxes compared to commercial properties since Prop 13 was passed, provide strong evidence for the need for reform. California Calls and the 22 organizations who have joined the Make It Fair campaign will be working to bring this new study and its implications into the public policy debate for 2016 and beyond. Next steps will be announced later this year.

4 Ways Grassroots Organizing made the difference in November 2014

As part of the ‘Yes on Prop 47’ campaign, California Calls Action Fund had one-on-one conversations with 145,282 new and occasional voters statewide in the four weeks before the November 2014 election.  100,754 voters said that they supported Prop 47 and on election day. 54% of them went to the polls – a turnout rate 12 points higher than voters statewide.

The passage of Prop 47 is the latest example of how grassroots organizing works.

Check out 4 ways that California Calls’ long-term, strategic organizing led voters contacted by California Calls Action Fund to participate in the election at higher rates than other voters statewide.

1. Immigrant Voters defied campaign polls

Polls taken months before Election Day showed that Prop 47 was not popular with immigrant voters, especially women, because of concerns about community safety.  Leading up to the election, California Calls Action Fund and PICO California reached out to immigrant voters to educate them on the truth of how Prop 47 would impact their families and communities. California Calls Action Fund identified 27,899 immigrant voters. On Election Day, 57% of them turned out to vote – 20 points higher than immigrant voters statewide!

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Since 2009, California Calls has built trust in immigrant communities by engaging immigrants through one-to-one contact with grassroots leaders from their community. This strategy allows leaders  to contact voters in their native languages, making it easier for voters to get the information they need about important policies. To date, California Calls has contacted 203,184 immigrant voters and identified 80% as supporters of policies that that prioritize funding for education and critical services, close corporate loopholes and expand democracy to all Californians.

2. Voters of Color turned out to end over-incarceration

African American voters were crucial to the passage of Prop 47 because their communities feel the greatest impact of years of over-incarceration and harsh sentencing.  The Yes on Prop 47 campaign focused heavily in African American neighborhoods and the efforts paid off on Election Day:  55% of Black voters contacted by California Calls Action Fund during the campaign turned out to vote ,compared to only 35% of African American voters who turned out statewide—an 20-point increase!

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California Calls also organizes in communities with a high density of Latino and Asian voters.  Latino voters contacted by California Calls Action Fund during the campaign turned out 20 points higher than other Latino voters statewide and Asian voters turned out 21 points higher.

Grassroots leaders engage African American, Asian, and Latino voters year round in face-to-face conversations. To date, voters of color make up 68% of all California Calls supportive voters.

3. Young Voters seized their chance to speak out

Voters age 18-30 have experienced first-hand the results of criminal justice policies like Three-Strikes, which passed with 70% support before they were old enough to vote (and before some of them were born).  These young people have seen their families and communities impacted by high rates of incarceration and their schools left behind as the state increased prison spending annually at the expense of education.

California Calls Action Fund identified 19,505 young voters and 26% turned out to vote on Election Day – 8 points higher than young voters statewide.  This is important progress, and we still have a lot of work to do.

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As one of the most underrepresented groups in California, California Calls has used text messaging and social media to engage and educate young voters. Over the last 6 years, California Calls has identified 127,345  young voters supportive of our policy agenda and continues to make inspiring young people to vote a priority.

4. Changing Landscapes in Shifting Areas

As demographics in California shift, many areas that once leaned away from progressive policies are experiencing a shift in the electorate that is changing the way people think and vote on issues of social and economic justice.

In all, California Calls organizes in 8 shifting counties: Fresno, Kern, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, Santa Barbara, Tulare and Ventura.  In the last election, voters identified by the Action Fund as Prop 47 supporters in these counties turned out 8-24 points higher than other voters in their county.

For example, in Riverside County, voters contacted by California Calls Action Fund not only turned out 24 points higher than voters county wide, voters contacted by California Calls Action Fund and PICO California Action Fund  accounted for a combined  4.8% of the ‘Yes’ vote – creating the margin of victory for Prop 47 in Riverside County.

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The passage of Prop 47 in November 2014 was the first time in over a decade that Riverside County voters passed a progressive statewide policy.  This win demonstrates how engaging and turning out the emerging electorate – low-income people, voters of color, young voters and immigrants – can make the difference in important elections.

California Calls’ 7 Favorite Power Building Moments of 2014

For California Calls, 2014 was a year of deepening our alliance, building power in our communities, and preparation for 2016.

To celebrate a powerful year, we put together a list of our 7 favorite moments of power building in 2014:

1. Prop 47 Gives Thousands of Californians a Chance for a Brighter Future.

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20 years after the passage of three-strikes, Prop 47 passed with 59% of the vote, reducing six non-violent, low level crimes to misdemeanors, and redirecting hundreds of millions of dollars annually from prisons to prevention programs, education and victim services. Nearly 50,000 people in California will be eligible for reduced sentencing, and hundreds of thousands more can apply to have their record cleared.

California Calls Action Fund and PICO California Action Fund joined forces to fuel a large scale ground game to increase voter turnout for Prop 47. Together they mobilized 8,000 grassroots leaders and contacted over 300,000 new and infrequent voters in 14 counties of the state – identifying 250,000 “yes” votes for Prop 47.  And in the last four days, the coordinated effort re-contacted 40,000 supporters from San Diego to Sacramento to motivate them to the polls.

The Prop 47 win didn’t happen overnight. It has taken years of grassroots community organizing to expand the electorate by targeting young people, new citizens, and people of color who are typically overlooked by electoral campaigns.  When Three Strikes passed in 1994, only 22% of California’s electorate was African American, Latino or Asian Pacific American voters. According to exit polls, voters of color made up 37% of the electorate in the November 4 election.

2. 1 million Californian Immigrants Win Temporary Legal Status.

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In November, President Obama took executive action to give temporary legal status to 1.1 million immigrants in California. His decision was a huge 1st step toward the immigration reform many of California Calls member organizations worked toward throughout 2014. Alliance San Diego, Communities for a New California, Central Coast Alliance United for a Sustainable Economy (CAUSE) and the Dolores Huerta Foundation mobilized their communities to take direct action to put pressure on their elected leaders to stop deportations and pass a national immigration bill.

Over the summer, California Calls members Communities for a New California, Congregations Organizing for Prophetic Engagement (COPE) and Knott’s Family Agency contacted 15,000 voters in the Inland Empire and Central to build support for expanding healthcare coverage to undocumented Californians.

California Calls recruited over 18,000 new immigrants to be part of our growing base of supportive voters. Immigrant voters are an important part of the emerging California electorate and make up 26% of California Calls supporters.

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