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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Ortiz y Pino
DATE TYPED 03/14/05 HB
SHORT TITLE Poverty Level Property Tax Exemption, CA
SB SJR 9/aSRC
ANALYST Ford
REVENUE
Estimated Revenue
Subsequent
Years Impact
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
($0.1)
Minimal
Recurring
Local Funds
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
Relates to HJR 12, HJR 13
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Department of Finance and Administration (DFA)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of SRC Amendment
The Senate Rules Committee amendment changes the title of the resolution to accurately reflect
the effect of the resolution. The new title makes clear that the property tax exemption applies to
persons whose family income is at or below the poverty level and are determined to be disabled
or blind.
Synopsis of Original Bill
Senate Joint Resolution 9 proposes to amend the state constitution to exempt from property taxes
the property of persons whose income is at or below the federal poverty level and who is blind or
permanently disabled pursuant to the federal social security act and is determined to have a
permanent and total disability pursuant to the workers’ compensation act. The proposed
amendment is subject to voter approval.
pg_0002
Senate Joint Resolution 9/aSRC -- Page 2
Significant Issues
The resolution proposes to enact a property tax exemption for a small group of people – those
who are at or below the federal poverty level and are blind or permanently disabled pursuant to
the social security act and have permanent total disability pursuant to the workers’ compensation
act. It may be that the intent for the bill was for either of these two latter conditions to be met,
not both; however, as written, both conditions would have to be met.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
If approved by the voters, this resolution would result in a revenue loss to local funds. Because
the affected group of taxpayers is small, the impact is likely to be minimal. An analysis by the
Taxation and Revenue Department is not yet available.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
House Joint Resolution 12 would increase the maximum limit of mills that can be levied on
property without a special election and would impose the first 2 mills statewide with revenue
dedicated to public school funding. House Joint Resolution 13 would amend the constitution to
exempt certain properties from taxation.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
The resolution incorrectly references the federal poverty “level.” As DFA notes, it should refer-
ence the federal poverty “guidelines” which is the correct technical term used by the federal gov-
ernment.
It is unclear if the resolution intends for persons to meet both disability requirements or just one
of the two.
It is unclear if the exemption is intended to apply only to those whose permanent disability is the
result of a job-related injury or if the reference to the workers’ compensation act is meant only to
provide a set of guidelines for determining disability. This provision should be clarified.
EF/lg:yr