Los Angeles Times - February
3, 2008
Fighting the phone tax
Are the neighborhood
councils' problems with Proposition S the start of a revolt against City
Hall?
ith
the faltering economy doubling its budget shortfall, the city of Los Angeles
cannot afford to lose any tax revenue, which is why a telephone users
utility tax, Proposition S, will appear on Tuesday's ballot.
Many neighborhood council members across the
city oppose the tax. Their opposition is less about Proposition S than an
inchoate cry in the dark against what many perceive as City Hall's
relentless drive to subsidize dense developments, particularly downtown, and
to provide lavish contracts for city workers while largely ignoring the
needs of neighborhoods and the overall L.A. economy.
The defeat of the telephone tax measure,
which is unlikely, would not end subsidies for developers or force the city
to reopen union contracts. But a grass-roots movement spearheaded by
neighborhood councils could blunt the city's attempts to hand out new
subsidies, or expand existing ones, on top of the hundreds of millions of
dollars it has already given to powerful developers.
The city has taxed telephone services since
1967, and as wireless technology evolved, it extended the tax to cellphones,
among other modern services. Wireless companies objected and sued the city
to block the cellphone tax. With the courts siding with the companies, Mayor
Antonio Villaraigosa pressed for the ballot measure that would keep the tax
alive and bring in $243 million.
Proposition S has the support of L.A.'s
highest officials, and the campaign for it has the financial backing of the
city's unions and big developers.
Greg Nelson, former director of the city's
Department of Neighborhood Councils, sees something potentially politically
far-reaching in the councils' opposition to the telephone tax. He says that
most of the members of the councils cite larger issues for their coolness
toward it. Most notably, he says, they object to the city's willingness to
pay ever-larger wages and benefits to its workers -- labor costs have surged
53% since 2000 -- and to hand out subsidies to downtown developers.
Jill Barad, president of the Sherman Oaks
Neighborhood Council and founder of the Valley Alliance of Neighborhood
Councils, echoed Nelson. "There's tremendous distrust of the city" and "a
sense that the city is controlled by downtown power-brokers," she said.
"People here ask, why put money into a hotel
next to Staples Center," she continued. City Hall "keeps asking for money
from the Valley, but we get very little in return." She noted that other
members of her neighborhood council were losing faith in the City Council's
ability to control costs, wondering why it didn't better prepare for the
economic downturn caused by the housing meltdown. After all, it was no great
secret that the real estate market was vastly overinflated and in need of a
correction.
Similar sentiments can be heard in other
parts of the city. "We pay a lot of attention to the big [union] raises, the
subsidies, Villaraigosa's fundraising, Proposition S. Some of us realize we
need to organize against these things," Doug Epperhart, former president of
the San Pedro Neighborhood Council, told me.
Daymond Johnson, former secretary of the
South Central Neighborhood Council, says his group has little enthusiasm for
Proposition S because its passage would allow City Hall to keep on handing
out subsidies for downtown development that has offered little economic
opportunity to poorer minority residents. "It doesn't really matter if it's
the Valley or South Central," Johnson told me. "The majority of everything
goes downtown, but nothing is happening south of the 10 Freeway. All we get
is more liquor stores."
Three factors may intensify neighborhood
council opposition to City Hall.
One, councils have a new power that could
make them a more consistent voice in city policy: They can now introduce
proposals in city government and no longer have to rely on City Council
members to do it for them.
The second factor is the city's darkening
financial prospects. Last week, Villaraigosa revealed that the city is
facing a $155-million budget shortfall because of the economic downturn. The
larger-than-expected drop in sales and real estate-related taxes portends
steep budget cuts, including the possibility of unpaid vacations for city
workers in order to save money. When you add in the possibility that
balancing the state's $14.5-billion deficit could result in less money for
the city, the budget picture could get even gloomier. Even if Proposition S
passes, the city will need to find new revenue. One source is the city's
Department of Water and Power, which is seeking rate hikes for both water
and power.
The problem is that many L.A. residents are
already financially pinched by falling home values and the credit crunch.
Higher DWP rates or a new tax would further strain their budgets. That could
help fuel a grass-roots anti-tax movement that could strengthen the hand of
neighborhood councils.
Finally, there may be renewed focus on the
long-ignored, broad-based L.A. economy. Indeed, as the full extent of the
real estate market collapse becomes evident, the very logic behind
subsidized development -- that it will increase property values and create
enough jobs to justify the subsidies -- may begin to fall apart. Now that
some condo developers have to hand out Mini Coopers to lure potential
buyers, the issue of whether the highly subsidized downtown "boom" has been
a good investment is open for debate. Just last month, the third
postponement of the groundbreaking for the $3-billion Grand Avenue project
-- another beneficiary of huge public subsidies -- should raise questions
about the development's viability in the current market.
"If they think it's so hot, why do they need
subsidies?" City Controller Laura Chick asked. "And if it is not, what is it
about, but a few developers getting rich while the rest of us get little?"
Chick reluctantly supports Proposition S
because the city's deficit would grow by another $243 million if it fails at
the polls. But she shares the disdain of many neighborhood councils for the
Villaraigosa administration's focus on downtown real estate development. It
would be better, she said, if the city instead spent more time on fostering
private-sector job growth.
"We don't have an economic development
program in this city," Chick told me. "Instead, we have a feel-good
development program run by the developers."
Perhaps some people downtown are recognizing
this reality. The mayor's Los Angeles Economy & Jobs Committee recently
reported that the city's economy is increasingly shaky. About 30,000 jobs
have been lost since 1995, and more than 106,000 manufacturing jobs over the
last 17 years, many of them in aerospace. The group of business and civic
leaders called for a virtual "Marshall Plan" to revive Los Angeles' economy.
But to bring about significant change, Chick
said the city will need a new political movement. "If the neighborhood
councils get together effectively," she said, "we could have a revolution."
Given the dismal record of L.A.'s recent
economic development efforts, and the financial hole the municipality is now
in, such a revolution may be what this city needs.
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