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Proposition A Sales Tax Increase Will Slam Los Angeles Poor, Profs and Students Say at Protest

Prop A Protest.jpg
Inae Bloom
L.A. students, profs and creatives protest the Prop. A sales tax hike at L.A. City Hall.
Please also read Proposition A Sales Tax Increase: Do People Trust the L.A. City Council?

By David Stamp

Los Angeles City College poli sci teacher Salvador Sanchez says "Nobody has time for this, but we have to do it" -- it being to ask L.A. voters to defeat Prop. A, a tax increase on the March 5 ballot that's heavily bankrolled by wealthy developers, monied labor unions, multinational billboard firms and other not-poor-folk.

At a protest at L.A. City Hall today, people like Lynda Tong, former study body vice president at LACC, said, "There's a lot of things that they can change here at City Hall -- starting with their finances -- before they even start taxing. Every time they come up with an issue, they want to tax, tax, tax. The ones that are going to be hit the most are those that are impoverished, the immigrants, the students, especially the students."

Chip Croft, a senior citizen and documentary filmmaker who lives in working-class Westlake, says, "I can't afford to pay taxes like someone who's making $100,000 or $200,000 a year ... People under the poverty limit will have to pay about 240 additional dollars a year, they figured out, in taxes."

westlake neighborhood.jpg
Clinton Steed
Westlake is expected to be hard-hit if voters approve Prop. A because of its deep poverty.
Westlake, which is west of downtown L.A., is home to "Central Americans, Mayans -- those people definitely can't afford to pay an additional $240 a year," says Croft. "They can barely afford groceries."

Roberto Heraldson, a civic activist running for City Council District 13, said he supported the L.A. City Council's original plan to add more cost onto the real estate transfer tax -- a plan hotly opposed by the city's wealthy land developers.

Heraldson says that, "As a small business owner -- I have a small business that does visual effects for the studios in Hollywood -- I'm not in favor of raising the sales tax because I feel that not only does it make a burden for the residents in our city and especially for those that have the least income in our city, but also I think it's difficult for businesses that are trying to attract customers."

Student leader Tong took a swipe at mayoral candidate Wendy Greuel, saying, "You know all those Wendy Greuel ads, the ones where she's found discrepancies?" Tong asks why Greuel and the rest of the City Council failed to long ago "muster up that $1.5 million dollars to help that police force."

Thumbnail image for Wesson Illo.jpg
Herb Wesson dreamed up the L.A. sales tax hike plan.
The citywide sales tax hike is the brainchild of City Council President Herb Wesson, who makes $178,789 per year as his salary, more than members of the U.S. Congress.

Tong adds, "As a student leader we had to be accountable to the students -- we had to manage a [more than] $100,000 budget."

According to the Los Angeles Times, a new poll shows the Proposition A tax increase is very narrowly ahead and could go either way at the polls tomorrow in what some have called a rich-versus-poor spectacle.

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1 comments
abramsrl
abramsrl topcommenter

The first things that cities are supposed to provide are roads, police, paramedics and fire services including 911.  The TV ads with Chief Beck says we need to increase taxes to pay for police, fire, paramedics and fix 911.

Why did Garcetti, Greuel, Perry, and Zine not fund roads, police, paramedics and the fire department first before giving hundreds of millions of dollars to real estate developers?  Why do real estate developers get priority over a decent 911 system or paramedics?  Garetti and his friends gave $30 Million to CIM Group to rehab the Kodak Theater for Circ du Soleil.  Why give tax dollars to private businessmen?  Garcetti cut $200 Million from the LAFD budget and then gave $52 Million to his buddy billionaire Eli Broad so he could have a parking garage next to his art museum.


Why was paying for an parking garage for a billionaire more important than fixing the 911 system or providing paramedics?  The kid who died at his middle school because the paramedics could not reach him in time wants to know.  Ooops, no, he does not want to know because he is DEAD! 


Rather raising taxes, why doesn't Garcetti asked Eli Broad to give back $52 Million?  Why doesn't Garcetti retract the $67 Million tax break to a downtown hotel?  Why doesn't Garcetti demand that AEG's architects give back the $1 Million he gave them? Why doesn't Garcetti get back the $1.4 Million from appraisal fraud at 1601 N Vine from whoever took the money?  Why did Garcetti sell a lot he said was worth $5.4 Million to his buddy Hal Katersky for only $835,000.  Had he charged the proper value, we would have had about $4.6 M more for paramedics and who knows how many kids and seniors would not have needlessly died if Garcetti had not given away the tax dollars which we paid for fire, police, and paramedics.


We've paid for these basic services and we should not subject ourselves to double taxation.  Besides, the money won't go to fire and police, but will find its way to real estate developers -- and Angelenos will continue to needlessly die

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