This is an archive of a past election. See http://www.smartvoter.org/ca/sf/ for current information. |
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Proposition O Replacing the Emergency Response Fee with an Access Line Tax and Revising the Telephone Users Tax City of San Francisco Ordinance - Majority Approval Required Pass: 208,044 / 66.74% Yes votes ...... 103,679 / 33.26% No votes
See Also:
Index of all Propositions |
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Results as of Jan 24 10:41am, 100.0% of Precincts Reporting (580/580) |
Information shown below: Fiscal Impact | Yes/No Meaning | Arguments | | |||||
Shall the City replace the Emergency Response Fee with an Access Line Tax at the same rates and with the same exemptions, and revise the Telephone Users Tax?
The proposal would replace the current emergency response fee (the 911 fee) charged to phone customers with a general access line tax. The current 911 fee rate is $2.75 per month per phone line, with higher rates on commercial lines, and generates approximately $42 million annually. These revenues are budgeted for costs associated with the City's emergency response (911) service. The replacement tax would be at the same rates with the same exemptions and is projected to generate the same amount of revenue. These revenues would be available for any public purpose. The proposal would also update and modernize the City's telephone users tax, which generates approximately $40 million annually. The telephone users tax rate is 7.5% of the cost of services billed, and exempts residential and certain other users. The proposal does not change the tax rate or the exemptions. The proposal would modernize the tax to specifically apply to new and future technologies that over time are expected to replace a portion of current telephone services, such as non-residential voice over internet protocol and other emerging types of communication services. The projected tax revenue amount will not significantly change over time, because while emerging services would be subject to the tax, these services are likely to replace classic telephone services which are gradually decreasing. The California Court of Appeal recently decided that a similar emergency response fee is a special tax which requires voter approval under the state constitution. Also, changes to telephone user taxes made without voter approval have been legally challenged in some other California cities. Voter approval of the proposed measure would confirm the City's continued and future collection of these revenues.
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Nonpartisan Information League of Women Voters EventsVideo
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Arguments For Proposition O | Arguments Against Proposition O | ||
SAVE 9-1-1. NO NEW TAXES. VOTE YES ON O
What do you do in an emergency? You dial 911. Emergency response is the most important service our city government provides. Today, it's our 911 system that faces an emergency. A recent court ruling has jeopardized the funding source that San Francisco uses to provide 911 services. At risk is San Francisco's Emergency Response Fee, created after the tragic 1993 shootings at 101 California Street. The Emergency Response Fee is the lifeline for our 911 service. It has enabled San Francisco to centralize 911 Police, Fire and EMS dispatch functions and dramatically improve our ability to respond to life-threatening events, natural disasters and public safety emergencies. We cannot afford to lose it. Voting YES on Proposition O:
Yes on O is strongly supported by San Francisco Firefighters, San Francisco Police Officers, Mayor Newsom and entire Board of Supervisors, San Francisco Democratic Party and Republican Party, business, labor organizations, neighborhood groups and San Francisco small business owners. Now, it's up to all of us to vote YES on O, to save 911 services with no new taxes.
Mayor Gavin Newsom
Since then of course, fees paid by San Franciscans have risen dramatically. Let's not give government a new authority to tax our Internet use! A fee is a payment for a service rendered to the person paying the fee. The "Emergency Response Fee" never met this definition, therefore it has always been a tax. Proponents of Proposition O are trying to have it both ways. If they admit it was a tax all along, then it should have been approved by the voters in order to be levied + and that approval was never obtained. If they say it wasn't a tax before, then making it a tax now puts the lie to their claim of "no new taxes." Call a spade a spade, and a tax, a tax! Please have compassion for working people and families trying to make ends meet. For residents of limited means, every penny counts. Vote NO on O and send this testament to government greed to the circular file! Starchild, Outreach Director, Libertarian Party of San Francisco/ Steering Committee Member, San Francisco Taxpayers Union* Phil Berg, Libertarian candidate for Congress
| For 15 years, San Francisco City Hall has been taxing your
telephone usage and calling it a fee.
They did this in order to collect the money without seeking voter approval, which is required to impose a tax. Recently however, a court ruling put such duplicitously named "fees" in legal jeopardy. But instead of apologizing, or scheduling a vote to refund the extra money you've been wrongfully charged on your phone bill for the past decade and a half, the politicians want voters to reward their dishonest maneuver by affirming that this confiscation is the tax it was all along rather than a fee, thus protecting their ability to keep charging you. Measure O soothingly reassures us that "Future increases should be limited to the inflation rate." However the use of "should" rather than "shall" means there actually is no limitation on future increases. Even this wasn't enough to sate the government's greed. A second provision in Measure O would for the first time allow them to tax Internet-based telephone services, and even new technologies that haven't been invented yet. I am not arguing against emergency services. I am saying find other sources of funding to pay for these services which do not involve taking more money out of the pockets of ordinary working people. For instance, according to the City Budget Analyst, San Francisco spends an estimated $11.4 million a year arresting and prosecuting prostitutes and their clients for consensual sex between adults, contrary to the tolerant, sex-positive values of San Franciscans, and despite the fact that San Francisco juries regularly refuse to convict individuals charged with prostitution. Expenditures like that could be better put toward funding emergency services.
Starchild
That's why our front-line public safety officials and firstresponders, including the San Francisco Firefighters, San Francisco Police Officers, San Francisco Deputy Sheriffs, Sheriff Michael Hennessey and District Attorney Kamala Harris strongly support Proposition O. These are the facts about Prop O:
Thirty-three California cities have passed a similar update to reflect changes in telecommunications since the 1960's. It is time for San Francisco to approve a similar update. Please join the diverse coalition of San Franciscans - including the San Francisco Democratic and Republican Parties, Mayor Gavin Newsom and the entire Board of Supervisors, business, labor and neighborhood groups, and vote YES on Prop O.
Mayor Gavin Newsom |