VOTE YES ON PROP. 5
Prop. 5 gives local voters more control over funding for affordable housing and vital infrastructure projects including roads, bridges, local fire protection and water systems. Without raising taxes, Prop. 5 shifts local public policy decisions and spending priorities away from state government, giving local voters and taxpayers more tools, more power, and greater autonomy to address those issues in their own communities.
PROP. 5: AFFORDABLE HOUSING FOR LOW- AND MIDDLE-INCOME CALIFORNIANS
We have a massive shortage of affordable housing for low- and middle-income Californians. The high cost of housing consumes too much of our paychecks, and many middle-class families are being pushed out of the communities where they work and where their children go to school. Prop. 5 gives local communities more tools to make housing more affordable, including:
PROP. 5: LOCAL PROJECTS SUPPORTING NEW HOUSING AND SAFE COMMUNITIES
In addition to affordable housing, Prop. 5 makes it easier for local voters who choose to invest in safety repairs and improvements to bridges, roads, public transportation, water systems, and other critical public infrastructure as they see fit. Local voters can also approve bonds for emergency preparedness, including local fire stations and engines, ambulances, and early-warning systems for natural disasters. Prop. 5 trusts local voters to prioritize what's most important in their communities.
PROP. 5: LOCAL CONTROL. INCREASED ACCOUNTABILITY
Prop. 5 does not raise taxes. It simply gives voters more power to address the unique needs of their communities without relying on the state, which has not met the challenges facing most California families.
But with increased control, comes increased accountability, transparency, and oversight to ensure that these programs truly deliver results. To increase protection of local tax dollars, qualifying bond measures have strict accountability requirements including:
For years, local voters have known what challenges their communities face, and how best to address those issues. Voting Yes on Prop. 5 empowers local voters to make decisions about what their communities need, and makes it easier to solve those local problems, with less reliance on state government which has proven to be too slow and unable to address the critical needs of our individual communities.
Prop. 5 trusts local voters to know what's best for their own communities when faced with affordable housing shortages and other infrastructure challenges, and gives them the tools to invest in their own local solutions.
Vote Yes on Prop. 5.
Brian K. Rice, President
California Professional Firefighters
Christopher Carson, President
League of Women Voters of California
Leah Miller, Chairperson
Habitat for Humanity California
NO ON PROP. 5: MORE GOVERNMENT DEBT AND HIGHER PROPERTY TAXES
Politicians claim they need Prop. 5 to make it easier to pass bonds, but they don’t tell you bonds are not free. Bonds are debt. A $20 billion bond costs $30 billion to repay—and it’s paid off with higher property taxes.
NO ON PROP. 5: A TRICK TO USE TAXPAYERS AS A CREDIT CARD
The politicians in Sacramento turned a $100 billion surplus into a $73 billion deficit in just two years. Now, they want to use local taxpayers as a credit card to keep spending. They want you to pay for affordable housing and other "infrastructure" projects with higher property taxes.
NO ON PROP. 5: LOOPHOLES THAT GO BEYOND "INFRASTRUCTURE"
Politicians say Prop. 5 will build "infrastructure," but the fine print defines "infrastructure" so broadly that it can include just about anything they want to fund on the backs of local taxpayers.
NO ON PROP. 5: MORE WASTEFUL SPENDING
Politicians say Prop. 5 is needed to build "affordable" housing, but they don’t tell you their version of affordable housing costs as much as $1 million per unit and comes with expensive state mandates.
NO ON PROP. 5: HIGHER TAXES, HIGHER RENTS, HIGHER PRICES
Since 1879, California has required a 2/3 majority approval to approve most bonds. Prop. 5 reduces that threshold—meaning more debt and higher property taxes for homeowners, higher rents for renters, higher costs to farmers, and higher prices for everything we buy and use. Don’t trust the politicians. Vote NO on Prop. 5.
Jon Coupal, President
Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association
Rev. Dwight E. Williams, Chairman
California Senior Alliance
Greg Van Dyke, President
California Consumer Advocates for Affordability and Safety
NO ON PROP. 5: WRITTEN BY POLITICIANS TO INCREASE DEBT AND RAISE TAXES
Prop. 5 changes the constitutional requirements that have existed for 145 years by reducing the voter approval requirements to pass bonds. Prop. 5 makes it easier for cities, counties, and special districts to increase property taxes to pay for our already massive debt levels in California. Increased debt, combined with skyrocketing interest rates, means HIGHER PROPERTY TAXES ultimately paid for by every Californian.
NO ON PROP. 5: EVEN MORE UNSUSTAINABLE DEBT
California already has more debt than any other state, with more than $500 billion in state and local debt. When this debt is added to the state’s total unfunded liabilities, it totals a staggering $1.6 TRILLION. Prop. 5 puts taxpayers on the hook for even more—saddling future generations with the bill!
NO ON PROP. 5: HIGHER TAXES, HIGHER RENTS, HIGHER PRICES
Bonds are not free money. Like a loan, mortgage, or credit card debt, bonds have to be paid back—with interest. Interest charges turn a $20 billion bond into a $30 billion tax after principal and interest—and TAXPAYERS PAY those costs through higher property taxes.
Higher property taxes mean higher house payments for homeowners, higher rents for renters, higher costs to farmers, and higher prices for everything we buy since local businesses will have to pass their higher property taxes on to consumers.
NO ON PROP. 5: SHIFTS STATE BURDEN TO LOCAL TAXPAYERS
The politicians in Sacramento have made a mess with their financial mismanagement and wasteful spending, turning a $100 billion surplus into a $73 billion deficit with unsustainable spending. Prop. 5 allows politicians to cover up their mess by shifting the costs for state programs to local taxpayers. And Prop. 5 was written to define “infrastructure” so broadly that it can include just about anything the politicians and special interests want to fund on the backs of taxpayers.
PROP. 5: BEWARE THE FINE PRINT
The politicians who wrote Prop. 5 even snuck in a provision buried in the fine print that would make it RETROACTIVE— meaning that any bond passed this November would only need a lower vote total to pass. Normally, when voters approve a measure on the ballot, it doesn’t go into law until after the election results are certified. By making Prop. 5 retroactive, they hope to saddle taxpayers with billions in new taxes and debt immediately. That means taxpayers could see their property taxes skyrocket right away.
NO ON PROP. 5: IT WILL MAKE EVERYTHING MORE EXPENSIVE
Californians already struggle with the highest cost of living in the nation. We already pay the highest income, sales, and gas taxes in the country, and Prop. 5 will lead to even higher property taxes and higher costs for everyone. Homeowners will be hit with higher taxes, renters with higher rent, and consumers with higher prices on everything from food to gas and utilities to services.
PROP. 5 will make everything more expensive when Californians can least afford it.
NO on PROP. 5.
Robert Gutierrez, President
California Taxpayers Association
Julian Canete, President
California Hispanic Chambers of Commerce
Kendra Moss, Advisory Member
Women Veterans Alliance
YES ON PROP. 5 DOES NOT RAISE TAXES: Prop. 5 simply shifts local public policy decisions and spending priorities away from state government, giving local voters and taxpayers more tools and greater autonomy to address issues in their own communities. Unlike statewide bond measures, Prop. 5 requires that projects funded by local taxpayers must benefit local taxpayers, and gives more power to those communities that choose to use Prop. 5 to solve real problems.
PROP. 5 IS NOT A BOND OR A TAX: Prop. 5 finally gives local communities the choice to address critical infrastructure needs if supported by a super-majority of local voters. Whether it's making it easier for first-time homebuyers, seniors, veterans, and working families to afford housing, or fixing the local roads and bridges that families depend upon for safe travel to and from work and school, Prop. 5 empowers local voters to solve local problems.
PROP. 5 REQUIRES INCREASED ACCOUNTABILITY: For those communities that choose to utilize Prop. 5, strict taxpayer protections will be mandatory, including:
VOTE YES ON PROP. 5: Voters have always known what challenges their communities face and how best to address important issues including housing affordability, water systems, road repair, fire stations, and other critical infrastructure needs. Prop. 5 will empower local voters with the choice and the tools to solve those challenges.
Daniel Parra, President
League of California Cities
John Valencia, President
Middle Class Taxpayers Association
Michelle Gutierrez Vo, President
California Nurses Association
Arguments printed on this page are the opinions of the authors and have not been checked for accuracy by any official agency.