Word "leaked" out last night that an income tax initiative could join the marijuana legalization initiative already in progress. Joel Connelly posted the news to Strange Bedfellows, describing I-1077 as a "sweeping plan to cut the state property tax, eliminate the Business and Occupation Tax for small businesses and create an income tax on high income couples."
How times have changed--Connelly also points out that Republican governor Dan Evans tried twice to bring an income tax to Washington in the early '70s. Now, a Democratic governor and legislature won't touch the idea. Bill Gates, Sr., is the figurehead for the initiative; Gates has been unusually willing to argue for higher taxes on the wealthy, so he has probably already lost all the country club friends he's going to.
I-1077 is (like State Senate Majority Leader Lisa Brown's earlier, unsupported proposal) a high-earner's tax, applying first a five percent tax to income earned over $200,000 for individuals, or $400,000 for couples. A second bracket of $500,000/$1 million would apply a $15,000/$30,000-plus-nine-percent tax (again, on income earned above that amount). For some reason, Canadian Business Online has the most details on the initiative's actual brackets.
Total revenue could be $1 billion. In return, the Seattle Times says, the initiative "would cut the state property tax by 20 percent" and "end the business-and-occupation tax for small businesses."
The success of the initiative is dependent on first gaining 240,000 signatures between now and July, so that it makes the ballot; then winning in November, and then not being ruled unconstitutional, thanks to a 1933 Washington Supreme Court ruling that interpreted income as a form of property. Under the state constitution, "property taxes must be uniform on every class of property and can't exceed 1 percent of the value of property" (the Seattle Times, again).
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