Proposition 208 was approved by voters in November. The Legislature is trying to find work-arounds. 

PHOENIX — Republican state representatives voted Friday to allow the owners of small businesses — and anyone who organizes their finances for tax purposes as one — to escape paying the voter-approved income tax surcharge on the wealthy to fund education.

That would cut hundreds of millions of dollars from what is supposed to go to schools.

Under current law, many small businesses are organized in a way so their income passes through to their owners. That means the owners now compute what they owe the state on their personal income tax forms, after deducting all business expenses.

Proposition 208, approved by voters by a 52% margin in November, imposes a 3.5% surcharge on adjusted personal income of amounts above $250,00 for individuals and $500,00 for married couples filing jointly. That makes the owners of these small businesses liable for the surcharge on amounts they retain as profits above those figures.

Senate Bill 1783, approved on a 31-25 party-line vote, is designed to be a work-around by creating a new small business tax category.

That’s because the surcharge in Proposition 208 applies only to tax categories that existed last year when it was approved. And since this new classification being created did not exist last year, the surcharge would not apply at all to anyone opting to use that new category.

The tax relief in SB 1783 goes far beyond what the Republican-controlled Legislature already did when it voted earlier this week to cap all income taxes at 4.5%.

In that case, unable to overturn what voters approved, lawmakers created a workaround: The wealthiest would still have to pay the 3.5% surcharge. But, with the 4.5% cap, they would have an effective tax rate of 1% on their earnings.

The voter approval of Proposition 208 also means lawmakers must make up the difference of what the high-income earners would otherwise have paid, to guarantee the education programs would get all the money promised.

But SB 1783 changes all that.

“This would create a loophole for the wealthiest in Arizona to file as a small business so they can avoid paying the 3.5% surcharge that Arizonans said they want to support education,’’ said House Minority Leader Reginald Bolding, D-Laveen.

Schools would lose $292 million

There are fiscal implications: Legislative budget analysts figured that anyone who now is subject to the Proposition 208 surcharge and is eligible to use the small business classification will do so if it lowers their taxes.

They concluded that, out of the estimated $836 million Proposition 208 was expected to raise for education, SB 1783 would cut that by about $292 million.

Rep. Shawnna Bolick, R-Phoenix, said the exemption is justified. She pointed out that campaign materials for the initiative said it would not affect small businesses. Rep. Bret Roberts, R-Maricopa, said that means the proponents either were confused “or they willfully lied.’’

But Rep. Mitzi Epstein, D-Tempe, said the campaign statement is true and that Proposition 208 is not a tax on business. She said what’s subject to the tax is not the gross proceeds of any business, it’s what’s left to the owners after they pay all expenses.

Expenses can include everything from employee salaries and equipment purchases to other deductions. That list also encompasses what remains after any other deductions, such as money a business owner puts into a 401(k) retirement account.

What that leaves — and what’s subject to the Proposition 208 surcharge — Epstein said, is the net income the owner pockets, and only above $500,000 for a married couple.

But Rep. Steve Kaiser, R-Phoenix, said that ignores how businesses operate. He said they retain net earnings to help them weather the ups and downs of businesses. And it is those net earnings, Kaiser said, that are subject to the tax.

The measure needs final approval by the Senate before going to Republican Gov. Doug Ducey. He is likely to sign it because he opposed Proposition 208.

Opens the door to litigation

That could lead to litigation. The Voter Protection Act, a provision of the Arizona Constitution, bars lawmakers from repealing or making changes in anything approved at the ballot. The only exception is for amendments that “further the purposes’’ of the original law, and then only with a three-fourths legislative vote.

Rep. Domingo DeGrazia, D-Tucson, said he believes what’s in SB 1783 runs afoul of the provision, even though it doesn’t actually repeal the levy.

“The Legislature cannot do indirectly what it cannot do directly,’’ he said.

Attorney Roopali Desai, who represents the Invest in Ed Committee that put the initiative on the ballot, has said the key is whether courts believe the change would “undermine the ultimate will of the voters.’’

What schools would get

Half of whatever ends up being raised from Proposition 208 is earmarked for schools to hire teachers and classroom support personnel, a category that also includes librarians, nurses, counselors and coaches. Those dollars also could be used for raises.

Another 25% would be for support services personnel. That covers classroom aides, service personnel, food service and transportation.

There’s 12% for grants for career and technical education programs and 10% for mentoring and retaining new teachers in the classroom. The last 3% is for the Arizona Teachers Academy, which provides tuition grants for people pursuing careers in education.


Legendary performer Elvis Presley sang to a capacity crowd at Tucson Convention Center on Nov. 9, 1972.

Elvis has previously performed at the Tucson Rodeo Grounds on June 10, 1956, when he was just 21 years old. Video by Rick Wiley / Arizona Daily Star


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