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Capitol Hill Community Post | Mayor Murray, Councilmembers Herbold and Sawant unveil tax proposal for high-income households

From the City of Seattle

Today, Mayor Ed Murray and Councilmembers Kshama Sawant (District 3, Central Seattle) and Lisa Herbold (District 1, West Seattle & South Park) unveiled a joint proposal to begin shifting Seattle to a more progressive and sustainable tax structure, through a tax on high-income households. The proposal would place a 2 percent tax on joint filers’ income over $500,000 and single tax filers’ income over $250,000. The estimated $125 million in new annual revenue would allow the City to lower the burden associated with property taxes and other regressive taxes, replace federal funding potentially lost through President Trump’s budget cuts, enhance public services such as housing, education, transit, and/or create green jobs while meeting the City’s carbon reduction goals.

“Washington state’s tax structure is the most regressive in the country, putting the burden on many of our most vulnerable residents,” said Mayor Murray. “Leaving cities with only regressive tax options puts the heaviest burden on working people, families and communities of color. By replacing a system that relies too heavily on property and sales taxes with a progressive income tax, we can ease that burden and generate revenue to invest in Seattle priorities – human services, education, affordable housing and reliable transit. This remains one of the major shortcomings of our city and state, and it is finally time to fix it.”

“I ran for office four years ago on a program of a $15 per hour minimum wage, to tax the rich, and for rent control,” said Councilmember Sawant. “We won $15 by building the 15 Now grassroots campaign. Now we’re on the cusp of taxing Seattle’s rich, because socialists, activists, and community organizers have tirelessly built up our movement over the years. Our movement will continue to organize in our interests, against big business and the super rich, to make Seattle affordable for all.”

“People earning $20,000 a year devote two entire months of pay to their yearly tax bill; the 1 percent pay their annual tax bill in only six days,” said Councilmember Herbold. “A tax on high incomes will give Seattle a more equitable revenue structure to fund affordable housing and services addressing homelessness, education, transit, and climate change, and it could also be dedicated to lowering other regressive taxes and replacing federal funding potentially lost to Trump budget cuts.”

The Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy (ITEP) has found Washington state’s existing tax structure to be the most regressive in the nation, disproportionately hitting low-income households. ITEP found in 2015 that state and local taxes paid by the 20 percent of Washington families with the lowest incomes amounted to 16.8 percent of their income. In contrast, the tax burden for the 1 percent of families with the highest incomes was 2.4 percent of their income.

“Households with incomes below $21,000 are paying, on average, 16.8 percent of their income in state and local taxes, while those with incomes above $500,000 pay just 2.4 percent said John Burbank, Executive Director of the Economic Opportunity Institute, which co-leads the Trump Proof Seattle Coalition. “It is reasonable for Seattle’s wealthiest residents, who currently pay the lowest tax rates, to pay a little more to make Seattle a better place for everyone – including themselves – to live, work, raise a family and do business.”

The City Council will conduct an initial public hearing regarding this proposal on June 14. It is anticipated City Council will take final action by mid-July.

 

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Eli
Eli
6 years ago

Well, that’s one way to reduce pressure on our city’s single-family housing stock.

Glenn
Glenn
6 years ago
Reply to  Eli

I would rather see a more broadly based citywide income tax tied to concrete reductions in the city’s portion of property taxes and, if possible, a reduction in the sales tax. Ideally the change would be relatively revenue neutral while redistributing the tax burden in the direction of higher earners. This proposal is easy for all to support because none will have pay it. I don’t like taxes like that. And they talk about reducing property taxes, etc., but does anyone believe that will happen if it isn’t included in the current proposal ?

Eli
Eli
6 years ago
Reply to  Eli

That’s exactly why I despise Ed Murray as mayor.

He knows how to say the things people want to hear, but he avoids concrete accountability commitments, so it’s always easy to screw over the dummies (like me) who vote for his taxes afterwards.

Nope
Nope
6 years ago

Given that >50% population of Seattle are renting, and thus not directly paying property tax, I think this is a great step forward. now they too will feel the pain of the ever increasing burden.

Seattle times says this would impact 11k people who earn 250k+. The majority would benefit.

Greg M
Greg M
6 years ago
Reply to  Nope

Holding my breath until they also lower the sales taxes in exchange for this.

CD neighbor
CD neighbor
6 years ago
Reply to  Nope

errrrr – you think that people earning 250k+ per year are usually renters…