California Property Tax Exemptions For Solar Energy Systems Extended To 2025
New submitter DaveSmith1982 writes with word from PV Tech that A property tax exemption for solar power systems in California has been extended to 2025, following the passing of a bill as part of the annual state budget. Senate Bill 871 (SB871) was approved during the signing of the budget by governor Jerry Brown, which took place last week. The wording of SB871 extends the period during which property taxes will not be applied to "active solar energy systems," which includes PV and solar water heaters.
Do they charge property tax for regular water heaters in California?
California is crazy. My dad bought in 1971 pays $600/year in property tax. Neighbors bought 25 years later the larger house next door pay about $6000/yr. The bonus is you can inherit the prop 13 property tax valuation with the property. This also holds for corporations.
What needs fixing?
The government has too much money already.
John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
Note that they reassess the property tax if you refinance your loan though. Mine went up $520/yr after refinancing during the 2008-9 crash.
I'm super cereal.
Maybe if you take cash out. I've never been re-assessed on a refi.
John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
The market adjusts the values of these properties accordingly. It's part of the reason real estate is so expensive in CA (there are other reasons, but prop 13 contributes). The problem is that new buyers have to pay those inflated prices, usually with a mortage. So what? Think about it. If you're not swinging a smaller mortage and paying higher property taxes, you're paying more interest on your debt rather than paying higher property taxes. Thus, money that used to go to the state goes to the banks
Once again, it's not the only reason the real estate is expensive. I don't mean to imply that throwing more money at state services is necessarily that answer either--for PEUs have captured the apparatus of government just as surely as the banks have.
It's just one of the many facets of the ways in which California is disfunctional; but the whole USA is disfunctional in one way or another these days. There is no real escape. There is no easy fix, even though many people would like you to think there is.
For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
It only means you don't really own your property. You are leasing it from the government. That's insane.
“He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
tax breaks on upper-middle class and rich people using an otherwise-uneconomical energy source...
Just like the electric car subsidies that help rich people buy a Tesla or Fisker as their 2nd, 3rd, 4th etc car (which the upper classes COULD afford on their own but choose not to without the subsidies "because they're too expensive") while the poorer part of the population is left with old, inefficient, expensive-to-operate "clunkers".
If the party of "Tax the Rich!" TRULY wants to actively subsidize things like e-cars and provide the wealthier with tax breaks for things like solar panels solar panels, I propose they finally REALLY tax the "rich" (Something they've NEVER tried) as follows: a flat percentage tax on all global ASSETS over $5 million ($10 million for FAMILY farms and manufacturing firms where the family lives on and operates the farm, or the family operates the factory). This sort of tax would ACTUALLY hit people like Bill Gates and Warren Buffet and George Soros instead of the usual "tax the rich" schemes that they push that never touch the rich but actually hit the middle, and particularly upper-middle, class. All-too-often, these tax deductions become part of a portfolio of financial tactics the truly rich use to offset their incomes and thus avoid paying taxes - this is why so many rich celebrities have so many odd things like farms with odd crops (which they rarely even visit), and apiaries. Maps of subsidies and tax exemptions for farms, ethanol production, etc are interesting; most subsidies and tax exemptions actually go to urban addresses of rich investors.
Average Americans should simply never be involved in the forced support (via subsidy OR tax break) of economic inefficiencies.
Driving the cost of purchasing a house up will reduce the market value of the house, not increase it. Purchasers pay the tax on the assessed value, holders pay tax on their last assessment. Tax rates have to go up to cover the lost revenue to holders, increasing the cost to purchasers.
John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
You can never tax the rich or churches as they write the tax codes.
AC runs an off shore tax shelter and is trying to drum up business.
John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
I would argue that we still are living in the days when bands of "Indians" with bow and arrow or colonists with muskets gave the British a run for their money. If that is not the case then how do you account for ISIS in Iraq and Syria being able to give the governemnt in the middle east a run for their money? They may not be using bow and arrows but they are using the modern descendents of those weapons, including shoulder launched anti-tank weapons and should launched ant-aircraft weapons!
Not a bad point. Asymmetric warfare does indeed cause problems. Goooood morning Vietnam... but the geurillas in Vietnam were backed by somebody, and ISIS is getting hi-tech from... well... I've heard some interesting theories. Round up the usual suspects.
It's like a fulcrum I suppose. Asymmetric warfare has always involved leverage. The weight is bigger on both sides now.
For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
We subsidize other forms of power generation constantly buy forcing the public to pay for all the externalities. If the power companies had to pay for all the costs related to mining, drilling, transporting, and burning fossil fuels, renewables would make a lot more economic sense even without the incentives.
What has it really cost us to keep the oil flowing out of the Middle East? What about the environmental and health impacts of burning fossil fuels? Who is paying for that?
You would think that, but depending on the area of the country you live in, there just aren't enough homes in places that people want to live. I live in San Diego and there isn't anymore room to build homes without bulldozing the existing properties. Everyone wants to live within 15-20 minutes of the beach and that makes the housing prices go up.
I live 30 minutes from the beach and my townhouse (800 sq ft upstairs and downstairs condo really) cost 199k three years ago. In the current market I could likely get 140-150k on it. I'm not going anywhere for at least ten years, so ideally this property will appreciate some more in the coming years.
I yearn to get out to the countryside where I can start my own winery and enjoy not having a neighbor in shouting distance. Let everyone else live in the city.
Who is paying for that?
You wrote that on a computer most likely powered by fossil fuels, and posted on a web site almost certainly powered by fossil fuels, on an Internet developed by defense spending. So look in a mirror for the answer to your question.
How is that crazy? Should the state be allowed to steal a property because the neighbors drove the value up? In general, yes, you ought to pay your fair share, but Prop 13 is designed specifically to keep the state from driving people out of their own property through onerous taxes. My opinion is that it should float with inflation only, but the system they have now is a whole lot better than suburb growth destroying farms through taxes.
> too much money already.
You just accidentally exposed yourself as one of those asshole Republicans. The government doesn't have enough money to provide even basic services to a fraction of the people, much less enough to operate properly which involves paying everyone a basic income. The rich old white people here don't pay nealry enough. They only pay a tiny fraction of their income. The top tax rate is only 39.6% which isn't high enough. I have a negative rate like a lot of people, but my rate could be even more negative if those whites would pay their fair share. Also, we have to pay out of pocket for health care which is morally wrong because it is a right. You people always get that wrong.
OP is completely clueless. You are only reassessed if the there are substantial improvements made to the property.
I'm not sure what your point is exactly. If by "look in the mirror" you mean that I'm paying for those externalities, I agree. We pay for them through higher taxes, higher health care and insurance costs, among other ways.
And for the record I don't mind spending money on necessary defense. I do have trouble with the idea of propping up unpopular leaders of questionable ethics in exchange for short term stability and cheap gas prices. You can argue that it's necessary but either way we still pay for it. It's still an additional cost related to fossil fuels.
If you're implying that I'm part of the problem as a customer of a utility that primarily generates power via fossil fuels, I'll remind you that most of us don't have a say in where our utilities get their power from, - which is why it is good that states like California gives breaks to those who want to generate their own power using solar energy. I'm not even blaming the utilities entirely. Many of them are trying to generate electricity using cleaner sources of power and spend significant money on energy efficiency programs.
I'll also add that I'm typing this on a laptop provided by a non-profit energy efficiency organization (along with a salary) in exchange for my services. A laptop that I transport to and from work... on a bike.
...for the affluent. Wondeful. I'm so sick of California.
The US Government does NOT subsidize fossil fuels from the middle east. The oft-repeated leftwing mantra is provably false.
First, we dedicate just as much of our military to the defense of Japan (from whom we get NO oil) and our friends in Europe (from whom we also get NO oil) as we do to the middle east - and in the cases of BOTH the "Gulf War" and the "Iraq War" we did NOT use our military might to secure the oil fields for US oil companies and US consumers. The United States would be JUST as militarily committed to the middle east even if we got NO oil there. First, because we have a particular ally in the area that we have made an exceptional commitment to: Israel. In the post WWII Holocaust world, Israel will NEVER be allowed to fall, no matter how many Muslims fantasize about it, because of the collective guilt of the west for failing to stop Hitler's "final solution" earlier and failing de-NAZIfy Egypt after Hitler's fall (Goebbels engineered a WWII alliance between the Muslim Brotherhood and the German NAZI war machine) and the simple fact that the entire non-Jewish world has proven through the 20th century that it could not be depended upon to protect the Jews on non-Jewish soil. Second, even if there WAS no Isreal, the US would still have to be involved in the middle east because opur economy depends on the health of the economies of the "western world" and THEY would still be dependent on that oil. Third, the elites in the US (in BOTH parties) are always convinced they are wise enough an entitled to run the world, and they LOVE junk like the UN. The initial "Gulf War" happened because Mr Establishment himself (Gearge HW Bush(#41 not #43)) was outraged that one UN member (Iraq) had invaded and conquered another UN member (Kuwait). The guy took the country to war to kick Hussain out of Kuwait and then promptly declared the war over as soon as that stupid global-governance international-cause-celeb was completed (rather than grabbing the oil and turning Kuwait into a 51st state or something like handin Kuwait to Saudi Arabia to "administer" (which would likely have made the Bush dynast fabulously wealthy))
If you want to go into "all the externalities" of oil, let's be consistent and do it for EVERYTHING ok?
All those solar panels and wind farms are dependent on MASSIVE quantities of chemicals, rare-Earth minerals etc (much of which come from China and therefore drive nearly half of the pentagon budget) Your iPad or iPhone probably drives a far higher list of "externalities" that you would ever want to admit to BEFORE we even get to the point of analyzing the energy it demands (and the energy and materials demanded by the internet infrastructure these devices depend upon...)
Who is paying for all the environmental impacts of all the "stuff" you own and use, hmmmm??? The toxic waste of a lot of the electronis you probably use, the solar panels you seem to worship, etc are in totality far worse than the waste from oil, which IS after all a completely natural substance. Man does not make oil... it's already there; we just pump it, and use it
"Too much money" compared to what? The amount you decided the public sector should have?
Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.
All these green energy subsidies have to stop. I believe we've past the tipping point years ago that green energy technology needed government money for development. Perhaps it was five years ago, maybe it was fifty, but we don't need to give rich people money to buy solar panels they'd be buying anyway.
Solar panels reduce carbon released into the environment, we know that. Solar panels save money for those people that can afford to buy them. What we have now are tax avoidance schemes for rich people. This makes poor people bear a greater portion of the tax load.
What seems to be an issue lately is that people are buying solar panels too quickly. The electric grid in many places was not designed to handle residences putting energy into the grid, it was designed only for residences to draw from it. Solar power is good, we need more of it. Problem is that if the solar power is added too quickly to the system then it can become unstable. Giving people tax breaks to people for putting solar panels on the roof of their house means less tax money to improve the electric grid to accommodate the increased use of solar power.
Same goes for electric cars, CFL bulbs, windmills, and bio fuels. People would be making money with these technologies without the government subsidies. With the subsidies they are making more money by giving tax breaks to the people wealthy enough to buy them. It's rich people becoming richer by taking from the poor. Because solar panels are involved we're all supposed to feel good about ourselves. Everyone is going to feel real good when the power goes out because we gave tax money to rich people instead of improving an aging electric grid.
We don't need to encourage people to buy solar panels any more with tax money. The money saved in power produced is enough. The good feelings people have in saving the environment doesn't hurt either.
I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
That has nothing to do with property tax.
John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
The amount that leaves you with a functioning society. Too much government money attracts exactly the wrong people into government (e.g. Feinstein) and results in out of control government growth and a police state.
John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'