http://www.hjta.org/press-releases/pr-hjta-files-class-action-lawsuit-against-fire-tax__
HJTA Files Class Action Lawsuit against
Fire Tax
Class Action could qualify 825,000 property
owners for a Fire Tax refund
October 3, 2012 Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association Press
Release
Sacramento — Today the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association filed
a class action lawsuit to provide relief to nearly one million
California property owners who received bills from the State for
a new "fire prevention fee" which the lawsuit claims is illegal.
The class action complaint, filed today in Superior Court in
Sacramento, seeks to overturn the fire fee, which costs property
owners an additional $150 per year for each habitable structure
on their property. The class action names plaintiffs from Kern
County, Mendocino County, Calaveras County, Butte County, San
Bernardino County, Solano County, San Luis Obispo County, El
Dorado County, and Lassen County, who together represent a
cross-section of the roughly 825,000 property owners subject to
the new fee. As the state's largest taxpayers' association, HJTA
is challenging the constitutionality of the fee on the grounds
it is really a tax that needed a two-thirds vote in the
Legislature to pass, but garnered only a bare majority and
therefore never became law.
The complaint was filed against the California Department of
Forestry and the Board of Equalization, as the two agencies
responsible for identifying owners of the parcels subject to the
new tax and collecting the tax, respectively. If the class
action suit is successful, approximately 825,000 homeowners
could be eligible for refunds.
"This tax was dreamed up by politicians in Sacramento who are so
desperate for revenue that they were willing to ram this through
the Legislature without the proper two-thirds vote," said Jon
Coupal, President of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association.
"The fire tax is a direct violation of Prop. 13. It is our goal
to overturn this tax, prevent the politicians from taking more
money from hardworking people for a program they were already
paying for, and help taxpayers to get a refund from the
government."
To be eligible for a refund, property owners must first pay
their bill, then file a protest with the State. HJTA has
established a website that shows how to protest the fee and
provides the necessary forms. Property owners can also sign up
for free e-mail bulletins that will keep them informed of the
progress of the class action suit.
For more information visit FireTaxProtest.org
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