Voters Split on Sales Tax Benefitting Fire Districts
By Corinne Murdock |
Voters are split on a proposed new sales tax on the ballot benefitting fire districts, according to the latest polling.
A Data Orbital poll surveying 550 voters indicated that just over 12 percent of voters are undecided on Proposition 310. Nearly 44 percent are in favor of the proposition, while just over 42 percent are against it.
Of those in favor of Prop 310, nearly 30 percent were completely for it while just over 14 percent were somewhat for it. Of those against Prop 310, nearly 33 percent were strongly opposed to it while nearly 10 percent were somewhat opposed to it.
Pollsters read voters Prop 310’s official ballot summary, then asked how they would vote if the election were held on that day.
41 percent of respondents were registered Republicans, 32 percent were Democrats, and 24 percent were independents or unaffiliated. The greatest majority of them had some college education but no degree, 46 percent, while 24 percent had a bachelor’s degree, 16 percent had a graduate or postgraduate degree, and 11 percent had a high school degree.
Respondents’ demographics revealed that most voters answering were aged 65 or older: 36 percent. The remaining age categories were evenly split, all under 20 percent. 75 percent of respondents were white, 17 percent were Hispanic, four percent were African American, and 2 percent were Asian/Pacific Islander.
The Arizona Free Enterprise Club (AFEC), an opponent of Prop 310, commissioned the poll.
Proponents of Prop 310 argue that it would help underfunded, rural fire districts, and claim that increased funding would cut response times. Opponents argue that Prop 310’s fund awarding would favor districts with larger property valuations, even with the three percent cap on distributions, and insist that funding solutions should be tailored to the districts rather than imposed on all taxpayers.
Prop 310 would generate hundreds of millions of dollars annually for the next 20 years without requiring fire departments to disclose how those funds were spent. The Common Sense Institute Arizona (CSI), a nonpartisan research nonprofit, projected that Prop 310 would have a negative effect on the state’s economy.
CSI claimed that the cumulative $5.5 billion in additional fire tax revenue would come at a cost of fewer jobs, lower personal income, and higher local prices.
CSI projected that Prop 310 would reduce statewide employment by 2,500 jobs in 2023 and then 3,800 jobs by 2042; reduce state GDP by $7.4 billion; reduce resident personal income by a cumulative $8.55 billion ($690 million in 2042); and increase the local price level by .04 percent.
As part of their data modeling, CSI included background on fire districts’ historical funding and expenditures: from $114 million in 2003 to nearly $500 million annually in 2020, accrued from revenues such as property taxes. CSI shared that a significant portion of those funds went toward unfunded public pension liabilities. CSI noted that no available source regularly tracks fire district funding.
Corinne Murdock is a reporter for AZ Free News. Follow her latest on Twitter, or email tips to corinne@azfreenews.com.