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Sunday, February 23, 2025

Council Member Priforce to Force Election on Unfair Small Business Taxes

 Council Member Priforce Says Small Business in Emeryville Is Taxed Unfairly

Snubbed by Council Majority, He Says Voters Should Now Decide

Big Business Pays a Much Lower Tax Rate Than Small Business

Council member Kalimah Priforce announced today he is beginning a campaign to lower the tax rate on small business in Emeryville by forwarding a direct ballot initiative for voters, bypassing the City Council.  If successful, the small business tax ballot initiative would culminate a citizen drive begun in 2011 to finally address Emeryville’s infamous business tax cap, a regressive structure implemented by a pro-business City Council in 1993 that allows the largest corporations in Emeryville to pay a much lower tax rate than small businesses do.  Mr Priforce's announcement comes on the heels of a rejection in December by his colleagues to even discuss the business tax cap at the Council level.  The City Council could get rid of the cap by fiat but they have steadfastly refused and they even actively worked to stop an incipient citizen's ballot initiative in 2011 that would have removed the tax cap.  Emeryville is the only city in Alameda County that has a business tax cap.

Council Member Kalimah Priforce
He says helping small businesses thrive in
Emeryville should be more than just platitudes.
Small businesses in Emeryville should not have
a higher tax rate than big businesses do.

Council member Priforce, who calls himself a 'progressive populist', announced at the Council's December meeting that the lack of equity in Emeryville’s business tax code is troublesome and that the Council needs to finally do something about it especially seeing how they (individual Council members) often publicly exclaim how they want to help small business, he said.  As it is now, the small businesses in Emeryville are effectively subsidizing the big businesses by paying a rate higher than they need to for the City to collect the same amount of money.  A ‘flat tax’, that being every one paying the same rate, would be more fair than the current tax cap scheme and it would enable the City to charge all businesses at a lower rate to collect the same amount of money.  Small businesses would pay considerably less money under a flat tax.

Mr Priforce is correct: Emeryville’s business tax cap is unprecedented.  In fact, no other city in the entire East Bay has such a tax cap.  For small businesses, the business tax rate in Emeryville is .1% of gross receipts.  Large businesses pay a much lower effective rate, and it’s a rate that goes down the bigger the business is.  This is because big businesses, those with revenue that would be taxed above the $450,997 capped total, don’t have to pay any tax at all on any receipts above that.  Small businesses on the other hand, must pay tax on all of their revenue, making for a much higher tax rate; small businesses must pay the full .1%.

Mayor David Mourra
He likes the business tax just as it is.
NO to helping small businesses he says.
He won't even allow a debate about it.

The inequity is highlighted by a comparison between a large business in Emeryville and a typical small business.  A small local restaurant with $500,000 in revenue (gross receipts) owes the City of Emeryville the full .1% of their revenue, whereas Grocery Outlet Corporation owes the City a lower percentage of their revenue.  Every dollar the local restaurant makes is taxable versus Grocery Outlet who doesn’t likely have to pay Emeryville any taxes at all for some of their $3,969,549,003 ($3.96 billion) revenue.  If they were taxed at the rate of small businesses, Grocery Outlet would have to pay Emeryville more than what they now pay with the cap.  The cap affects the two businesses this way: the local restaurant owes the City $500 per year and Grocery Outlet owes no more than $450,997 per year.  The cap being a cap, every other large business in town also owes Emeryville only $450,997 per year regardless of their revenue.  That’s the most any business in Emeryville has to pay, no matter how big they get.  Because Grocery Outlet operates some of their stores as franchises, it is unknown how much of their revenue is taxable by Emeryville and City Hall does not reveal that private information.  

The tax cap is a very sweet deal for the large corporations in Emeryville and something much less than that for the small businesses. 

Council Member Courtney Welch
She says she loves small business.  Except when
it comes to taxing them.  Then she's saving all
her love for big business.
At .1%, Emeryville has the lowest business tax of any neighboring city.  Berkeley’s business tax, dependent on the type of business, ranges from .16% to .45%; from 50% over Emeryville to four and a half times Emeryville’s rate.  And Berkeley doesn’t have a tax cap so every business pays fairly and equally.  With a $12 million deficit this year, if Emeryville raised the rate to what neighboring cities charge and removed the cap, the deficit would be taken care of rapidly. 

Mr Priforce says Emeryville could decide how to best tax businesses after a public debate.  Two ideas are presented without a tax cap: money to the City could remain the same (revenue neutral), meaning a large tax rate reduction for all businesses and a big savings for small businesses, or the rate could be kept at .1%, meaning small businesses would pay the same as they do now but big businesses would pay more, giving the City a lot more money to pay down the deficit and have money left over or something in between.    

City Council Tax Double Cross in 2011

Back in 2011, Emeryville residents reached a boiling point with the tax cap because of the unfair taxation on small businesses.  A drive to put the issue before Emeryville voters was started by Residents United for a Livable Emeryville (RULE), a citizen’s activist group.  RULE took out papers and started a door to door signature drive to get the issue on a ballot because the City Council refused to remove the tax cap by fiat as is their prerogative. After they caught wind of the RULE signature drive, the Council intervened and they unanimously voted YES (in principle) to remove the tax cap on their own and they further announced a petition drive would therefore not be necessary.   That Council vote ended the petition drive but at the last minute, after loud protests from Pixar, the conservative majority on the Council scuttled the deal, keeping the cap in place and leaving the citizens no time to finish their petition drive before the election deadline.  Any new petition drive would have to wait until the next election, two years later.   

After the dirty deal done by the conservative Council majority, stopping the will of the people, Council member Jac Asher offered a consolation: an increase in the tax rate while leaving the tax cap in place.  The conservatives on the Council accepted that and the rate was raised from .08% to the current .1%, still the lowest business tax of any city in Alameda County even with the cap.  Ms Asher’s modest deal and the required two year wait for a new ballot initiative petition drive brought about by the Council majority dirty deal, took the wind out of the sails of the citizen petition drive and it didn't rise up again two years later.

And that’s where we are today.  From then to now, no other City Council member other than Councilman Priforce has publicly offered a plan to get rid of Emeryville’s notorious business tax or even talk about the gross inequities built in to Emeryville's pro-corporate business tax rules.

Councilman Priforce is offering the people of Emeryville a chance to return to 2011; a time when it seemed for a moment, public business tax policy would be decided by the public.  Mr Priforce gave his colleagues on the Council a chance to weigh in on this in December but they refused.  

Mayor Mourra was contacted for this story but he refused to comment, presumably leaving his publicly made NO vote to even allow discussion of changing Emeryville business tax policy, to speak for him.  Council member Priforce was also contacted and he told the Tattler he heard all four of his Council colleagues say NO to his business tax equality discussion proposal and so he will go around them and “listen to the people, not the Council”.   

Please read more on the 2010-2011 fight for a fair business tax HERE, HERE, HERE , HERE , HERE and HERE.

The Tattler will report on developments in this story as they come to light.  

UPDATE CORRECTION:  A reader pointed out that Grocery Outlet operates some of its stores as franchises and so some of their revenue is not taxable by Emeryville.  We thank the reader for catching what we missed and we apologize for the mistake.

A Sampling of Emeryville Businesses & How the Business Tax Cap Effects Them
NOTE UPDATE: Grocery Outlet operates some of its stores as franchises and the franchisees share in some of the profit and those numbers are not public.  Because of this, the numbers in these charts are based solely on the total corporate revenue and are not accurate for Grocery Outlet.  We apologize for the mistake we didn't catch.
Leapfrog Corporation has to pay taxes on every dollar it makes just like the Mom & Pop Shop and the local restaurant.  The big businesses only have to pay taxes up to $450,997 regardless of what they make.  Everything they make over that taxable amount is tax free.  It must be nice for them....says Leapfrog and every small business in town.


A Portrait of Emeryville's Business Tax Cap
Actual Tax Rates For a Sampling of Emeryville Businesses

100 = .1% (the tax rate for small businesses).
NOTE: Grocery Outlet pays Emeryville more than this number because some of its
stores are franchises.  This number is based on their total revenue, not Emeryville receipts which are unknown.
The higher the number in this bar chart, the higher the tax rate.
Higher taxes for small businesses is considered 'fair'
by the Emeryville City Council majority. 
Every other city in Alameda County disagrees with Emeryville.


19 comments:

  1. You are not being fair to Grocery Outlet. In Emeryville, they are but an administrative office. The big money is earned elsewhere; in stores that are outside Emeryville's jurisdiction. I am grateful to them for what they do pay. We're lucky to have 'em.

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    1. You are wrong on multiple points. Grocery Outlet is a public company, and most stores are independently operated.

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    2. Your concern is genuine, and your point is well taken, however, you are short sighted on this one, and wrong. Their activity is a stimulant to the entire Emeryville economy.

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    3. We are wrong about Grocery Outlet operating franchises at some of their locations. Some profit is shared by the franchisee and not taxable for Emeryville. Thanks for catching this and correcting us. This company is still has a lower tax rate than small businesses in Emeryville however. How much? That number is not reported.

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    4. All business activity is a stimulant to the local economy not just one business. That's not a rational reason to make small businesses pay at a higher rate. Besides, big business usually starts as small business. The City Council says they are pro-small business and they should have public policy reflect that goal or else they are revealed as charlatans.

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  2. It's true the council members are always talking about how much they love small business. None of them ever say anything about how they love big business. So this story is very incriminating for them. Good job Tattler.

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  3. The defenders of this tax policy have to answer why Emeryville stands alone with a tax cap. Why aren't other cities doing it? The Council needs to answer this.

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  4. Fuck all this Priforce business. He's a wilting blade of grass flapping in the breeze compared to Sutter Health and the $1B hospital and emergency service behemoth that is going to rip this community apart. 24/7 ambulance sirens, 24/7 hustle and bustle around a primary acute care emergency facility. And don't even get me started on the generation of toxic waste. We are a city less than 2sq mi big. If you don't think this is going to affect you, then you need to do some more research. Think Highland Hospital. Take a drive around our illustrious hopsitals and see the surrounding communities for yourself. I moved to Emeryville to get away from Pill Hills, now they are going to build a behemoth right in our front yards. Time to dig into this Brian. The first thing to go will be your precious speed bumps on Horton Street to accommodate the ambulance traffic. Come on man. This is going to screw up the artists coop more than anything else. Get off your ass and dig into this. It's not a good thing.

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    Replies
    1. The Tattler will report on this proposal as details emerge. I can see the Council vote even now, coming into focus: it'll be 4-1. Four yay, one nay. But no need to panic: Emeryville will receive $450,997 per year for it! The East Bay will need another hospital; there's going to be a lot of protestors shot by Trump's federal troops in need of care.

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  5. Thanks to Priforce for this. But I don't understand why the rest of the council won't even discuss this. What are they afraid of? I don't think they will do the right thing and I think we should vote on it.

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  6. I agree with the general idea of what you're saying but your math is a little off. If the cap says they pay at most $450,997 in taxes and the tax rate is .1% then they are paying taxes on the first $4,509,970 they make.

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    Replies
    1. Sorry but you're wrong. Re-read the story and re-check your math. $450,997 is the most any business in Emeryville has to pay in taxes to the City. That means any business that has gross receipts greater than $450,997,000 starts to realize a lower tax rate. The more gross receipts they make after that serves to lower their Emeryville tax rate even more. It's like how Trump wants it: The richest people pay the lowest tax rates leaving poor people saddled with the highest rates. Mayor David Mourra loves this and so does Courtney Welch and Sukhdeep Kaur. They had their chance to do something about it and they said NO.

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    2. Yes, right, I used 10% instead of 0.1%, but my point is the article says things like "The big businesses only have to pay taxes on their first $450,997 they make." But in reality they have to pay tax on the first $450,997,000 they make.

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    3. Please go back and read it again; it says “big businesses, those with revenue that would be taxed above the $450,997 capped total, don’t have to pay any tax at all on any receipts above that.” Elsewhere in the story I’m very clear the rate is .1% up until the cap is reached then it’s less than that. I changed a caption in the bar chart to make it more clear. Thanks for your comment and your advice to make it more clear. FYI, the amount of revenue a corporation makes to reach the cap ($450 million +) means only the largest businesses in Emeryville get the lower tax rates….to the extent this story you might have given you the impression that the amount is $450,000 +, realize this business tax cap is much more inequitable and unfair than that.

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  7. How do we sign Petitiom?

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    1. The petition is not out yet. The Tattler will report on this story as it moves forward.

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  8. When will the election be? I will be voting yes for a flat tax.

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    1. Council member Priforce did not indicate when the election would be but I assume it's November of 2027, during the regularly scheduled election. We could vote earlier but we would have to pay Alameda County for a 'special election' which is expensive.

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  9. Hello everyone, it's Kalimah. Should this business tax cap remain unresolved by city council, Emery Rising will be gathering signatures for a 2026 November ballot measure. I will be providing updates once the website is up. My apologies for the delays, I am just wrapping up my ADEM activities and can focus on these pressing issues.

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