Decreases To Business Taxes | California Primary Election | Change.vote
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A yes vote supports exempting small businesses with up to $7.5 million in gross receipts from certain taxes.
This measure aims to provide tax relief for about 800 small businesses, potentially aiding local economic recovery. However, it is projected to decrease annual City revenue by $30 to $40 million, which could lead to cuts in vital public services.
A yes vote supports exempting small businesses with up to $7.5 million in gross receipts from certain taxes. This measure aims to provide tax relief for about 800 small businesses, potentially aiding local economic recovery. However, it is projected to decrease annual City revenue by $30 to $40 million, which could lead to cuts in vital public services.
Info sourced from public filings, verified media, and official campaign materials and summarized by AI. Learn more
Who's recommending a yes vote on the Measure CSupport for the "Decreases to Business Taxes" measure is robust among small business advocates, with endorsements from the San Francisco Chamber of Commerce, Uber, and GrowSF. However, key opposition comes from labor unions and progressive groups, highlighting a contentious fiscal debate around city services.
Backed by business interests
18Recommenders
Business
Advocacy Groups
Bay Area Council
It provides much-needed predictability for our largest employers while ensuring that the city can maintain essential services.
Golden Gate Restaurant Association
For many restaurateurs, the cost of doing business in our city has reached a breaking point. This tax savings will allow them to hire more employees, make needed repairs, pay down debt, and provide some much needed financial relief.
LT
Laurie Thomas
This isn't just about taxes - it's about making sure storefronts don't go dark.
RF
Robyn Sue Fisher
This isn't just about taxes - it's about making sure storefronts don't go dark.
IT
Itzel Tunich
Support Rodney Fong -- who has served the City with unquestionable distinction.
GS
Grow SF
Raises the small business tax exemption from $5M to $7.5M in SF gross receipts (adjusted for inflation), while modestly raising rates for larger businesses to partially offset the ~$30–40M annual revenue reduction. A balanced, moderate fix: the $5M threshold approved in 2024 has been outpaced by rising costs — a restaurant with $6M in revenue isn't a corporate giant. This is the responsible counterproposal to Prop D.
San Francisco Chamber of Commerce
AdvanceSF
GrowSF
HF
Hotel Council of San Francisco
Info sourced from public filings, verified media, and official campaign materials and summarized by AI. Learn more