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County Counsel recommending the Board deny a claim for tax refund in the amount of $11,122.92, plus interest, from Lumen Technologies (formerly CenturyLink Communications, LLC) for unitary property taxes paid for Tax Year 2022-23.
FUNDING: General Fund.
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DISCUSSION / BACKGROUND
The Clerk of the Board of Supervisors received a tax refund claim from Lumen Technologies (formerly CenturyLink Communications, LLC) requesting a return of $11,122.92, plus appropriate interest, for taxes levied for fiscal year 2022-23.
Lumen Technologies is one of several telecommunications companies pursuing refund claims against a number of counties, alleging that the statutory formula used to calculate its property tax rate is unconstitutional. Under Article XIII, sec. 19 of the California Constitution, the State Board of Equalization (“State BOE”) is charged with annually valuing and assessing the taxable property of a telecommunications company operating across the state as one unit. Property so valued and assessed is known as “unitary property.” Once the unitary property is assessed, the State BOE transmits to each county the assessed value of the portion of property located within the individual county. The amount of unitary property assessments attributed to the county by the State BOE are then taxed in accordance with the statutory formula. County auditors have no discretion on their calculation of the unitary tax rate; they are required to impose a tax on unitary property using the rate calculation formula prescribed in Rev. & Tax. Code § 100.
Other counties that have received similar refund claims from utility companies, such as telephone service providers, have also uniformly denied these claims. Litigation is currently in progress in Riverside County and Santa Clara County to determine whether the statutory tax rate imposed on telecommunication companies complies with Article XIII, Section 19 of the California Constitution. In the Santa Clara County c...
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