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Suit Seeks to Force State to Pay Special Sales Tax Funds : Budget: Agencies in 2 counties claim that local revenue funneled through the state should not be affected by the legislative deadlock.

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

Claiming that their revenues have become hostage to a long-running state budget crisis, two of the 15 counties that levy special local sales taxes asked a state judge Monday to order the release of millions of dollars.

In a lawsuit filed in Sacramento, the San Diego County Regional Transportation Commission, the Santa Clara County Transit District and the Santa Clara County Traffic Authority argued that local revenues funneled through the state should not be affected by the Legislature’s failure to reach agreement on a budget.

“There is nothing here subject to legislative appropriation that we can see, so how can a state budget that governs state money hold up our check?” asked Barney Allison, a partner in the Los Angeles law firm Nossaman, Guthner, Knox & Elliott, which filed the lawsuit.

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Allison said a decision favoring the two counties would pave the way for all 15 counties--including Los Angeles--that levy the transportation tax to seek immediate disbursement of their funds. A ruling is expected today.

The State Board of Equalization collects an extra 1 cent in sales tax in San Diego and Santa Clara counties on top of the 6 1/4% sales tax the state levies. In Santa Clara, the local sales tax goes for transportation, while San Diego’s is divided between transportation and jails.

Once collected, the local revenues are turned over to state Controller Gray Davis who disburses them to the counties monthly. But on July 9, Davis notified the counties that he would have to withhold the payments until a new state budget is adopted. Democrats and Republicans in the Legislature have been unable to reach agreement on a tax and spending plan for the fiscal year, which began July 1. Once the fiscal year started, Davis said he “would lack legal authority to make certain payments” unless a budget were adopted by the Legislature and signed by the governor.

Davis has already been ordered by federal and state judges to release $688 million in medical and social service payments as a result of three lawsuits by nursing homes, welfare recipients and in-home care workers. Federal and state courts are expected to rule today on a request by state employees for an order releasing paychecks that were held up at mid-month.

But Wayne Sink, director of finance and administration for the San Diego Assn. of Governments, which also sits as the county Regional Transportation Commission, said local governments are worried that the delays could affect bond ratings and may also cause them to lose interest payments on the sales tax funds. His agency missed a $7.8-million payment July 12.

He said the delays may cause bond-rating firms to question whether the sales tax is as secure a source of revenue as once thought. “What we’re concerned about is that this could cause a lower rating which translates into higher interest,” said Sink. “We could be talking hundreds of thousands of dollars in higher interest costs.”

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