The San Diego Convention Center / File photo by Adriana Heldiz

We pulled this post from the Politics Report.

The city of San Diego announced this week that it would start to collect the higher hotel-room tax prescribed in 2020’s Measure C. Measure C got a majority of support from voters but not two-thirds and opponents have argued that means it did not pass. But supporters have said it qualifies under the still open loophole that citizens initiatives can pass, even with special tax increases, with support of just a bare majority of voters.

The two weird things: We pointed out the awkward reality that the measure promised an expansion of the Convention Center and yet it can’t deliver it now in the post-Covid era of inflation. The Convention Center expansion was why many conservatives like former Mayor Kevin Faulconer and former City Councilmember Scott Sherman supported it — and the intial city announcement on new tax collections didn’t commit to that expansion.

We asked Rachel Laing, a spokesperson for Mayor Todd Gloria, to clarify the city’s Convention Center plans.

“The city will work with stakeholders to determine how best to proceed to improve the Convention Center to ensure the longevity and success of this essential economic asset,” she wrote in a text message.

So we’ll perhaps see what that means.

But the other awkward point: It wasn’t immediately clear who was making the decision to collect the higher tax. The announcement came from the city itself, not the mayor’s office. Though the city has won many court decisions affirming that the tax passed, it’s not completely vindicated by courts yet.

We asked the city attorney’s office why they decided to go forward collecting the tax. They said it wasn’t their call.

“On Sept. 3, 2024, Judge [Wendy] Behan issued an order in the Measure C trial favorable to the city on all issues. Whether and when the city elects to collect the additional TOT and what it intends to do with those funds are both policy decisions that are within the mayor’s purview,” they said.

Laing clarified that Gloria did indeed give direction to start collecting higher hotel taxes. She also told us the plan is to set the new revenue from collections of the tax aside until the court actions are completely resolved, which means those collections are unlikely to immediately help the city address its massive budget deficit for the fiscal year that starts in July.

Scott Lewis oversees Voice of San Diego’s operations, website and daily functions as Editor in Chief. He also writes about local politics, where he frequently...

Lisa is a senior investigative reporter digging into San Diego County government and the region’s homelessness, housing, and behavioral health crises.

Join the Conversation

1 Comment

  1. I think our property taxes we pay already include payment for trash collection. I think the city council need more money to collect to pay for the ever increasing salaries of San Diego city employees and former/retired employees of the city. I read online sometime this month that the average salary of the City of San Diego is over $100,000.00. If this is true, the city needs more and more money for its employees and retirees. Maybe time for our local investigative reporters to check this out.

Leave a comment
We expect all commenters to be constructive and civil. We reserve the right to delete comments without explanation. You are welcome to flag comments to us. You are welcome to submit an opinion piece for our editors to review.

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.