155.30.
(a) (1) Notwithstanding any law and subject to the limitations of this section, a county board of supervisors may exempt from property taxation any possessory interest held by a tenant of publicly owned housing with a value so low that the total taxes and applicable subventions on the property would amount to less than the cost of assessing and collecting them.(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), the board shall not exempt possessory interests with a total base year value, as adjusted by an annual inflation factor pursuant to subdivision (f) of Section 110.1, or full value of more than fifty thousand dollars ($50,000).
(b) Notwithstanding Section 155.20 and
subject to the limitations in this section, there shall be a rebuttable presumption that the property taxes and applicable subventions on a possessory interest held by a tenant in publicly owned housing are less than the costs of assessing and collecting those taxes and applicable subventions.
(c) A county board of supervisors may grant an exemption for a possessory interest pursuant to this section as follows:
(1) By inaction. If the board does not hold a public hearing pursuant to paragraph (2) and does not take a vote to apply, or to deny the application of, the exemption under this section to the possessory interest at issue, then the board shall be deemed to have agreed with the presumption described in subdivision (b) and the exemption shall be deemed granted by the board with respect to the possessory interest.
(2) By action. Alternatively, on or before the lien date the board shall consider in a public hearing whether to apply the exemption under this section to the possessory interest. The county shall provide sufficient prior notice of the public hearing and provide an opportunity for the public to be heard at the hearing. A majority vote of the board shall be required to apply or to decline to apply the exemption described in subdivision (b) to the possessory interest. However, if the board takes a vote pursuant to this paragraph but fails to reach a majority vote either in favor of or against the application of the exemption for the possessory interest, the board shall be deemed to have agreed with the presumption described in subdivision (b) and the exemption shall be deemed granted by the board with respect to the possessory interest.
(d) If the board holds a hearing pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (c) and votes to deny
the exemption for a possessory interest of a tenant in publicly owned housing, prior to the assessor enrolling the possessory interest, the county assessor shall send, by registered United States Mail, notice to each applicable tenant that does all of the following:
(1) Informs the tenant of the county’s intention to impose property tax on their possessory interest.
(2) Displays the valuation proposed to be assessed by the assessor and the methodology to support the proposed value.
(3) Provides information regarding the assessment appeals process for contesting both the existence of a possessory interest and the valuation of any such interest.
(e) If the board grants the exemption for the possessory interest, as described in subdivision (c), the
following apply:
(1) In administering the exemption authorized by this section, the assessor shall not enroll the tenant’s possessory interest on the assessment roll.
(2) The exemption shall apply to lien dates following the granting of the exemption for the possessory interest and may, at the option of the board, continue in effect for succeeding fiscal years. Any revision or rescission of the exemption shall be adopted by the board on or before the lien date for the fiscal year to which that revision or rescission is to apply.
(3) The exemption of possessory interests held by tenants in publicly owned housing pursuant to this section shall apply to all open property tax years and shall apply prior to any regular property tax assessments of tenant possessory interests in publicly owned housing made pursuant to
Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 2601) of Part 5 and prior to escape assessments of possessory interests to tenants of publicly owned housing issued pursuant to Section 531, whether placed on the regular or supplemental roll or on the secured or unsecured roll.
(f) For purposes of this section, the following definitions apply:
(1) “Board” means a county board of supervisors.
(2) “Costs of assessing and collecting” shall include, but are not limited to, the costs to the assessor’s and treasurer-tax collector’s office for potential administrative disputes before an assessment appeals board to contest the existence or value of a possessory interest by the tenant, determination of value in accordance with this section, the cost of notifying each residential tenant of the county’s intent to assess property taxes as
required by this section, the costs of the treasurer-tax collector in preparing and sending a tax bill, and a reasonable estimate of potential legal or other costs and risks of noncollection of property taxes from residential tenants because the taxes are not secured by a lien on property and because of the limited financial resources of the tenant.
(3) “Property taxes and applicable subventions” shall not include any non-ad valorem property taxes or similar charges based on ownership of a residential possessory interest in publicly owned housing.
(4) “Publicly owned housing” means an apartment or condominium multifamily residential project that is owned, as of January 1, 2025, by an agency that is exempt from property taxation under either subdivision (a) or subdivision (b) of Section 3 of Article XIII of the California Constitution.
(5) “Tenant” means the occupant of a residential unit in publicly owned housing. “Tenant” shall not include holders of a commercial lease of real property in publicly owned housing.
(6) “Value” means the valuation of the possessory interest as determined by subparagraph (A) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (e) of Section 21 of Chapter 1 of Division 1 of Title 18 of the California Code of Regulations, as that section read on January 1, 2023, where the term of possession is conclusively presumed to be the stated term of possession in the lease agreement plus any express options for the tenant to unilaterally extend the lease that are part of the written lease agreement, and where the rent to be capitalized is the contract rent paid by the tenant over the term of possession.