The State Board of Equalization was created in 1879 by the ratification of the second
Constitution of California. Its original mandate was to ensure that property
tax assessments were uniform and equal across all counties in the state. Efforts to reform the Board were made in the 1940s, 1950s, 1960s, 1990s, and 2000s. In 1994, Governor
Pete Wilson vetoed a plan by the legislature to abolish the Franchise Tax Board and give its responsibilities to the Board of Equalization, explaining in his veto message that the state should have done the opposite. In 2004, Governor
Arnold Schwarzenegger released a 2,500-page report seeking to merge the Board with other agencies and then promoted a bill by Assemblywoman
Lois Wolk to do just that. The effort failed. By 2017, the Board had expanded to collecting $60 billion a year. It collected sales and use taxes, hazardous waste fees, jet fuel taxes, marijuana taxes, and over 30 additional taxes. That year, the Board had 4,700 employees and a $617 million annual budget. Board members were paid a $137,000 annual salary and were each allowed to hire a 12-member staff. Each year, the Board spent at least $3 million on education events where elected members appeared before their constituents. In June 2017, the
California Department of Justice began a criminal investigation into the members of the Board. On June 27, 2017, Governor
Jerry Brown signed into law legislation, stripping the Board of many of its powers. The legislation created two new departments controlled by the governor responsible for the Board's statutory duties, the
California Department of Tax and Fee Administration and the California Office of Tax Appeals. The Board still has its constitutional powers to review property tax assessments and insurer tax assessments, and its role in the collection of alcohol excise and pipeline taxes. It retained 400 employees, with the rest of its 4,800 workers being shifted to the new departments. The
Los Angeles Times editorial board called for ACA-11 and ACA-9, which would abolish the elected position of
California State Superintendent of Public Instruction, to pass the legislature and appear before voters as a
ballot proposition. ==Equalization districts==