Friday, July 10, 2009 8:51 PM CDT
LETTER: State budget can't be balanced without some kind of tax increase
By PEGGY L. BRAYFIELD, Charleston
Another month has gone by, and our state still does not have a budget. A deficit looms, estimated by the non-partisan Center for Tax and Budget Accountability at between $9 and $11 billion.
We hear that we cannot raise taxes during a recession. We hear that we cannot cut human services during a recession. It seems, then, that we cannot do anything about the budget during a recession. Except, of course, look to the next election cycle and point fingers of blame.
In the May 19th edition of the JG/T-C, former governor Jim Edgar was quoted as saying a tax increase is needed. If we look at the figures, it is obvious the budget cannot be balanced by cuts alone, unless we advocate cutting to the bone services for the most vulnerable citizens. Therefore, a refusal to vote to raise taxes is in effect a vote to cut social services. There’s no way around that fact.
If an elected official stands before a group and announces that he would never advocate cutting services to vulnerable citizens, don’t stand and cheer just yet. First, ask if he would raise taxes to continue funding these programs. If he says no, ask what cuts he advocates to erase the budget deficit. After he has answered these questions, decide whether to cheer or not.
The bottom line: the budget cannot be balanced without raising taxes. Passing temporary budgets to ‘give the legislators more time’ is a political ploy. Everyone who thinks the legislature has NOT had enough time to work things out, raise your hand. Anyone?
The governor’s latest proposal as I write includes $2 billion in cuts, plus a 1.5% hike in the income tax rate. He originally included an offsetting deduction for those with incomes under $60,000, which would assure that those of low and moderate income do not see an increase in the income tax they pay. This combination spreads the sacrifice around, though the people at the bottom of the heap can ill afford to sacrifice the little they have.
In my view, all those legislators who intend never to vote to raise taxes should file their votes against any and all budget proposals now, and take an unpaid furlough while those remaining try to work out a combination of cuts and tax hikes that will solve the problem. If the nay-sayers aren’t going to be part of the solution, they are part of the problem.
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Harry Potter wrote on Jul 11, 2009 10:26 AM:
Tom Andres-
Just trying to help you out Tom. "