A select committee of mostly Republicans in the WV legislature have spent a good part of 2015 pondering state tax reform. It's pretty clear that what they'd like to do is further cut business taxes. But Gazette statehouse reporter Phil Kabler asks a good question: how does that plan play out when the state budget is going under?
COULD THERE BE A PATTERN HERE? In this piece, WV Public Broadcasting looks at the troubled history of safety violations at Upper Big Branch before the 2010 disaster.
Showing posts with label WV tax reform. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WV tax reform. Show all posts
October 18, 2015
June 11, 2015
Bad medicine
In case you missed it, this op-ed of mine appeared in today's Gazette:
In the course of human events, to coin a phrase, people have tried to use remedies that did more harm than good. Over and over.
There are plenty of examples of this in the history of medicine. One such disturbing instance was the use of calomel, a mercury-based mixture, as a medicine for many disorders during the Civil War era.
It was delivered in the form of a blue pill or “blue mass.” If smaller doses didn’t seem to help, doctors prescribed “heroic doses” of the poison, which often resulted in loss of teeth and oral tissue, facial disfigurement, and sometimes death by mercury poisoning.
Earlier, George Washington suffered from a different — although less gruesome — application of bad medicine. Retired to Mount Vernon after leading the Continental army to victory and serving two terms as the nation’s first president, Washington fell sick at age 68 after a lengthy ride around his farm in foul weather.
His caregivers applied a standard remedy of the time: bloodletting. When the first attempts didn’t seem to help, they did it over and over, removing as much as five pints of blood. No wonder the “father of his country” died within a couple days of falling ill.
It seems strange to keep resorting repeatedly to something that doesn’t work, but it happens a lot.
Sometimes even state governments suffer from doses of bad medicine. One such “blue pill” that has been tried repeatedly around the country without success is cutting taxes to create jobs.
A few years back, Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback claimed that his tax reductions would be like “a shot of adrenaline to the heart” of the Kansas economy.
He was right about the shot to the heart part. As for adrenaline … not so much.
Kansas has — surprise — a $400 million deficit and may be on the verge of cutting aid to schools and laying off public safety officers. Standard & Poor even downgraded the state’s bond rating.
Around the country other states are taking the blue pill as well, although not in such heroic doses.
However, we don’t really have to leave home to see that some snake oil claims haven’t lived up to their promise. Several years ago, under Democratic leadership but with Republican support, state leaders inaugurated a series of tax cuts that have taken millions of dollars out of the state’s budget.
The 2006-2008 cuts were much more than enough to pay for tuition and fees for state colleges and universities for all undergraduates, which really could have been a game changer for a state with low educational attainments.
The results are in: 49,000 fewer West Virginians have jobs than they did before the cuts began. The state is spending around 23 percent less per student on higher education. State college tuition has gone up by nearly a third in the same period, making education less attainable and leaving many students mired in debt.
Oh yeah, and our roads are falling apart.
State legislative leaders are contemplating another round of tax changes that could once again wind up hitting working families either by shifting taxes on onto them or by making things like education less available or lowering the quality of life.
Fortunately, there are real working alternatives to blue pills and bloodletting. These include investing in education, workforce development and infrastructure and ensuring that West Virginia is the kind of place where people want to live, work and raise families.
In a recent news story, Kanawha County Commission President Kent Carper laid it out: “Most of the business people that I talk to, and I talk to a lot of them, are interested in the quality of life here. Do we have good schools? Do we have good roads?”
It’s sad that George Washington and the soldiers of the Civil War had to suffer from the effects of bad medicine. They deserved better.
So do the people of West Virginia.
In the course of human events, to coin a phrase, people have tried to use remedies that did more harm than good. Over and over.
There are plenty of examples of this in the history of medicine. One such disturbing instance was the use of calomel, a mercury-based mixture, as a medicine for many disorders during the Civil War era.
It was delivered in the form of a blue pill or “blue mass.” If smaller doses didn’t seem to help, doctors prescribed “heroic doses” of the poison, which often resulted in loss of teeth and oral tissue, facial disfigurement, and sometimes death by mercury poisoning.
Earlier, George Washington suffered from a different — although less gruesome — application of bad medicine. Retired to Mount Vernon after leading the Continental army to victory and serving two terms as the nation’s first president, Washington fell sick at age 68 after a lengthy ride around his farm in foul weather.
His caregivers applied a standard remedy of the time: bloodletting. When the first attempts didn’t seem to help, they did it over and over, removing as much as five pints of blood. No wonder the “father of his country” died within a couple days of falling ill.
It seems strange to keep resorting repeatedly to something that doesn’t work, but it happens a lot.
Sometimes even state governments suffer from doses of bad medicine. One such “blue pill” that has been tried repeatedly around the country without success is cutting taxes to create jobs.
A few years back, Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback claimed that his tax reductions would be like “a shot of adrenaline to the heart” of the Kansas economy.
He was right about the shot to the heart part. As for adrenaline … not so much.
Kansas has — surprise — a $400 million deficit and may be on the verge of cutting aid to schools and laying off public safety officers. Standard & Poor even downgraded the state’s bond rating.
Around the country other states are taking the blue pill as well, although not in such heroic doses.
However, we don’t really have to leave home to see that some snake oil claims haven’t lived up to their promise. Several years ago, under Democratic leadership but with Republican support, state leaders inaugurated a series of tax cuts that have taken millions of dollars out of the state’s budget.
The 2006-2008 cuts were much more than enough to pay for tuition and fees for state colleges and universities for all undergraduates, which really could have been a game changer for a state with low educational attainments.
The results are in: 49,000 fewer West Virginians have jobs than they did before the cuts began. The state is spending around 23 percent less per student on higher education. State college tuition has gone up by nearly a third in the same period, making education less attainable and leaving many students mired in debt.
Oh yeah, and our roads are falling apart.
State legislative leaders are contemplating another round of tax changes that could once again wind up hitting working families either by shifting taxes on onto them or by making things like education less available or lowering the quality of life.
Fortunately, there are real working alternatives to blue pills and bloodletting. These include investing in education, workforce development and infrastructure and ensuring that West Virginia is the kind of place where people want to live, work and raise families.
In a recent news story, Kanawha County Commission President Kent Carper laid it out: “Most of the business people that I talk to, and I talk to a lot of them, are interested in the quality of life here. Do we have good schools? Do we have good roads?”
It’s sad that George Washington and the soldiers of the Civil War had to suffer from the effects of bad medicine. They deserved better.
So do the people of West Virginia.
May 19, 2015
Game on
Round two of daylong hearings on overhauling WV's tax system was held yesterday at the WV legislature. I didn't make it this time, but it looks like the conversation was pretty rational. It sounds like the show will start next time. And, as Gazette political reporter Phil Kabler notes here, some measures on the table would deliver a hard blow to counties, which aren't in any shape to take one.
May 05, 2015
Gotta love this
Regular readers will be aware that tax reform is on the legislature's agenda in West Virginia. My main hope is that the newish Republican majority doesn't go Kansas by pushing irresponsible tax cuts for the wealthy and trashing schools and public investments.
Naturally, I was delighted when I saw this item from that state. Apparently Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback, who has slashed millions from education funding, went into a restaurant in Topeka. When he got the bill, in the place where the tip amount should go the waitress wrote "Tip the schools."
Apparently, the hashtag #TipTheSchools is catching on. Or trending, in the parlance of our times. I hope it goes viral.
Naturally, I was delighted when I saw this item from that state. Apparently Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback, who has slashed millions from education funding, went into a restaurant in Topeka. When he got the bill, in the place where the tip amount should go the waitress wrote "Tip the schools."
Apparently, the hashtag #TipTheSchools is catching on. Or trending, in the parlance of our times. I hope it goes viral.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)