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 Budget shows little faith in Californians
Feb 6, 2008

Budget shows little faith in Californians

Feb 6, 2008
 By Thomas Elias - La Jolla Light

Not even Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger calls his draconian budget proposal for the next fiscal year fantastic. In the weeks since he submitted it, the plan has been attacked by educators, environmentalists, law-and-order activists and advocates for the poor, an almost unprecedented coalition that raises serious doubt whether any or all of the cuts proposed will stand. And the governor himself hints he may not mean everything he said in submitting the plan.

This putative budget is based almost completely on one assumption: that the majority of Californians will not stand for any tax increase but prefer to accept fee increases and great reductions in public services. That may simply not be correct.

In fact, this is as venal and misleading a budget plan as California has ever seen. It suggests college tuition increases for the middle class even as the governor asserts his determination to protect that same economic group. It doesn't merely suggest fee increases for state parks but seeks to close almost one of every five of them - public lands paid for by the taxpayers that would suddenly become inaccessible .

The plan violates Schwarzenegger's own pledge of last summer never to release any criminals from prison early. It seeks to roll back the school funding guarantees enacted by voters via Proposition 98. It tries to add a new fire protection fee to the insurance bill of every California property owner, not just those in fire-prone areas. It sees the same governor who says he wants universal health care coverage trying to cut back medical and prescription benefits for the poorest Californians .

It does little or nothing to endanger the lives or interests of anyone in the governor's economic class, people who live in gated communities with large private properties, private guards and copious health insurance benefits.

That's the very definition of venal. It's essentially a lie to use the word fees for price increases on things like college attendance and fire insurance, since those enrolled for higher education and buying coverage on their homes have little or no choice. The usual definition of a tax is an added cost that the payer has no option but to pay.

But the main thing wrong with this budget and the widespread negative response it draws is an underlying lack of faith in the people of California.

Dozens of successful school bond elections through the past 10 years illustrate that voters here are willing to dig into their wallets if they think there's reason. The passage rate of such local bonds tops 50 percent over that period, with payments for those bonds added to millions of property tax bills.

Then there's the Schwarzenegger assertion that "The people are sending plenty of money to Sacramento. The problem is not taxing, it is spending."

Well, most of that spending is on things the majority of voters like.

No one has thrown out a single state legislator for voting to expand or improve those kinds of public services. Isn't it just possible that the same voters who approve school bonds and keep reelecting lawmakers who back public services might vote to tax themselves just a bit more to keep those services going?

This is a possibility not even mentioned by either Schwarzenegger or the Democratic legislative leaders who so often act as his toadies. Says Schwarzenegger, explaining the cuts he plans, "It's all the money we have." But does that have to be true?

For despite a lot of talk to the contrary, Californians are not particularly over-taxed. The Washington, D.C.-based Tax Foundation ranks this state 12th in overall tax burden, with Proposition 13 keeping property taxes far below national averages, while sales and income taxes are above average.

Back in 1977, California's total tax burden, state and federal, ranked fifth in the nation, at 12 percent of the average household income. Now the bite is an average of 11.5 percent. By itself, returning to the 1977 tax level could produce almost $8 billion, enough to avoid most cuts now proposed.

This could be done via a combination of small increases in sales and income taxes, by taxing some services and/or adding a surtax to property levies.

But this is not seriously considered by leaders in Sacramento, due to a lack of courage and faith in constituents.

Maybe it's time the politicians let the voters decide. Ask them if they want all the budget cuts or are willing to pay a few bucks more per year per household. Put the question on the June primary election ballot. The answer might be surprising.


Thomas Elias
Elias is a political columnist and the author of "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It. To make comments about articles, contact talkback@lajollalight.com.

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