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The
day before we celebrated our nation’s birthday the proponents of the so-called
Budget Accountability Act stood on the steps of the State Capitol chastising
lawmakers for not completing a budget on time, a worthy criticism with which we
agree. But while one hand was pointing blame, the other was offering the
Legislature – the target of their criticism – a blank check to spend even more.
This ironic display of bait and switch is playing out as backers of this
deceptively titled initiative proposal gather signatures to place it on the
March 2004 ballot.
Actually, a better name for this proposal that shamelessly attempts to
capitalize on the state’s fiscal miseries to further the proponents’
tax-and-spend agenda would be the Blank Check Initiative. It would open the door
to uncontested tax increase after tax increase after tax increase. There would
be less accountability, not more, when it comes to raising taxes. Lowering the
vote threshold from two-thirds to 55 percent for tax increases would only open
the floodgates to higher taxes and more runaway spending.
The
measure would trick voters to ease vote requirements for taxes by offering
provisions to dock legislators’ pay if they fail to produce a budget on time and
create a rainy day fund. Sure, these are attractive ideas. Unfortunately, the
initiative sponsors want voters to focus on these reforms while they pursue the
one thing they want – a blank check – by reducing the vote requirement for new
taxes. It would remove a time-tested safeguard that helps minimize unreasonable
tax increases. And initiative sponsors well know, in the ballot booth, you
cannot pick and choose between initiative provisions – so while you might like
one section and not another, it’s “yes” or “no” on the entire proposal. This
initiative is a cynical trick by the spending lobby, led by public employee
unions, to get approval of vast new taxes to paper over the budget deficit.
There’s
no question our state is in trouble. But we are in this mess because of
overspending and mismanagement of the state budget. Passage of the Blank Check
Initiative would only institutionalize that out-of-control budget process. A
blank check to the very politicians who spent us into debt only compounds the
problem.
In the
current legislative session alone more than 100 tax and fee increases were
proposed, totaling nearly $65 billion. Income tax increases, sales tax
increases, surcharges on everything from childcare to telephone service to
insurance to beer to diapers. You name it, and there is likely a tax increase
waiting to be passed. The car tax has tripled and there is a proposal in the
legislature that would slap consumers with a billion-dollar-a-year hidden gas
tax – an increase that would not even benefit transportation. These proposals
are just for this legislative session. Passing the Blank Check Initiative gives
Sacramento your blank check forever.
Californians deserve more for the hard-earned taxes they already pay. The budget
process in Sacramento is out of control and unaccountable. The answer to
California’s budget crisis is obvious to most taxpayers: It is to improve the
allocation of existing tax dollars that are more than enough to pay for quality
schools, public safety, highways and critical programs for this state’s poor.
When you
overspend your credit card, most of us don’t simply apply for a new credit card.
Instead, we cut unnecessary spending, find new efficiencies, start paying off
our debts and learn to better manage our money. But Sacramento doesn’t seem to
understand this basic principle. State spending actually doubled between 1994
and 2000. Do we really want to give these same politicians a blank check to
spend more?
Taxpayers have few protections
against unjustified tax hikes. But one such provision was put in the
Constitution a quarter century ago when voters approved Proposition 13. One of
the elements of Proposition 13 is that it
required that all state tax rate
increases be approved by a two-thirds vote of the Legislature. The Blank Check
Initiative would undermine that threshold by eliminating full debate and
avoiding detailed examination of the consequences new taxes would have before
implementing them. We need to wisely manage and budget our resources, not
raise taxes every time the state’s checkbook gets tight.
Voters can challenge those behind the
Blank Check Initiative by not supporting the signature gathering effort and
making sure that friends and neighbors understand the cynical deception this
initiative represents. This initiative is not reform; it is a blank check for
the politicians who have already spent us into debt and created a budget crisis. |