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Taking money from schools and endangering social workers: call for tax reform grows

by Jessica Hays last modified October-29-2009 03:54 PM
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Two weeks ago the state papers reported that mines were going unmonitored because the state couldn't afford to send the inspectors needed to the do the work. 

Last week, the papers reported that Kentucky has a projected $161 million shortfall, on top of the $1 billion shortfall that we already knew about.

This week, the calls for the need for tax reform are growing louder.

First, there's this good Herald-Leader editorial, "Irresponsibility on Tax Reform."  An excerpt:

Both Stumbo and Gov. Steve Beshear argue that taxes shouldn't be increased during this recession. But there is no better time than a recession to pass real tax reform that moves the state away from a tax structure that relies on retail sales and toward a tax structure that captures the growing service sector of the economy.

Then, the move from Speaker Stumbo that inspired the editorial.  Speaker Stumbo is contemplating taking money from schools to fill the gaps in the General Fund.  Since when is taking money from schoolkids a better option than much needed and long-awaited comprehensive reforms?

Meanwhile, state social service workers are pointing out that the Boni Bill of 2007, which was supposed to make it safer to be a social service worker in Kentucky, has gone unfunded, and is not fulfilling its promise to social workers.  You can read more in this Courier-Journal article, "Budget cuts may leave social workers vulnerable to violence."

Taking money from schools?  Endangering social workers?  Letting mine waste contaminate people's water, without even a nod to monitoring them? You might have other stories. If so, feel free to share them.

There's never been a better time for these much needed tax reforms.  The call is out there. Are our elected officials hearing it?

more taxes

Posted by F at October-21-2009 11:47 AM
i agree shouldnt take education money away but more taxes on a working woman or man.why not start something on those that dont work.i know going get the usual elder people thingy but have a age limit on it should curb that.lets hear somethings but in all I see another tax for the coal industy coming again.that usually what get picked on not oil,gas,logging,land improvement,road building etc.have a tax for every tree a person cuts that isnt dead already,more tax on electric.if that happens people will start useing less mean less coal needed which in turn will help envoirment so might be a time to think about things

Kentucky taxes

Posted by Huff at October-24-2009 02:45 PM
Ky's problem? Spending more than it takes in or as legislators describe it as cutting state appropriations and enhancing tax resources! Either way lawmakers should:
cut $300 million from estimated $800 million total of tax exemptions, exclusions,credits,deferrments,prefrential tax rates;
cut $400 million of corporate tax shelters;
cut $100 million of unclassified (political appointee) jobs;
to help 80% of Ky counties bankrupt or close to it pass legislation allowoing local tax options to relieve state budget;
Enhance H.B. 44 max cap rate to 6% to alleviate state budget; remedy Ky's obsolete tax base by including services industry;replace state income tax with tax on services;
legislate all new state employees be under defined contribution pension plan;


Kentucky taxes

Posted by Huff at October-24-2009 02:52 PM
O! By-the-way Kentucky needs to collect estimated $350 million of car and truck tax evasion! It is estimated $200 million belongs to 150,000 Kentucky car owners operating their motor vehicles daily using illegal registrations; $90 million estimated to belong to Ky truck owners operating their trucks without paying weight-distance tax; rest belongs to U-drive-It-permit owners (lease/rental vendors operating from Ky airports) licensing their lease/rental vehicles because Transportation Cabinet's Division of Motor Carriers does not implement "allocation formula" to ascertain number of lease/rentqal vehicles that should be licensed through county clerk office.

Kentucky taxes

Posted by Huff at October-24-2009 03:00 PM
If anyone is concerned about Kentuckians' using KY service without paying for them---any Ky car owner opeating their motor vehicle daily on Ky highways without a Kentucky registration and license plate does! They sleep, eat, transact business, bank and sleep in Kentucky making them liabile to Kentucky taxing jurisdictions. Why? Because approximately 60% of property tax on vehciles goes to local school funds and these outlaws have been doing this for almost quarter of a century! Great Job our state of Ky has done making sure everyone pays their fair share?