Posted on 05/08/2011 7:24:54 AM PDT by Kaslin
Unemployment is rising, the federal government is broke, and so are many of the states. Now more than ever America needs its various governments to exercise restraint, and to scale-back on spending.
And in the midst of this environment a stunning proposal has emerged in the nearly insolvent state of California: a third income tax.
The proposal is actually worse than a mere additional income tax and Ill explain this in a moment. First lets look at the other two income taxes.
For the record, if youre an American and you work and you earn personal income, your U.S. federal government imposes a tax on that income (most of us are well acquainted with this). And workers in forty-three of our fifty states also have their personal income taxed even further by their state government (the states of Alaska, Florida, Nevada, South Dakota, Texas, Washington and Wyoming do not impose a state income tax on their residents).
But now California, with an average statewide unemployment rate of over 12% (in some regions the rate is over 20%) and a budget deficit of somewhere between $10 and $15 billion, is considering the imposition of a third income tax. The additional income tax rate would vary, according to which region of the state one lives in, and would be imposed directly by school districts and county governments.
Many of Californias public school districts (there are over 1000 of them) are themselves broke, just like the state government. And because of a California law that was brought about by passage of a ballot initiative back in 1978 (it was famously known as Proposition 13), California school districts cannot simply do what most public school districts in America do, and continually raise property taxes higher and higher.
So in the absence of additional state tax dollars, and without the option of raising local property taxes, California school districts are searching for additional revenue streams to feed their never-ending spending addictions. In response, the California legislature is contemplating a new law that would literally grant local school districts broad new authorities to tax personal income a third income tax for California residents according to the needs of the individual school districts themselves.
Along with the ability to impose a third income tax on residents income, this newly proposed power would also grant school districts the authority to impose additional sales taxes on alcohol, cigarettes, oil drilling (believe it or not there is some of this still going on in California), sugary beverages, and medicinal marijuana. Teachers unions in California are elated with the idea of all the additional tax revenue that school districts would theoretically have to spend on unionized teacher contracts, and Governor Jerry Brown, who is indebted to government employee unions, would theoretically stand to gain politically from the idea.
But while Jerry Brown and his government employee union friends are seeing dollar signs, California business owners already saddled with undue taxes, regulations, healthcare and workers compensation insurance requirements are seeing chaos. In what has been described as a confusing patchwork of tax rates for both businesses and individuals, business advocacy groups are reacting to the legislation with horror, realizing the disparity it could create among businesses operated on opposite sides of a school district boundary.
Given that each of Californias 1000-plus school districts would have the authority to set their own rates on the additional income and sales taxes, both businesses and individuals would be faced with the chaos and inequality of paying different income and sales tax rates depending on what public school district they found themselves in. As Gina Rodriquez, vice president of the California Taxpayers Association noted, this would pit school district against school district.
In addition to the chaos and confusion that the school district taxes would create, there is the disturbing fact that some people indeed several people in the California legislature actually think it is a good idea to levy a third income tax on a citizenry that is already living with double-digit unemployment. This is perhaps the greatest injustice entailed in Californias new scheme.
The very fact that Californias legislators would propose such an idea underscores the perverse, incestuous relationship between government employee unions, and the Democrat Party. Nobody can argue from the standpoint of sound economics that a third income tax will do anything but harm the overall California economy, but that seemingly doesnt matter to Governor Brown and his fellow Democrats.
As long as Democrat politicians can continue to re-distribute increasing amounts of wealth into the hands of unionized government employees, the unionized government employees will continue to do the grassroots political work to keep Democrat politicians in office. The government employees gratify the politicians, and the politicians gratify the government employees and the person who works and creates wealth in the private sector pays for it all.
Noble statesmen and women across the country have recently begun to say no to this kind of destructive public policy. But the perversion rages on for now in California.
I used to live in Cal. I am sorry for those of you still there as the death spiril approaches Stuka proportions.
No one want sto admit that education begins in the home. Add onto that the multi cultural approach to education and you have a beast whose appetite cannot be met.
Without massive spending, governments don't grow into the monsters they are in most other states. People don't even realize how enslaved they have become, think it's normal, and figure everybody out there is taxed to death too; unreal.
Only $13,000 per pupil - are you sure?
In cities here in NY State (NY, Buffalo, Syracuse, Rochester) - the average cost per pupil is $22,000!
And you’ll be lucky if half graduate.....
Also throw in huge amounts of “fossil fuel pollutants” that won't be released driving the kiddies to/from school.
No to/from school would lead to less traffic on the roads, which equals less need for maintaining roads, right?
The need for tax revenues should plummet! YAY!
Like “they'd” ever let any of this stuff pass, right?
Public education is a failure. It depends on people who desire to be educated.
Social Security and Medicare are income taxes as well.
If they could just figure out a way to get enough of our money, they could solve all our problems. We’re just too stupid and greedy.
There are NO private day schools in my state that charge a tuition that high.
There is one boarding school that does, but it is a specialized school that includes training for a specific Olympic sport!
I had a professor a long time ago that stated that taxes are meant to keep the people broke. Then the government has control over them.
AMEN!!!
At least they will be collecting California tax money.
What outrages me, is them paying for illegal alien’s education, running a $ 15 Billion deficit and then being bailed out by the federal government.
The bailout funds are taxes that I have to pay even though I don’t live in California and am opposed to paying for illegal’s education.
This also applies to healthcare and abortion.
What they did have was a work ethic and self control and a desire to learn and parents that loved and disciplined them .
Excellent point. Also when the kids got spanked spanked by the teacher, they got spanked again when they got home and they all survived
While they are proposing this they let thousands if not hundreds of thousands of acres of land be put into to enviormental trusts which are then made tax exempt a direct hit on school budgets.
Eventually, the only people left in California with money wil be teachers, government employees and lawyers. And knowing lawyers, that won’t last long.
The (economic) phrase that you are looking for is zero elasticity. That is the concept that liberal trash cannot understand.
When a tax is imposed spending habits change - money does not suddenly appear of of thin air to pay these crushing burdens.
I can't swear to this, but I seem to remember reading that CA was floating the idea of a "fee" to be assessed against businesses when they left the state. Something along the lines of a percentage that correlated in some fashion with the size/assets of the business that was leaving.
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