Governor’s fixes tantamount to tax increase
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“I’m your worst nightmare.”
That’s not exactly the movie line that many were hoping to hear
from Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger this week as he unveiled his fix for
the state’s financial woes.
But his Rambo-esque attack on local governments, college students
and state park visitors make that statement even more apropos today.
This week alone, the leadership of Coast Community College District
and the city of Huntington Beach learned there would be a mixture of
deep cuts and fee hikes proposed to their already razor-thin coffers
as part of the governor’s plan to erase the state’s $15-billion
deficit.
On Friday, the governor proposed his $99.1-billion budget that
included $30.3 billion for public education and $8.7 billion for
higher education.
The bad news is that the governor’s plan will shift some $1.3
billion in property taxes from local governments to the state to help
pay for school funding.
At Golden West College, students could see fees go from an already
hiked $18 a unit to $26 a unit. It was only a year ago that the price
of a course was $11 a unit, meaning the cost of a community college
education could more than double.
For state park visitors, the hikes mean instead of paying $5 to
visit the beach, it could cost $12 per day. For those who hold annual
passes, the price jumps from $67 to $125.
As for the shift in $1.3 billion from local governments statewide,
city officials have been down this road before: in the early 1990s,
when the state government took money out of civic budgets to give to
schools with the promise that it would be returned later. That date
never came.
The governor’s budget is not all bad news, however.
School officials were relieved this week to learn that the
governor’s proposed $30.3 billion in school funding meant that
spending per pupil would increase by $216 a year. While some special
programs would lose funding, it was heartening to learn that for the
most part, elementary education would not feel the brunt of the
budget knife this year.
Schwarzenegger was elected to be a reformer, to provide new and
creative ideas to solve the state’s budget woes. So far, this budget
doesn’t seem to offer anything new. While not imposing taxes on
income, businesses, or property, it does mean college students and
state park visitors are going to see their costs go up.
It might not be called a tax for them, but it sure is going to
feel like one. We just hope the pain they are going to feel is worth
it.
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