Tag Archives: 2006 legislature

Utah’s Budget Surplus

Today’s Salt Lake Tribune has published the article $350 million: The advocates for worthy causes compete for the excess state cash: How to divvy up big surplus?

In the face of the latest record-breaking revenue surplus – the Utah Tax Commission reported a $350 million excess in collections through June – education and health care advocates hope to make up for lost ground.

But just how is this surplus going to be used?

Despite public surveys that have shown taxpayers would rather see the surplus go to education, transportation and health needs rather than get a tax cut, many lawmakers still hope to give $70 million to $115 million back. For many it’s a philosophical issue, but it doesn’t hurt that this is an election year for all House members and half the senators.

I don’t get it. The public is dictating how we want our tax dollars spend and the lawmakers aren’t listening? And who do they work for again?

“We can invest in education or we can invest in transportation, or – more importantly – we can return it to the taxpayer,” says Hughes, chairman of the Republican Conservative Caucus. Hughes and his colleagues warn that gleeful spending in times of surplus means inevitable painful cuts in times of deficit.

More importantly?

“As a legislative body, we show less discipline than our kids do at Toys R Us,” Hughes said, referring to the blessing and threat intrinsic in a large surplus. “I’m 100 percent convinced that we will be cutting those very programs to which we gave increases.”
Though Valentine does not see spending on education and transportation as growth in government, because both are meeting the needs of an expanding population, he warns, “If we grow education too fast, we’ll just have to cut in the future.”

This is absurd. While our lawmakers promote population growth and development, all which cause strains on our services and infrastructure, they are not willing to fund those things which are needed to support the growth and development?

Campbell fears lawmakers will squander the opportunity. “I find it appalling that with all the talk about tax cuts, there hasn’t been a lot of talk about investing more in public education.”
Bramble warns: “I don’t think the needs are mutually exclusive – if you don’t demand that everything goes your way. It is going to take people to step up and realize there are other priorities.”

Other priorities – like making sure the most wealthy of citizens and businesses receive tax breaks, right?

I do agree that people need to “step up” – but to demand that our money is spent on the people which is the highest priority there is. Medicaid, Education, and Transportation are all areas that need the benefit from this surplus.

Tax Cuts in Utah – an Election Year Tactic?

Of course it is!

Today’s Desert News reports on Utah legislators pushing for a special session to give taxpayers a $70 million cut in personal income taxes.

Putting the obvious reasons for this for this push aside, however, while there does need to be examination of our current income tax structure, what is the rush to push tax reform through in special sessions?

I wish our legislators would spend more time looking at ways to increase services to our citizens first and then examine our tax structure to find ways that all people would benefit.

Medicaid

The first meeting of the Medicaid Interim Committee of the Utah Legislature is Wednesday, June 14, 8 a.m., in Room W135 in the House building. The Medicaid funding for indigent dental care, was not approved in the recent special session.
Read background materials


Here is the proposed agenda:

8:00      1.     Committee Business

•Call to order

8:05      2.     Medicaid Program Overview (Tab A)

                                    Background Materials

                                          Briefing paper: “Understanding Medicaid: A Policymaker’s Introduction”

                                          Slide presentation: “Making Your Way Through the Medicaid Maze: A Policymaker’s Introduction”

                                    Staff Presentation

                                          Mr. Mark Andrews, Policy Analyst

9:053.Medicaid Programs and Funding (Tab B)

                                    Background Materials

“Ten-year Appropriations History – Health”

                                          “Medicaid Enrollment and Spending Trends”

                                          “State Medicaid Fact Sheets”

                                          2006 Appropriations Summaries: Health and Human Services, and Commerce and Revenue

                                          “A New Medicaid”

                                    Staff Presentation

                                          Mr. Bill Greer, Analyst

 

Hill Happenings – Special Session

Here are articles from local news sources on Utah’s Special Legislative Session:

Deseret News
Guv puts leaders in touchy position: Dental-care vote could hurt GOP legislators
Dental funding sidestepped: GOP lawmakers vote to keep issue in committee
Huntsman defends dental-care request: He had hoped for enough votes for dental proposal
Special session fought over ‘technical’ details
Pignanelli gets strong nod for tax commissioner
Trading fines irk brokerage houses: They’re ‘talking about not doing business in Utah’
Windfall for brainpower: U., USU using funds to recruit top researchers
Schools see funds shrink: Public education getting smaller piece of pie
Legislator vows to revive bill on drug overdoses: S.L. Demo to rework rendering-aid plan for 2007 session

Salt Lake Tribune
Guv: Dental aid checkup:
He revamps health bill for special session

Dental aid bill takes back seat to parking: Guv’s $2M pitch for needy fails; $15M Capitol garage gets nod
Talks with Mexico’s Fox were substantive, governor says
House strikes back at governor
Revenge? Angry at a PR loss, lawmakers demand a special session on taxes

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Hill Happenings

The Utah Special Legislative Session will begin Wednesday at 2pm.

According to today’s Salt Lake Tribune, these items will be up for proposal to be addressed following an address to the House and Senate by Mexican President Vicente Fox:

  • partial restoration of Medicaid dental benefits – a plan to spend $2 million to restore emergency dental service – tooth extractions and possibly fillings, exams and root canals – to about 40,000 elderly, blind and disabled adults.
  • consideration for allowing legislative and Governor’s Office staff to double-check revenue estimates from the state Tax Commission.
  • diverting $15 million from Capitol renovation funding to start building an underground parking garage on Capitol Hill.
  • Gov. Huntsman is asking lawmakers to approve raises for himself (increasing from $104,100 to $107,700)and state executives (The lieutenant governor’s would increase from $81,000 to $102,315).
  • relief bill for retailers who are struggling to implement a cut in the state grocery tax

    It is anticipated the much of the session will be spent debating the medicaid dental benefits.

  • Hill Happenings

    Governor Jon Huntsman, Jr. is expected to announce the call today for Utah Legislators to convene a special session beginning May 24. The special session will begin by greeting Mexican President Vicente Fox to Utah.

    At this point, it is predicted that Utah lawmakers will focus mainly on taxes:
    The governor wants tax reform, in the form of a “flatter, fairer” system of income tax that would provide long-term stability and predictability. But some lawmakers would be satisfied just to lower rates to get a $70 million tax cut before November’s election.

    Against Utah lawmakers wishes, the governor is considering putting the medicaid issue on the agenda. Advocates for the poor are urging the legislature to fund another year’s worth of dental and vision care for more than 60,000 adults on Medicaid – at a cost of $4.6 million.

    Newly released state Health Department data show between 2003 and 2005 – the last time dental coverage was pulled – the state and federal government spent $725,166 on hospital emergency room visits for Medicaid clients with oral health complications.

    I will be following this special session as best as I can and posting news items here.

    New Laws Take Effect Today

  • SB19: Smoking ban in all of the state’s private and public drinking establishments over the next 30 months
  • HB90: Hate crimes law
  • HB417: Porn Content protection law
  • HB85: Abortion parental consent law
  • HB30: “Lost Boys” law- allows minors to petition juvenile courts for a declaration of emancipation.
  • HB322: Raises the cost of filing for divorce in the state to $155, up from $95
  • HB102: “Lori’s Law” – Increases the minimum sentence to 15 years for first-degree felony murder.
  • SB118: Prohibits drivers younger than 17 from operating a motor vehicle between midnight and 5 a.m.,and from operating a vehicle with any passenger in the vehicle who is not an immediate family member.
  • SB80: Allows the creation of public-private partnerships for the construction of toll roads.

    Read more details at: Salt Lake Tribune

  • Hill Happenings

    Articles published in today’s papers about Utah legislative news:

    Salt Lake Tribune
    Legislators short on votes needed to override vetoes

    Desert News
    No override session
    Legislators question Provo school board bond plan
    Demo bills usually go nowhere

    H.B. 148 could be revived if conservatives are pursuaded….

    The state represenative who introduced H.B. 148, LaVarr Christensen, is planning campaign to override the governor’s veto, according to a Salt Lake Tribune article in today’s news.

    H.B. 148 was a bill designed to block same-sex couples’ ability to legally define their families through custody agreements.

    Christensen, who is also running for U.S. Congress, introduced bills during the 2006 Utah Legislative Session, along with State Senator Chris Buttars, that were aimed at denying rights to gay and lesbian citizens of our state and were what I coined as “morality legislation”.

    Stepparents and grandparents bombarded the governor’s office with phone calls and letters, afraid Christensen’s legislation could end up cutting them out of the lives of children they have raised. And Huntsman responded, rejecting the bill’s “undesirable consequences.”
    Christensen insists the governor’s worries are unfounded. In an e-mail sent to his 103 colleagues last week, he urged lawmakers to remember his stated purpose. “This is a public policy decision regarding marriage, parenthood and family that is most appropriately decided by the legislature,” he wrote.

    The Tribune article also mentions that Christensen did not return phone calls to the media inquiring about the issue.

    This is clearly an attempt by a right-wing conservative to force one set of values on the whole of a population and waste taxpayers dollars by doing so instead of introducing legislation aimed at providing services for citizens.

    What a waste.

    Homelessness in Utah

    After a legislative session that failed (in my opinion) to address basic human needs and, instead, debated the merits of personal lifestyle and “morals”, Utah citizens are still suffering from lack of services and resources. This article appeared in today’s Salt Lake Tribune:

    Homelessness hits more Utah families: SLC’s largest shelter struggles to handle an unexpected surge

    102 families….[took] up residence this winter at the Road Home in Salt Lake City – a 62 percent spike over last year, matched only by the winter preceding the Olympics. “We’re not seeing any trends,” said associate shelter director Michelle Flynn. “The families are larger and using up more nights. Most are local two- and single-parent families who, for whatever reason, have just fallen on hard times.” ….poverty and the lack of affordable housing are two growing trends, say low-income advocates.

    While the media chooses to publicize the creation of more jobs on Utah, low-income advocates also point out that, yes, more jobs are being created……but for lower pay. The Federal government is reducing its rental assistance programs. Tim Funk, an advocate at Crossroads Urban Center, the state’s busiest food pantry, said Utah’s housing authorities lost 895 Section 8 rent vouchers to federal cuts last year, a 9 percent hit. More cuts are pending under President Bush’s proposed 2007 budget.

    How you can help:
    More than a third of the Road Home’s budget comes from private donations. To donate, call 359-4142.

    The article in the Salt Lake Tribune has a chart that shows stats of the Road Home’s increase in clientel.

    Thank you Chris Buttars and LaVarr Christiansen for taking up taxpayer dollars to use the legislative time to argue incessantly about issues that have no place in government, instead of addressing what our citizens really need.