Well. The Sacramento Bee certainly found a conservative
voice for the attack on the proposed tax measures to be faced by voters in fall 2012. Lets look at the distractions Ben Boychuk throws up and the issues he chose to not
discuss in his piece in the Sacramento Bee for March 22,2012.
First, in arguing that “Progressives are deluding
themselves” he describes Governor Brown and SEIU as moderates,
then he labels the California Federation of Teachers as “ far left”. The reason for this name calling approach to argumentation? To criticize the compromise tax
proposals worked out by Governor Brown, the various unions and the California
Federation of Teachers last week.
Boychuk goes on to make the argument that the very wealthy
should not be taxed more and to
claim that those who argue for more taxes are “ far left”. This is a ploy.
If you are standing as far right as the Boychuk’s employer
the Manhattan Institute then
almost everyone appears to be on the far left. See the conservative Manhattan Institute web page at www.city-journal.org Under the label “make the rich pay” Boychuk accurately calculates how
much the wealthy currently pay, but he does tell you that the wealth pay less
as a percentage of the income on taxes than do all the rest of us- the
90%.
A report of the California Budget Project notes that “measured as a
share of family income”, California’s lowest-income families pay the most in
taxes. The bottom fifth of the state’s families, with an average income of $12,600,
spent 11.1 percent of their income on state and local taxes. In
comparison, the wealthiest 1 percent, with an average income of $2.3 million,
spent 7.8 percent of their income on state and local taxes.”
California, like most states, needs additional revenue to fund
schools and to invest in the future.
California public schools are in crisis - and they are getting worse.
This is a direct result of massive budget cuts imposed by the legislature and
the governor in the last four years. Total per pupil expenditure is down
by over $1,000 per student. The result- massive class size increases. Students are often in
classes too large for quality learning. Supplementary services such as tutoring
and art classes have been eliminated. Over 14,000 teachers have been
dismissed, and thousands more face lay offs this fall.
California schools are now 47th in the nation in per pupil
expenditure and 49th in class size. Our low achievement scores on
national tests reflect this severe underfunding.
Of course the economic crisis of 2007 to the present caused by
bankers and their advocates made matters worse. The state
took in some $30 billion less in taxes due to the crisis and thus had less to send to the
schools. School budgets have been cut by some $10 billion. K-12
education receives about 40% of the California budget. Thus any decline
in the state budget leads directly to cuts in school services.
The question for the anti tax advocate such as Boychuk and the
Chamber of Commerce, and
ultimately for California voters is can the economy prosper with a poorly
educated work force. California grew and prospered from 1970- 1994 based upon a
well educated work force. Then, in the period between 1994-2008 over $10
billion in corporate tax cuts were passed making the current crisis much worse. California
suffers from a decade of disinvestment in education and in infrastructure. Today, instead of continuing our state’s
once great commitment to education, conservative anti tax forces have imposed a
Mississippi model on California schools.
The California economy needs to invest in roads, bridges, telephone
lines, communications systems, clean energy and quality education. These
are the down payments that make prosperity possible. Conservative opposition to
any new tax ignores the undeniable, historic fact that prosperity depends upon
having a viable educational system and a well functioning infrastructure.
Rather than invest in something that pays itself back many times over, the
Republicans have led the effort to starve public education of desperately
needed revenue.
There are economic issues to be debated such as the grandiose
salaries of new CSU Presidents, U.C. Chancellors, and the tax abuses of a few
managers in pension programs. But
these are issues to be dealt with, not reasons to underfund our schools and our
future.
As Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes said, "Taxes are what we pay for civilized society.'' I will vote
for the new tax proposal and pay a little
more taxes to have a civilized society.
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