Taxes & TABOR

Ref C waste is 'nothing to sniff at'

Let’s take a trip back in our time machine to last fall’s election season (I know, we haven’t even managed to get through this one but bear with me) and recall the arguments used to support Referendum C – the state’s largest tax hike ever. One of the prevailing arguments, that prompted former Senator Hank Brown to beg for our votes in a television commercial, was that if we didn’t pass the tax increase it would be devastating to higher education. And it worked! On November 1, 2005, 52% of the voters passed Ref C hoping that the money would be spent wisely and higher education would be "safe." If you’re curious as to how part of your tax increase is being spent, don’t miss this article in the Denver Post: “Holistic science studies are nothing to sniff at.”

One of the pictures accompanying the article shows a student blissfully sniffing a bottle of, well, something. In the article you’ll learn that one of Metropolitan State College of Denver’s brand new majors is “integrative therapeutic practices” which teaches students to sniff things like “tangerine oil” and practice Reiki, “which involves channeling energy into someone’s body.” Students will also receive instruction on how to make herbal teas and salves.

That's your tax dollars at work, folks.

Michigan economy needs the Colorado cure

    Note: This open letter to the people of Michigan, submitted to the Lansing State Journal today, answers a recent article there from the Devastation Prevarication propagandists I last did battle with in Maine - John Andrews

As a taxpayer advocate who was born in Michigan and held office in Colorado, I want my native state to have the kind of thriving economy that my adopted state has. The news that your state may pass SOS, the Stop OverSpending amendment, delights me even more than seeing the Tigers in first place.

The SOS plan to slow the runaway growth of government can help restore healthy growth to Michigan’s hurting economy. It worked for us in the Rockies; why not for you in the Great Lakes State as well? This onetime Allegan County guy objects to the distortion of our Colorado success story that was foisted on Lansing readers last month by big-government cheerleader Carol Hedges ( "Michigan, don’t make mistake Colorado did,” June 25).

The spending lobby, Hedges’ employer, understandably dislikes our state’s version of the SOS amendment, a constitutional provision called the Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights. But the amendment has been great for prosperity and quality of life in Colorado.

Back in 1992, my neighbors were fed up with a bloated budget and a lagging economy – which may sound familiar in Michigan today. So they petitioned to force change, just as your neighbors are doing Since then our amendment has paid dividends for job creation, family finances, leaner government, and lower taxes. I can see your SOS plan delivering all the same benefits.

Yet liberals resent the $3 billion in tax refunds paid out to hard-working Coloradans since the 1990s because of our amendment. They deplore the additional half-billion in tax cuts we passed when I was in the legislature. They miss the good old days of runaway spending; it’s grown at only the rate of inflation and population since 1992, after growing at twice that pace in the decade before.

During the 2001 recession it was weak revenues – not our constitutional spending limit, as Hedges falsely stated – that pinched highways and higher education. With revenues strong again, voters in 2005 used the flexibility of our amendment to approve faster increases through 2011 so those areas can catch up.

Has Hedges no compassion for Michigan’s economic plight, dead last in job growth and near the bottom in income growth? Someone should clue her in. As the Detroit News put it, “The state’s economy, crippled by faulty public policy, is driving out businesses and jobs.” Whereas my state, having gotten the public policy right, now ranks at or near the top in almost every index of economic vitality and business climate.

Want clinching proof of Colorado’s attractiveness with fiscal discipline in place? Consider our booming population growth since 1992. My grown children all live in Colorado; my Fennville cousins have all left Michigan. The Dr. Phil question comes to mind: “How’s that working for you?” SOS, the Stop OverSpending amendment, could start to turn things around for Michigan. Government insiders hope you don’t pass it. I hope you do.

TABOR Truth Tour visits Maine

(John Andrews in the Denver Post, April 2) Devastation Prevarication. That might be, as Dave Barry used to say, a good name for a heavy metal band. But it’s no way to make public policy. Lies are being told in a number of states about Colorado's allegedly “devastating” experience with the Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights, TABOR, since 1992. Such nonsense needs to stop. “TABOR was run out of Colorado. Why now bring it to Maine?” So read the headline on a union flyer in Portland when I arrived last month for the TABOR Truth Tour, organized by local activists Mary Adams and Bill Becker. Their successful petition drive, giving Mainers a chance to enact tax limits next fall, has the spending lobby panicked. I brought testimony of how such limits are benefiting Coloradans.

Tax battle tests Colorado's soul

(John Andrews in the Denver Post, Oct. 16) Voting is underway on a law transferring several billion dollars from Colorado families and employers into government, Referendum C, along with a plan to borrow another couple of billion for government projects, Referendum D. I expect that when the votes are counted, the common sense of citizens will result in their saying no to this largest-ever proposal for increasing our tax burden and financing our infrastructure by credit card.

Armey rallies the troops for TABOR defense

By Brian Ochsner baochsner@aol.com "Three groups spend other people's money" Dick Armey likes to say: "Children, thieves, and politicians -- and all three need supervision." This is just one of Armey’s Axioms, and a sample of the wisdom he shared at a Greeley luncheon sponsored by Colorado FreedomWorks on Oct. 4. Representative Armey spoke with candor and common sense about government’s constant itch to raise taxes and spend more money.

The Ref C & D battle isn’t a new fight, he reminded attendees. Alabama and Oregon had similar votes on measures to raise taxes andor spending. Both were soundly defeated, against the odds, with help from FreedomWorks and other aroused citizens groups.