Kentucky Club for Growth
fighting and winning for economic freedom

« How to Cut Kentucky's Budget Without Really Trying | Main | Moberly and 'Revenue Enhancers' »

January 13, 2008

Pat Crowley Gives KYCFG some ink

Pat Crowley wonders who the fiscal conservatives are now?

In Frankfort, it is Republicans leading the charge to spend billions and billions of new dollars. Certainly some Democrats will go along, but it is the Senate Republicans who want to borrow nearly $1 billion to shore up the state's pension system.

"Borrowing your way out the pension system is the most ridiculous thing in the world," said Brian Richmond, executive director of the Kentucky Club For Growth. "If you can't pay your mortgage and car payments, do you take a loan to pay them?

"Politicians who have mismanaged the pension system for decades are now asking our children and grandchildren to pay for it," he said.

Richmond has similar concerns about the bill filed by Senate President David Williams, a Burkesville Republican. It attempts to address the replacement of the Brent Spence Bridge over the Ohio River.

Williams' bill, which has plenty of Northern Kentucky lawmakers squeamish, would allow local governments to form finance authorities that could raise money for big infrastructure projects, like the Brent Spence Bridge.

Good idea, until you read the fine print. Tolls might be the only way for those finance authorities to pay for the projects.

In principle, of course, tolls are a great way to pay for road and bridge construction. The problem is that overspending in most other areas of state finance make tolls an unattractive option for a state that ought to be jump starting its economy. 

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.kyclubforgrowth.org/blog-mt/mt-tb.fcgi/144

04/17/07 : 2007 Kentucky Club for Growth Scorecard

03/26/07 : House Bill 228 shields porkers from scrutiny

03/09/07 : Kentucky's senate votes to raise minimum wage

02/24/07 : HB 305: Wage controls

02/22/07 : KEY VOTE ALERT

01/07/07 : Key Vote: Budget Transparency

11/30/06 : A constitutional amendment to reduce lawmaker accountability?

Donor records might have similarities - Lexington Herald-Leader

Club for Growth launches in Oregon

The Kentucky Club for Growth is proud to announce its 2007 scorecard rating members of the Kentucky General Assembly on fiscal issues.

How did your legislators do?


Club for Growth eyes spending - by Patrick Crowley, The Enquirer

Political group taking on state - by Stephenie Steitzer, Kentucky Post

Projected state budget surplus is trimmed - by John Stamper, Lexington Herald-Leader

UK study: Tax breaks create fewer jobs than state claims - by John Stamper, Lexington Herald-Leader

Tax breaks don't create as many jobs as state claims, UK study finds - by John Stamper, Lexington Herald-Leader

Ky. minimum wage fight likely - editorial, The Enquirer

A brisk rise in American Wages - By Mark Trumbull, The Christian Science Monitor

Fletcher expects $278.9 million surplus - by Jack Brammer, Lexington Herald-Leader

Unemployment lowest in 5 years - By Jeannine Aversa, Associated Press

Email Newsletter icon, E-mail Newsletter icon, Email List icon, E-mail List icon Get e-mail updates!:

The KY Club for Growth seeks principled candidates who are committed to the following:

* Free market principles
* Lowering taxes
* Reducing spending
* Decreasing the size of government
* Judicial reform
* Protecting property rights
* Expanding school choice
* Reducing needless regulation

We will hold endorsed candidates accountable for these principles by monitoring each candidate on a vote-by-vote basis. As a Club member, you will receive candidate monitoring updates and scorecards on a regular basis. Join us today.