Kentucky Club for Growth
fighting and winning for economic freedom

« Tuesday, December 8, 2009 | Main | Wednesday, December 9, 2009 »

December 8, 2009

Governor Beshear Makes Some Contradictory Statements

Over at Page One, Jake points out that despite Governor Beshear saying he had nothing to do with the dismissal of an employee, the facts show otherwise. The directive came from the governor's office.

Yesterday, Governor Beshear painted a dire picture of the upcoming state budget:

"It's impossible to tell at this point," Beshear said when asked whether his budget proposal would include the layoffs of state workers. "Further reductions in spending at some of these agencies may result in some layoffs."

[SNIP]

"It is going to be the most difficult budget to put together that this state has seen in modern times," Beshear said.

This is a pretty strong contrast to the recent words of House Budget Committee Chairman Rick Rand:

State Rep. Rick Rand (D-47th District) of Bedford, Ky., said that the commonwealth's budget for 2011 is "in pretty manageable shape," thanks to $3 billion from the federal stimulus bill passed earlier this year.

"Most difficult in modern times" or "Pretty manageable"? Is the budget chairman misinformed or is the Governor overstating?

At another point in the interview, Beshear said:

"We are going to be facing probably the toughest budget, over the next two years, that this state has ever faced," he said during a phone interview with reporters.

"Obviously, all options are going to have to be on the table as we figure out how to get this budget balanced over the next two years."

But Beshear said he would not support broad-based tax increases, such as sales and income tax hikes.

It's good that he's ruling out tax increases. But are "all options" otherwise really on the table?

How about Senator Thayer's proposal?

Frankfort is already discussing options from expanded gaming to additional budget cuts to tax reform to meet these looming challenges. It would be my suggestion, however, that we first dedicate ourselves to maximizing every dollar we invest in Kentucky's future.

Let us look at an example. According to a report by the Legislative Research Commission, Kentucky's prevailing wage laws artificially inflate school construction labor costs by 21 percent. That means that 21 cents of those dollars are directed at inflated wages as opposed to going toward investments in larger schools, enhanced technology, more energy efficient facilities and an overall better environment for Kentucky's children to learn in.

[SNIP]

This is why I filed legislation to repeal "prevailing wage" during the 2009 Session and it is my intent to do so again. As the Governor and General Assembly come together to further address our budget shortfall, the time has also come to decide that failing to maximize our investment in our schools is a failure to maximize our investment in our children. Fortunately, this failure need not continue. We can increase our investment in our schools and Kentucky's children without having to raise one additional dollar from new taxes.

If this is really an option on the table, it's a no-brainer to save money for the state.

But does anyone really believe the governor?

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.kyclubforgrowth.org/blog-mt/mt-tb.cgi/837

06/23/09 : Session Could Finish Tonight; KEY VOTES

06/22/09 : KEY VOTE: HB 1

03/11/09 : Key Vote: HB 236 - Taxing IPTV

03/09/09 : Key Vote: HB 102 - Tolls

03/09/09 : Key Vote: HB 374 - Gas Tax Hike

03/03/09 : Key Votes: Some Good Legislation

03/03/09 : Key Votes: Driving Businesses Out of Kentucky

Drees: Raise gas tax to fund bridge - Pat Crowley, NKY.com

Ky. House nears tax vote - Pat Crowley, NKy.com


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


Ky. jobless rate hits 11 percent - Courier-Journal...

The Governor's Budget Proposal
This is a reposting of the first article of email update sent out earlier today.  If you don't receive them, you may want to sign up.Here's the Governor's proposal:$147.1 million in spending cuts $81.5 million from a 70-cent cigarette tax...

$373 Million in Cuts
Governor Beshear has told agencies to plan for 4% budget cuts, suggesting that he's either expecting to raise taxes, or not expecting the $456 million shortfall to materialize.  4% of FY 2009 appropriated spending is only $373 million....

Governor Announces Administration Exploring Cuts, Taxes
Governor Steve Beshear announced that he is expecting a $294 million budget shortfall and is going to gauge public reaction before making a specific proposal to address it in December.  Cuts and taxes are on the table.Waiting until December is...

Strapped
The media is so sure there's a revenue problem, that it's hard to even fathom that the reality is that state revenue is increasing.

Business Tax Climate
We're #34 according to the Tax Foundation's 2009 State Business Tax Climate Index.

Financial Troubles
"The Negative Outlook reflects plans to continue to deplete fund balances and virtually drain the budget reserve trust in the current biennium. Further, Fitch remains concerned about the weakened pension funding levels and the commonwealth's rising debt position as an additional $1.65 billion in debt has been authorized for the biennium."

  RSS
Subscribe to 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.