While Rep. Jody Richards was dripping orange hair dye on Rep. Greg Stumbo's speaker's chair yesterday, he had a chance to strike a blow for taxpayers.
He failed.
Rep. Ruth Ann Palumbo's economic development transparency bill was the perfect vehicle for Rep. Jim DeCesare to attach his transparency bill and get it a hearing in the House.
Richards, showing yet again his apparent lack of understanding of the term "germane," ruled the amendment out of order.
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
Asking Jim Newberry
Lexington Mayor Jim Newberry goes in for a deposition on Thursday to testify regarding his role in the cover-up of the Fayette County Detention Center prisoner abuse scandal.
Perhaps he will have details about the revelations of a jail employee trading clean drug tests for sexual favors and car detailing at Paul Miller Ford.
Perhaps he will have details about the revelations of a jail employee trading clean drug tests for sexual favors and car detailing at Paul Miller Ford.
No Priorities, Only More Spending
The House Budget Committee just voted to raise your taxes more.
Rep. Jim Wayne said legislators would be "dead-beat parents" if they didn't raise taxes.
"All of us want more in the budget and the only way we are going to get more in the budget is to raise more revenue," Speaker Pro Tem Larry Clark said, summing up perfectly what is wrong with our state government.
The bill they voted on was HB 262. As of this writing, not all the details are available. Hope to have it updated tonight.
Rep. Bob DeWeese and Rep. Danny Ford called out House Dem leaders for trying to cram the tax increase down their throats. Rep. DeWeese also complained that legislators will have to vote on the budget without being able to read it.
Rep. Keith Hall suggested there would be "blood on my hands" if he didn't vote for the tax increase. He voted for it.
Rep. Jim Wayne said legislators would be "dead-beat parents" if they didn't raise taxes.
"All of us want more in the budget and the only way we are going to get more in the budget is to raise more revenue," Speaker Pro Tem Larry Clark said, summing up perfectly what is wrong with our state government.
The bill they voted on was HB 262. As of this writing, not all the details are available. Hope to have it updated tonight.
Rep. Bob DeWeese and Rep. Danny Ford called out House Dem leaders for trying to cram the tax increase down their throats. Rep. DeWeese also complained that legislators will have to vote on the budget without being able to read it.
Rep. Keith Hall suggested there would be "blood on my hands" if he didn't vote for the tax increase. He voted for it.
The Tax Increase Fix Is In
The Senate Budget Committee is set this morning to vote on the HB 258 tax increase bill the House passed 97-0.
And no, don't call me and tell me it was just a tax increase on companies not headquartered in Kentucky or that it just turned back the clock on a part of the 2005 tax modernization. Consumers pay more when corporate taxes go up, even if the corporations aren't based in Kentucky.
A year ago, we were going to get rid of this tax. Doesn't anyone remember that?
It is disgusting to see Harry Moberly writing the tax increase talking points for Frankfort Republicans now. What's next, another cigarette tax increase for the children?
And no, don't call me and tell me it was just a tax increase on companies not headquartered in Kentucky or that it just turned back the clock on a part of the 2005 tax modernization. Consumers pay more when corporate taxes go up, even if the corporations aren't based in Kentucky.
A year ago, we were going to get rid of this tax. Doesn't anyone remember that?
It is disgusting to see Harry Moberly writing the tax increase talking points for Frankfort Republicans now. What's next, another cigarette tax increase for the children?
Monday, March 10, 2008
Sunny And Money Monday!
I'm stuck in the Louisville Airport after a car accident/traffic jam/missed flight/toiletries tossed in the name of jihad all-day nightmare as I try to get to Washington D.C. for the week.
To top it all off, the internet connection I just blew five dollars on here doesn't work very well. I plan to do updates tonight, but it might be a little thin until then.
To top it all off, the internet connection I just blew five dollars on here doesn't work very well. I plan to do updates tonight, but it might be a little thin until then.
Saturday, March 08, 2008
March 10 Monday Morning Meeting
Monday (3/10/08) at 10 am in Frankfort, Bluegrass Institute's education analyst Dick Innes will speak about reforming the education assessment program called CATS and about why the bureaucrats (and their politicians) are against Senate President David Williams' SB 1.
The forum will be held in the conference room at the Kentucky Association of Homebuilders, 1040 Burlington Lane in Frankfort.
Anyone is welcome to attend, but please email me at adams(at)bipps.com to let me know you are coming. Members of the media are welcome to attend, but the entire meeting is off the record.
The forum will be held in the conference room at the Kentucky Association of Homebuilders, 1040 Burlington Lane in Frankfort.
Anyone is welcome to attend, but please email me at adams(at)bipps.com to let me know you are coming. Members of the media are welcome to attend, but the entire meeting is off the record.
Friday, March 07, 2008
House Dems' New Population Reduction Scheme
One point missing from our discussion about the competing Democratic plans to raise your Kentucky taxes is that the reliance on refinancing bonds works like a tax increase, too. If we redo a bunch of bonds that are within just a few years of maturity, but have higher interest payments than are available now, we will wind up paying more money on that debt over time.
The interest payments may be lower now, but by resetting the terms back out to twenty years, we are ensuring that Kentucky taxpayers of the future will pay more then because we didn't cut spending now.
If we were actually saving the savings it might be a different story, but you know we won't be doing that.
And when you add in the public employee benefits disaster no one is talking about anymore, you see that we are only setting the timer on a killer bomb that will go off after the current crop of "leaders" is dead or out of office.
And speaking of death, HB 707 zings you on your final exit by prohibiting anyone but funeral directors from transporting a body to be cremated. Limiting competition here is certain to increase final expense prices.
The interest payments may be lower now, but by resetting the terms back out to twenty years, we are ensuring that Kentucky taxpayers of the future will pay more then because we didn't cut spending now.
If we were actually saving the savings it might be a different story, but you know we won't be doing that.
And when you add in the public employee benefits disaster no one is talking about anymore, you see that we are only setting the timer on a killer bomb that will go off after the current crop of "leaders" is dead or out of office.
And speaking of death, HB 707 zings you on your final exit by prohibiting anyone but funeral directors from transporting a body to be cremated. Limiting competition here is certain to increase final expense prices.
Ed Worley Gets One Thing Right
Senator Ed Worley just said on the Senate floor "The basic question before us today is 'have we been successful with KERA and with CATS?"
It is correct to say that is the question at the heart of the current education debate.
But the magic didn't hold for long. Worley said the answer was "yes" and then he voted "no" on Senate Bill 1 and then added that we would really "humanize" the education process by passing a bullying bill.
It is correct to say that is the question at the heart of the current education debate.
But the magic didn't hold for long. Worley said the answer was "yes" and then he voted "no" on Senate Bill 1 and then added that we would really "humanize" the education process by passing a bullying bill.
Thursday, March 06, 2008
Another Steve Beshear Fib (Non-Smoking Version)
If you haven't gotten in the habit of reading the Bluegrass Policy Blog, you may have missed this.
Cutting The Fat In Reverse
Now that Governor Steve Beshear has come clean about his support for a seventy cents a pack cigarette tax increase, we are about to see it get better.
House Majority Caucus Chairman Charlie Hoffman is going to propose raising it by a dollar.
House Majority Caucus Chairman Charlie Hoffman is going to propose raising it by a dollar.
Shaughnessy Spins The Roulette Wheel
Senator Tim Shaughnessy stopped to explain his vote against the SB 1 education reform bill by making an odd comparison that defines the opposition to improvement of public education in this state.
"This is a gambling bill," Shaughnessy said. By that he meant changing from the familiar course would present too much risk.
Nonsense. Depending on the education bureaucracy to operate with little real accountability and putting them in charge of administering the state's method of tracking their efforts would never be tolerated in the real world and should not be supported by taxpayers.
Senate Bill 1 just passed out of the Senate Education Committee on a party-line vote.
"This is a gambling bill," Shaughnessy said. By that he meant changing from the familiar course would present too much risk.
Nonsense. Depending on the education bureaucracy to operate with little real accountability and putting them in charge of administering the state's method of tracking their efforts would never be tolerated in the real world and should not be supported by taxpayers.
Senate Bill 1 just passed out of the Senate Education Committee on a party-line vote.
Wednesday, March 05, 2008
What, No Jail Time?
Senate Bill 246, filed Wednesday, requires parents to send their children to public school until age eighteen.
This is perhaps the closest we will get to any kind of school reform from this General Assembly. The only way they could make this junk worse would be to work up some kind of punishment for parents when their teenagers drop out of school. Otherwise, the people who really get hurt by expanding compulsory attendance are the kids who want to learn but are required to sit next to the disruptive kids who are forced to stay in school.
This is perhaps the closest we will get to any kind of school reform from this General Assembly. The only way they could make this junk worse would be to work up some kind of punishment for parents when their teenagers drop out of school. Otherwise, the people who really get hurt by expanding compulsory attendance are the kids who want to learn but are required to sit next to the disruptive kids who are forced to stay in school.
Sorry Charlie
Rep. Charlie Hoffman is riding out his last days in House leadership kicking the casino gambling horse, trying to get it to make the final turn.
But it won't get him to the finish line. It is dead.
Hoffman stuck another amendment on the casino bill today. What a complete waste of time this whole General Assembly session has been. Leaders like Sorry Charlie just won't get us anywhere.
But it won't get him to the finish line. It is dead.
Hoffman stuck another amendment on the casino bill today. What a complete waste of time this whole General Assembly session has been. Leaders like Sorry Charlie just won't get us anywhere.
Here Comes Adult Supervision
Louisville GOP insiders say long-time activist Craig Maffet has the votes to become the next chairman of the Jefferson County Republican Party.
This is a welcome change in The River City.
This is a welcome change in The River City.
(D)-Disarray
House Democrats have cancelled tomorrow's caucus meeting where some hoped they might get their act straight.
The group has not met since the first week of the General Assembly, which is very unusual and suggests there is no functioning leadership.
3/06 UPDATE: Now it looks like the the meeting will happen, but the agenda will only include the budget and tax increases.
The group has not met since the first week of the General Assembly, which is very unusual and suggests there is no functioning leadership.
3/06 UPDATE: Now it looks like the the meeting will happen, but the agenda will only include the budget and tax increases.
More Attacks On Political Speech
Tuesday, March 04, 2008
Making The Case For Moving The Filing Deadline
The House of Representatives just passed a tax increase bill 97-0.
Rep. Jim DeCesare's amendment to repeal the LLET came up for a voice vote (and clearly passed, according to my hearing, though Speaker Richards screamed "NO!" into his microphone.
Passing this bill simply makes it harder for companies to justify doing business in Kentucky. The bill raises taxes on companies who do business here but are headquartered in other states. No one can pretend this tax would cause any more companies to move their business here.
If we didn't shut off our candidate filing season earlier than anyone else in the country, a lot of people would have earned opponents today.
Rep. Jim DeCesare's amendment to repeal the LLET came up for a voice vote (and clearly passed, according to my hearing, though Speaker Richards screamed "NO!" into his microphone.
Passing this bill simply makes it harder for companies to justify doing business in Kentucky. The bill raises taxes on companies who do business here but are headquartered in other states. No one can pretend this tax would cause any more companies to move their business here.
If we didn't shut off our candidate filing season earlier than anyone else in the country, a lot of people would have earned opponents today.
Lemurs, Camels, And Jackasses. Oh My!
Two Very Different Legislative Chambers
While the most important bills likely to pass the Kentucky Senate this year would rein in government powers in education and the executive and legislative branches, the misfiring in the House continues with Rep. Kathy Stein's bullet bill.
The bullet bill would effectively disarm law-abiding Kentuckians by requiring a serial number and an additional tax on every bullet sold in Kentucky.
The bullet bill would effectively disarm law-abiding Kentuckians by requiring a serial number and an additional tax on every bullet sold in Kentucky.
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