Sen. Kathleen Vinehout: The “Eat Dessert First” Budget

From my email inbox comes Democratic State Sen. Kathleen Vinehout’s take on the biennial budget pushed through the legislature by Republicans.

“I love to eat dessert first,” the Prescott man said as he munched on cake. He smiled and said, “The problem is you don’t have room for the good things you need to eat.”

The first course of dessert in the state budget is a tax cut for about seventy five percent of tax filers. For a taxpayer making $30,000 a year the tax cut would be about $50 a year and for someone making over $300,000 about $1,500.

Tax rates would be collapsed – income at the $14 an hour range would be taxed at the same rate as income made at the $150 an hour range.
“It’s hard to be against a tax cut,” my colleague told me. “But the rest of the budget suffers because of this cut.”

The tax change would permanently remove about $600 million of state revenue. Because spending is not reduced – this budget spends $4 billion more than the last – a half a billion dollar structural deficit is created down the road.

The second course of dessert is almost 100 policy changes unrelated to the state’s finances that, in many cases, reward special interests or benefit certain lawmakers. One example is elimination of the UW sponsored Center for Investigative Reporting; another is overturning a Supreme Court decision on lead paint.

The real meat and potatoes of state government are state operations and funding sent to our local communities, colleges and universities. The state budget affects many parts of our lives. For simplicity’s sake I’ll mention just a handful of major programs with a few details on what’s in the budget.
Six items make up 85 percent of the state budget: health, K-12 education, corrections, transportation, the UW system and local government. Each of these areas of spending deserves a thorough look at how to improve operations. Unfortunately most of the discussion on the budget hasn’t focused on the meat and potatoes.

Health spending increases by over two billion dollars despite the Governor’s proposal to end BadgerCare for nearly 100,000 people. A simple change in eligibility would have saved over one hundred million in state funds. Instead the state spends more and fewer people are covered by Medicaid.

K-12 education receives a slight increase, but a large part of this goes to fund a statewide expansion of public spending for private schools.

The prison budget adds millions more to account for an increase in the prison population. Drug court, community policing and other programs to reduce crime and addictions are eliminated or in jeopardy.

Money for roads and bridges is dwindling, as autos are more efficient. As gas tax collections fall, lawmakers consider other ways to fund transportation. Instead of solving this long-term problem, the budget transfers nearly half a billion from the general fund – leaving less to fund K-12 schools, UW and other state expenses.

Local government and the university system receive very little additional money leaving questions about how these entities will cut services as they try to cover increasing costs.

Long-term finances are stable but precarious. The economy is improving. Tax collections are expected to increase. But financial forecasts are inconsistent. For example, budget writers built into the budget several hundred million in new tax collections. Yet a recent forecast by the Philadelphia Federal Reserve shows Wisconsin’s economy contracting over the next six months.

This budget continues to increase debt. Not enough money is put away should the state face another economic down turn. Following the law and setting aside 2% of the general fund as a cushion in the state’s checkbook could improve finances. Instead, the Governor changes the law and keeps a mere half a percent as a financial cushion in the reserve fund.

Every parent who tells their children not to eat dessert first knows there will not room for the meat and potatoes. They also know there’s going to be a crash from eating all that sugar.

Wisconsin’s fiscal sugar crash is likely to show up in the spring of 2015 when the next Governor and lawmakers pick up the pieces set in motion in June of 2013.

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3 thoughts on “Sen. Kathleen Vinehout: The “Eat Dessert First” Budget

  1. Governor Walker’s budget is shortsighted and partisan.

    I am reminded of an old adage that a wise man builds his home on bedrock. Walker fails in his mental acuity, vision, and selection of an adequate budget for Wisconsin’s future stability and growth.

    We folks in western Wisconsin, as well as all statewide, are indebted to our Senator Vinehout for one more of her detailed analyses of the choices and workmanship of an incompetent builder in Madison.

  2. If we could get the same amount of political support behind Senator Vinehout that we put behind Tammy Baldwin she could defeat Governor Walker, and if we built enough support behind her she could pull many Republican seats over to the Democrat side.

  3. Until the DPW has the balls (so to speak) to break with the national Democratic Party, change its name, and pick its own candidate and back that candidate here in the state, someone as bright and honest and intelligent as Kathleen Vinehout doesn’t stand a chance to be elected governor. The progressive voice heard during the Act 10 uprising and the work of the recalls, foiled by the entry of Doyle into the race, on the likely word of higher ups nationally (divide and weaken), to quell an actual progressive/populist movement from succeeding and being an example others in the country might emulate which could eventually threaten total control by the 1%, was the problem.

    National “Dems,” from their leader Barack (Eugene McCarthy) Obomba to their county party gate-keepers kettling any honest discussion of the issues or actual citizen concerns and needs or criticism of party direction, at the behest of the 1% they see themselves as having a chance to eventually be, or to be handsomely rewarded by for doing their dirty work needs to be exposed.

    http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2013/06/20/194513/obamas-crackdown-views-leaks-as.html#.Ucbsypyq-t8

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