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Edited on Thu Jun-23-05 06:08 PM by ThJ
First, this special session is Perry's strategy for trying to shift blame for school finance to the Legislature (and they are certainly deserving of blame), although I don't think it's likely to work.
Second, the state (who as of 1999 provided 46 percent of funding), if they want to fund school districts equitably, must assume a greater burden of school finance, which they have been reducing for the last several sessions, and we could also do away with the so-called Robin Hood plan, which is completely worthless (IMHO).
If the state takes on more responsibility, local property taxes could also be reduced, since they wouldn't need to raise local tax rates to make up for the state's spending reductions, and the property-tax caps are harmful, when you require unfunded mandates and reduce state funding.
Third, an income tax, although it might be beneficial at a low, flat rate, is a political non-starter, just witness what happened to Bullock, and even if you got it passed out of the Legislature and signed bu the Guv, it would probably die in the statewide referendum. However, expanding the sales tax to cover more services - services which lower- and middle-class people do not use - creating a BAT tax, and closing the franchise tax loopholes would certainly be beneficial. Basically anything which expands the tax base beyond our over-reliance on sales taxes would help.
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