Emphasis and Annotation mine.
I fucking hate this state, and wish General Sherman had finished the job.How do you cut $25 billion from Texas' budget?
01:28 AM CST on Sunday, January 9, 2011
By ROBERT T. GARRETT / The Dallas Morning News
rtgarrett@dallasnews.com
AUSTIN – A new crop of lawmakers, more heavily Republican than at any time in modern Texas history, reports for duty Tuesday, facing a frighteningly huge budget hole.
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Legislators must navigate around fiscal constraints and political pressures, knowing that this time, big cuts are coming and virtually nothing is safe.
In a new twist, the fight is all among Republicans, who dominate the House and Senate. Many already are involved in a nasty public brawl – touching on everything from religion to abortion – over who's conservative enough to be House speaker.
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How the hell? No, no... seriously. They have started fighting among themselves about who is conservative enough to be house speaker? They have entered a period of conservitard one-upsmanship!? "I think Abortion should be criminalized!" "Oh yeah!? Well, I think we should imprison women who have abortions, and execute the doctors for murder! PRAISE JESUS!"
Added to the mix is the bravado of tea party adherents and a huge freshman class, many believing there's still plenty of fat in a budget that ranks 50th in per capita spending and has been written by a GOP-led Legislature for the past eight years.
The underlying fear, from some in both parties, is that the budget-cutting zealousness could go too far.Code: Select all
Where is this fat exactly?
"You'll be gutting, literally gutting, some core services that government does for everybody," warned 16-year Rep. Burt Solomons, R-Carrollton, a key member of the House leadership. "You've got to be careful about crippling every program to the point of no recovery."
Almost one-quarter of House members, though, are newcomers – many with ties to the tea party push to hold the line on spending. Vowing to do whatever it takes to not raise taxes, they scoff at suggestions that deep cuts could inflict irreparable damage.Code: Select all
Is that not the whole point of the Tea Party? You embraced them, and got them elected to the point that you can adopt rules and override gubernatorial vetoes without consulting a single democrat... you get to deal with them now, assholes.
"Texas did absolutely fine with a level of spending that we had ... eight years ago," said freshman Rep. Van Taylor, R-Plano, referring to the 2003 session, when lawmakers closed a $9.9 billion budget gap. "Most Texans will say we have enough state government."
The 140-day session opens with ceremony and oath-taking by 181 House and Senate members at noon Tuesday, a day after Comptroller Susan Combs issues a two-year revenue estimate. It sets the limit for how much lawmakers can spend in the next cycle.Code: Select all
Not when the roads start crumbling, more on that later
Last time, they sidestepped a deepening revenue hole and avoided cuts because federal stimulus money and Texas' late entry into the national recession allowed them to write a two-year, $182.2 billion budget – 6 percent bigger than before.
Texas-size budget gap
At the Capitol, senior legislative staff members have said the budget gap could be $25 billion between anticipated revenues and expenses. That amounts to more than a quarter of the $87 billion in current spending of state funds that have no strings attached.
With the downturn lingering and no prospects of additional federal aid, Texas also faces troubles because of its heavy reliance on sales tax.
Some economists say it's possible revenue will never rebound to 2006-08 levels, as recession-stung residents may have throttled back household spending for good.
Democrats, while outnumbered, have chided GOP leaders for believing they can write a budget that doesn't assume growth in school enrollment and Medicaid numbers.Code: Select all
it just so happens that sales taxes are also the most regressive. Gotta love having almost all of the tax burden being on the poor...
"If we are bragging about our ability to attract people from all over the country because we've got such a strong economy ... then we actually have to admit those people are here," said Senate Democratic Leader Leticia Van de Putte of San Antonio. "I love fantasy, but I don't want this trip to Neverland."
Gov. Rick Perry, who doesn't have much say in the budget until late in the session when he can threaten to veto legislation, is expected again to call for higher education funding to be tied to performance measures, such as graduation rates.
He also will defend the Texas Enterprise Fund and Emerging Technology Fund, which he calls crucial job-creation tools, though even some fellow Republicans have begun criticizing them.
Solomons, a lieutenant of House Speaker Joe Straus, said ordinary Texans will notice if the deficit is as huge as expected – and only cuts are used to zap it.
"You just won't build any more roads. And you might not be able to maintain roads for a while. ... Instead of taking three days to get your license, it might take 30," he said.
Solomons said he'll support many spending trims but left open the possibility that he might reluctantly back tax or fee increases. The state has too many needs, especially in education, he said. Business people tell him they want an educated workforce.Code: Select all
This is a state that already does not spring for things like signs telling you that a median is about to crop up in the left hand lane just as you crest a hill, and also does not bother to use reflectors or even reflective paint on roads... when it rains, you can have your brights on and not be able to tell if you are still in your fucking lane. If that were not enough, they dont bother to repaint the lane markers after road work, so you have phantom lane stripes, and the lane stripes you are supposed to use are buried under broken lines of tar. The roads here are death traps already, lets maintain them less!!!
"So are you going to fund community colleges?" he said. "Or are we going to cripple everything?"
Against tax hikes
Grover Norquist , president of Americans for Tax Reform, said Republicans need to hold firm. He has obtained written pledges from 70 GOP state legislators that they'll oppose "any and all efforts to increase taxes."Code: Select all
This is the state with the second largest state economy in the US, but the least per capita spending... how the fuck low do taxes need to be? Even shithole states like West Virginia (No Offense Tev) spend more per capita.
He said the state's swelling, demographically challenging population does not justify raising revenues of any kind – unless it's "user fees" citizens pay voluntarily and that aren't siphoned off to fund general programs.
"No state is in a position that you couldn't reduce the size and cost of government," he said.Code: Select all
Demographically Challenging? You mean that there are too many poor brown people right?
Groups worried about the poor and enfeebled, though, want lawmakers to ease up on spending cuts by emptying a $9.5 billion rainy day fund. But that's a hard sell.
"We won't spend more than even half of it," said Van de Putte, the Democratic leader. "Folks are going to be really frightened."
Solomons said he's not sure "we can get [a required vote of] two-thirds to use any of the rainy day fund."
Rep.-elect Kenneth Sheets, R-Dallas, said that even if lawmakers drastically shrink state government, that can be changed if more money becomes available in the future.
"There's nothing that will prevent us from coming back" and agreeing to higher spending levels in the next session in two years, he said.
Staff writer Kelley Shannon contributed to this report.
AT A GLANCE
BY THE NUMBERS
Texas revenue, spending
The Legislature will confront what's likely to be the toughest fiscal crisis in Texas history when it convenes Tuesday – a gap of up to $25 billion between anticipated revenue and expenses for the next two-year budget cycle. In the most recent two-year, $182.2 billion budget, here's where the money came from and where it went:
Where the money came from
$87 billion in general revenue from sales and business taxes and land interests
$65.5 billion in federal funds that were designated for health care and roads
$29.7 billion in dedicated funds (such as gas taxes for roads and bond proceeds)
Where the discretionary spending went
$48.9 billion to public schools, junior colleges, universities
$24.4 billion to Medicaid, foster care, mental health services, disability, children's health care and elder care
$8.6 billion to prisons, probation and the Department of Public Safety
$5.1 billion to all other programs
Where the state's 310,000 employees work
158,000 in higher education
55,000 in social services
54,000 in prisons, criminal justice and public safety
12,000 in the Department of Transportation
32,000 in all other programs
MOST AT RISK
Programs that may be cut
The options are few when it comes to cutting $25 billion in the state's next budget, partly because legislators have most authority over the discretionary spending portion. Texas already ranks 50th nationally in per-capita state spending, so big cuts will have to come from essential services.
The deficit represents more than one-fourth of current discretionary spending, though agencies have been asked to submit only 10 percent cut scenarios – not plans that would fully bridge the gap.
Lawmakers may reluctantly spend some rainy day funds and raise fees, easing the pain slightly. But cuts almost certainly will be deep enough for ordinary Texans to notice. Here are some prime candidates:
State prisons: A Sugar Land unit is likely to be closed, and all others could have fewer guards and, almost certainly, fewer support personnel. Two youth lockups also are expected to be shuttered.
Alternative incarceration: Private prisons with 2,200 beds and 625 beds in substance abuse wards would close under the prison system's 10 percent cut scenario.Code: Select all
Ah yes! Let's reduce the number of guards in our prisons, leading to more prison riots and violence. It does not matter what their crimes are, prisoners are not people, and have no right to decent food, medical care, or to be free from violence. Nope. not at all. As for those juvenile offenders, we will just treat them like adults. Even if they are six years old. They can all go into the adult prisons. No, we dont need to worry about that sixteen year old burglar being treated like the cell block's bicycle for packs of cigarettes. Besides, even if that DID happen in TX prisons, once a person has been convicted of a crime, they stop being a person. Especially because they are usually not white.
AIDS medications: If lawmakers don't add $23 million to current spending, Texas will have to cap enrollment or stop covering some drugs, potentially threatening 15,000 low-income people with the disease.
Classroom sizes: Classes could balloon if lawmakers approve a proposal to scrap the 22-student limit in kindergarten through fourth grade. Up to 12,000 teaching jobs could disappear.Code: Select all
AIDS patients are all queers and hookers!
College financial aid: At least two-thirds of the nearly 60,000 low- and moderate-income students who apply for the basic assistance each year would be turned down. Also, a program that helps 30,000 private college students is likely to take a big hit.
Freeways and interstates: The Transportation Department will freeze building new roads next fall if it doesn't get any new money. Expected raids on its gasoline tax and registration fee receipts would leave the agency only enough to fill potholes and check bridges for safety.Code: Select all
Well, The Great State of Texas is ranked 25 in the nation in Education. We need to the join the rest of the southern states in a race to the bottom! We dont need no elitist edumucation!
Mentally disabled and mentally ill: A state agency is expected to be told to select and close two of 13 institutions, once known as state schools, that it runs for the disabled. A sister agency is likely to be ordered to privatize one of 10 mental hospitals that the state runs.Code: Select all
See above on the clusterfuck that is our road system
Small agencies: While all agencies are expected to take a hit, some smaller ones are almost certain to be eliminated.Code: Select all
Afterall, healthcare for the mentally ill and disabled is not a priority in the Great State of Texas. Rather than putting them in hospitals and special schools that will maximize their quality of life, they should be locked in Asylum in straight jackets for shock treatment! In fact, we should even privatize the whole enterprise. Give them over to corporations with every incentive to deny them care and treat them like chattel. After all, they are just retards and crazies. No one will ever hear or care about their screams
Layoffs: More than 9,000 jobs could be eliminated in state agencies and at public colleges.