Posted February 9, 2015 - 12:17am
By LAURA MYERS
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
Surprise: Treasurer, Controller offer alternative Nevada budget
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
Nevada
Treasurer Dan Schwartz and Controller Ron Knecht, two fiscal
conservatives swept into office by the Republican wave, have released an
alternative Nevada budget to rival GOP Gov. Brian Sandoval’s spending
plan.
The
idea isn’t to poke a stick in the governor’s political eye, the two
officials said, but to demonstrate to lawmakers meeting in their
biennial legislative session in Carson City that all of Sandoval’s
proposed $1.1 billion in new and extended taxes aren’t needed to boost
education and that “throwing money at a problem will not solve it.”
The
unprecedented alternative budget — laid out in a three-page press
release Schwartz put out Feb. 3 — could die on the vine. But Schwartz
and Knecht said they have sent it to the governor and to legislators,
hoping some of their conservative ideas might catch on with the GOP
majority in charge of both houses of the Nevada Legislature for the
first time in several decades.
“I
think the governor needs to reconsider what he’s proposing,” Schwartz
said in an interview. “He’s proposing a funding source that three months
ago we said no to. Why are we spending all this money on education?”
Nevada
voters Nov. 4 overwhelmingly rejected by 79 percent a proposed 2
percent margins tax on businesses that would have targeted gross
receipts of companies making $1 million or more in annual revenue.
Sandoval’s
proposed budget would put the annual business license fee, now a flat
$200, on a graduated scale with companies paying rates based on their
gross receipts, a mechanism the governor said is different than the
margins tax. There would be some 30 rate categories, for example, with
companies paying from $400 to $4 million a year.
Sandoval
also would extend a package of more than $500 million in taxes that
were supposed to sunset and increase levies on cigarettes, slots and
mining for a total of $1.1 billion in new and extended taxes to fund a
$7.3 billion biennial general fund budget. The current budget is about
$6.5 billion.
Schwartz’
proposed $6.8 billion budget would continue $470 million in “sunset
taxes” and impose a new $5 per passenger “facilities fee” at the
McCarran and Reno-Tahoe international airports to raise $540 million
over two years. His budget also would bump up gaming taxes to collect
another $70 million and cut $20 million in agency and board support.
“We
certainly agree that one objective is to improve education in Nevada,”
Schwartz wrote in releasing his proposed spending plan. “But the
governor’s budget funds a vast expansion of the state’s educational
system, a system that despite receiving generous funding in the past,
has failed to deliver the goods.”
Schwartz
questioned much of Sandoval’s proposed $782 million in new K-12
education spending, saying many of the programs are more like “social
work” than schoolwork. He said he doesn’t see why the state should spend
$30 million on anti-bullying programs, for example.
“There
are some good reforms,” he added, mentioning “zoom schools” to help
disadvantaged students. “But are we getting our money’s worth?”
Knecht,
who said he hasn’t committed to any final proposed budget but is
working with Schwartz on his plan, argues that he and the treasurer have
a duty to weigh in on the budget as the top two elected constitutional
fiscal officers in the state, although Nevada’s treasurer and controller
have never done so in the past.
“Our
goal is to address the issues in ways that best serve the public
interest and provide for Nevada’s children in the long term,” Knecht
wrote in January in his first monthly controller’s report, in which he
laid out his fiscal philosophy.
The
controller, a longtime opponent of massive tax hikes, was a member of
the Assembly in 2003 when he was among 15 Republicans who blocked a
proposed record $1 billion plan to tax gross business receipts under
then-Gov. Kenny Guinn.
“I’m not trying to pick a fight with the governor,” Knecht said. “I’m trying to make a positive, constructive contribution.”
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