Assembly Republicans
Fail to Shoot Down Elk Tax
By Chuck Muth
March 9, 2015
AB78 would increase the fee for a “tag” to hunt elk in
Nevada by $5. The money would be used to
mitigate property damage done by elk and, so I’ve been told by one legislator, elk
hunters support this tax hike.
Call me skeptical, so I did a little checking. Here’s what I found…
Which raise two important questions for fiscal conservatives…
The answer to the second question…
Because, according to an actual hunter in the know who
wishes not to be identified, this $5/tag tax/fee hike is NOT popular with
hunters. To the contrary, I’m told “it
is VERY unpopular with hunters” who believe “the State nickels and dimes
hunters to death.”
So one of the primary arguments in favor of this tax hike
turns out to be completely and totally untrue.
I’m shocked, shocked.
And look, *IF* this damage “mitigation” program is
such an essential high priority (it’s not, or at least shouldn’t be), then
Republicans who ran as fiscal conservatives need to find a way to fund it
without raising taxes.
For example, I see that the department has requested $55,000
for “Spanish Outreach and Marketing.” Is
that really an “essential” expenditure?
And is it more important than the elk damage mitigation program? If not, ax it. Next?
And no, contrary to another argument in favor of this tax
hike, it is NOT a “user fee” any more than a mandatory marriage license
fee or mandatory business license fee is a “user fee.”
The entrance fee to the Minden public swimming pool is a
user fee, because there are private sector swimming pools you can go to
instead. The rental fee charged to use a
public park for your kid’s birthday party is a user fee because you have the
private sector option of renting a room at Chuck E. Cheese instead.
A mandatory hunting “tag” fee is not a “user” fee because
there is no private sector option. It’s
a mandatory government tax by another name. And a tax by any other name stinks just as
bad.
Capice?
I was reading “The Magic of Thinking Big” by David Schwartz before turning in last
night and think this blurb is instructive for elected legislative Republicans
who ran last year as fiscal conservatives (meaning all of them)…
If GOP legislators gave it some effort and put their minds
to it, they could resolve this issue of the elk damage mitigation problem
without raising taxes. As Grover Norquist of Americans for Tax
Reform puts it…
Unfortunately, most Republicans in the Assembly took the
easy way out and voted for the tax hike last week rather than reform government
and set spending priorities. In fact, only
two Republicans voted against AB78 last week…
Assemblywoman Michele
Fiore was absent for the vote but assures me she would have voted “No,” as
well.
Surprisingly, three Democrats also voted against the tax
hike…
Bravo.
Disappointingly, seven Taxpayer Protection Pledge signers
voted for AB78 and broke their promise to their constituents and the people of
Nevada (including elk hunters!) to “oppose and vote against any and all efforts
to increase taxes.” They were…
Seriously. What part of “any and all” is so confusing?
The Pledge doesn’t say “any and all efforts to increase
taxes, unless it’s $5 or less.”
And it doesn’t say, “any and all efforts to increase taxes,
unless it’s deceptively and inaccurately called a ‘user fee.’”
And it doesn’t say, “any and all efforts to increase taxes,
unless the elk hunters’ lobbyists falsely claim elk hunters support it.”
How do these Republicans consistently find these loopholes
in the Tax Pledge that those of us who speak and understand plain English don’t
see?
And if these Republicans can’t even say “no” to a teeny-tiny
tax hike, or do the light lifting of finding $170,000 to cut somewhere else in
a $43 million budget, how in the world are they going to find $1 billion to cut
from Gov. Brian Sandoval’s proposed
$7.3 billion budget so that taxes aren’t raised?
Anyway, AB78 now moves to the state Senate. Will any GOP senators stand up and vote “No”
on the elk tax?
Don’t bet the farm on it.
We’ll be lucky if the only Tax Pledge signer in the Senate, Sen. Don Gustavson, votes against it.
And the tax hike train chugs merrily down the tracks…
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