$21.4 Billion

That is the amount of the new budget proposed by Governor Sonny Perdue:

For the budget year beginning July 1, 2008, and ending June 30, 2009, the governor proposes a budget of $21.4 billion, an increase of about $1.2 billion - or 5.6 percent - from the present spending level.

The Governor is purposing:

  • $50 million for loans to local governments for transportation projects
  • $53 million for the state’s trauma network
  • $30 million to buy undeveloped land for environmental protection
  • $17 million in subsidies to provide insurance to employees of small businesses
  • $21 million to improve the state’s mental hospitals
  • $52 million to dredge the Savannah Harbor
  • $25 million to improve the infrastructure of Jekyll Island
  • $14.2 million for VIP, a program to get parents involved in their children’s education

You can view the rest of the Governor’s recommendations here.

We won’t really have much to go on as far as pork goes until the House Appropriations Committee meets.

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2008 Legislative Preview

This is a slightly condensed version of my legislative preview. I’ve tried to focus on issues that concern taxation and spending. You can see the full version of the preview here.

Tomorrow is the first day of the 2008 session of the Georgia General Assembly. This session is the most important that the Republicans faced since taking control.

The Governor will present his budget proposal on Wednesday before the annual State of the State address before a joint session of the legislature. Perdue is supposedly considering some tax cut proposals.

Here is a look at what will be taken up during the session:

GREAT Plan: Speaker Richardson’s tax proposal has been the source of much contention. Local governments, teachers unions and bloggers have all voiced strong opposition to the plan. Meanwhile, property owners have suffered at the hands of local governments with continuous backdoor tax increases through reassessments. Many legislators in the Republican dominated legislature are philosophically against property taxes, but the political ramifications of passing a controversial tax reform bill will too much for many of them to bear. House leadership will push the bill to the floor for a vote. If it passes the House, which isn’t likely though possible, it will not pass the Senate.

Grady and Healthcare: There will be a major push by Democrats to increase state funding of Grady. Recently, opponents of reforming are attempting to demagogue the issue by portraying the creation of a non-profit board as privatization. Democrats are also wanting to tap into other Metro Atlanta counties as a funding source for the hospital due to its regional use.

Republicans leaders refuse to sink more until there is a change in the way the hospital manages its money. Some Republicans are using the issue as part of the continuing crusade against abortion. Such rhetoric will only create more tension as the legislature looks for a bi-partisan solution.

Glenn Richardson publicly floated a $10 fee on car tags in order to fund trauma centers. State Senator David Shafer, who has taken the issue head on will introduce legislation that would require hospital over a certain bed capacity to turn over management to a non-profit corporation. For more information, please visit Reforming Grady.

Both Sonny Perdue and Casey Cagle have proposals to deal with health insurance. Perdue’s plan would subsidize health insurance premiums for small business. Cagle’s proposal would create a clearing house website for consumers to look at different health insurance policies from private insurers, as well as state subsidized plans if the individual is eligible (I am assume this is existing plans, like PeachCare, I’m not sure if Cagle’s plan creates state subsidized plans available for purchase).

Education: The Governor’s education task force has suggested that education funding be more flexible so schools can put money into more urgent areas. The flexibility would be given after academic criteria is met. However, the method that is used to determine school funding is still in place.

Transportation: With a new commissioner in place, it’s likely that the state won’t move on any new transportation methods, such as commuter rail, for at least another year. However, there is some controversy. Gena Abraham was Sonny Perdue’s candidate for the job. State Rep. Vance Smith was the House’s choice. Abraham won by one vote. This could play out next year as House leaders will look to get even with GDOT members that voted against Smith.

Transportation funding is another matter. The Georgia Department of Transportation currently faces a $7.7 billion funding shortfall. There were several proposals in the last legislative session to address the issue. State Rep. Vance Smith proposed a ten year, one cent statewide sales tax that would be used for transportation projects. The proposal would be a $22 billion tax increase, the largest in Georgia history. The proposal would be subject to voter approval. The Governor is not sold on the proposal.

There is also a proposal (introduced last session) by State Rep. Chuck Martin that would allow counties to enter into a regional SPLOST agreement, subject to majority vote approval among the counties participating. Martin’s proposal is the most politically viable.

Vetoes: The legislature has a list of bills that could be considered for a veto override. Rumors have been flying as far as what that bill(s) will be. HB 91, sponsored by State Rep. Jill Chambers, is a strong candidate. HB 91 requires the executive branch (the Governor) to provide an annual report to the legislature contracts of $50,000 or more. It also requires a “list of any employment or consultant contracts, whether or not in writing, under which the employee or consultant is to be compensated more than $20,000.00.”

The House could also target Perdue’s veto of a $120 million property tax break from the 2007 supplemental budget. The House threatened to override (and did, but that is another story), the Senate leaders have refused to act.

There has also been talk of overriding some of Perdue’s vetoes of earmarks, including the Golf Hall of Fame.

You can stream each day of the session at this link, which also has video of the various committee meeting that took place in the months after the 2007 until just recently (including the Ways & Means hearings on the GREAT Plan).

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Merry Christmas

Merry Christmas from Georgia Porkbusters!

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Channel 2 Investigates

WSB-TV is airing the story on pork and government waste again tonight at 8pm (like…15 minutes) for a new show called Channel 2 Investigates.

I case you missed it the first time, you can watch it here.

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GA Porkbusters Round-up

Here is some reaction across the blogosphere to the WSB piece on government waste and Georgia Porkbusters

- PJNet
- Drifting Through the Grift
- The Spacey Gracey Review
- RedState
- What Is Goin’ On
- Peach Pundit
- Club for Growth
- National Journal

I also received a very positive e-mail from US Senate candidate Josh Lanier.

All in all…it seems that the response was positive, let’s just hope it turns into something when appropriators start working on the FY 2009 budget.

[UPDATE - 5:26pm] I just got this from Senator Tom Coburn’s office:

Excellent work. You are an American hero! We need people in every state doing exactly what you’re doing in Georgia. Keep up the great work.

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VIDEO: Georgia Porkbusters on TV

Back in September, WSB-TV shot an interview with me for a segment on government waste, corporate welfare and government spending…and Georgia Porkbusters. I got word last week that the segment will be featured on Thursday, November 8th at 6pm.

[UPDATE] The word on the street is that WSB is already running previews of the story for tonight.

[UPDATE #2] Here is the video…

Tom Schatz from Citizens Against Government Waste was also interviewed for the segment.

Orginally posted on November 5, 2007.

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Senate RePORK

The Club for Growth has release the Senate RePORK card, which measures how individual Senators vote on anti-pork amendments.

Saxby Chambliss voted for 14 our of the 15 (93%) anti-pork amendments brought to the Senate floor, putting him near the top of the list. Johnny Iskason voted for 11 out of 14.

The Club notes:

Only two amendments were successful. The most popular amendment was offered by Senator DeMint to bar the use of funds appropriated for spinach growers in the Iraq Supplemental Bill (Roll Call #123, 03/29/07); it passed 97-0. The other amendment was offered by Senator Coburn to eliminate $1 million for a museum dedicated to the Woodstock Festival (Roll Call #377, 10/18/07); it passed 52-42.

Did you know that it was a responsibility of the taxpayers and the federal government to provide sand on the beaches on San Diego and to give Democrats and Republicans $100 million for their conventions? I can’t see to find important functions of government anywhere in Article 1, Section 8 of the United States Constitution.

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Dan Lakly - Friend of the Taxpayer

This is sad news:

Veteran Fayette County state Rep. Dan Lakly died this morning of a massive heart attack, state officials said.

Lakly, 65, a Peachtree City Republican, was chairman of the House Information and Audits Committee. He was known as a fiscal conservative who frequently questioned state spending practices. He was also willing to be on the losing side of one-sided votes, such as in 2005 when he opposed popular legislation outlawing smoking in most enclosed work sites and public places. He compared the banning to Nazi Germany.

Lakly, a Yugoslavian immigrant’s son, served on the Peachtree City council in the 1980s, then from 1989 to 1992 on the Fayette County Board of Commissioners.

He was elected to a seat in the General Assembly in 1992 when Republicans were a minority in the House. He was beaten in the Republican primary in 1998 by Kathy Cox, now the state’s school superintendent, when he sought re-election that year. Six years later he made a comeback, winning a Fayette County seat in the House just in time for his GOP to take over the chamber.

Legislative staffers said he apparently fell and hurt his wrist over the weekend and had surgery. They said he was expected to be released from the hospital this morning.

Like the article says, he was a staunch fiscal conservative, and even sponsored an amendment to scrap “Go Fish” spending out of the FY 2008 appropriations bill.

Keep Rep. Lakly’s family in your thoughts and prayers.

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Don’t Mess With Texas

The State of Texas is making open government a priority:

Texas this month joined a handful of states and the federal government in posting detailed financial information on the Internet. Anyone with strong eyeballs and an investigative spirit now can search for pork or find out if their neighbor’s business sells widgets to the state.

The “Where The Money Goes” feature on the comptroller’s Web site — at www.window.state.tx.us — is the result of legislation by a group of thirtysomething, tech-savvy lawmakers.

Rep. Mark Strama, D-Austin, a technology consultant who founded the first company to register voters online, wrote the bill that required the online database.

He modeled it after federal legislation passed last year. Texas joins Kansas, Minnesota, Oklahoma, Hawaii and Missouri in setting up searchable spending sites.

State Rep. Jill Chambers proposed similar legislation that would have applied to the executive branch of state government, it was vetoed by Sonny Perdue.

And…despite the hard time we give Glenn Richardson, he is promising to implement zero-based budgeting next year and he should be given credit for that.

If you ever get a chance to read the state budget in each section you will see one word…”continuation.” The legislature renews a budget each year with really knowing what they are spending it on. Even the Speaker acknowledges that “[he doesn’t] know what we’re going to find.”

Another thing the legislature should do is require the legislator asking for a Local Assistance Grant to put his name next to the earmark in order to provide some sort of transparency and open government to the citizens of this state.

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Taxpayer funded golf courses

Georgia’s support of golf doesn’t stop at the Golf Hall of Fame:

Golfers pay about $40 to play at Hard Labor Creek, a state park about an hour east of Atlanta. Taxpayers chip in another $5 per round at the money-losing golf course.

That’s a bargain compared with a round of golf at Brazzell’s Creek in Reidsville. Taxpayers subsidize players at the South Georgia course to the tune of $29 per round. And the little-used golf course is undergoing a $3 million upgrade, trading nine holes for 18, paid for by, yup, taxpayers.

Georgia’s seven state-run golf courses lost $1 million in fiscal year 2006. Since 2002, losses have averaged $941,000 a year.

“It’s pretty ridiculous, isn’t it?” said former state Sen. Robert Lamutt, an east Cobb Republican who railed against golf course spending while serving in the General Assembly. “Is that government’s job? To take [tax money] from me, by force of law, to give to somebody down in South Georgia so they can have a golf course?”

Of course supporters of this type of pork spending say it’s “economic development” and one Republican State Senator defends it:

Supporters say the links serve as economic development tools that attract duffers to rural, economically stunted areas of the state. They note that state parks and historic sites are also subsidized by taxpayers. And, they add, all Georgians deserve the same quality-of-life amenities available to their more urbanized brethren.

“A decision has been made that recreation is a thing of merit for tax dollars,” said Sen. Jack Hill, the Reidsville Republican whose district includes Brazzell’s Creek. Or “we can let the marketplace provide all recreation and we can have private state parks. You can’t separate state parks and golf courses, in my mind.”

Surprise…Sen. Jack Hill is Chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee. Hill was originally elected as a Democrat in 1990. He switched parties a few years ago when it was no longer politically convenient to be a Democrat.

Why are taxpayers subsiding golf courses? The private sector can likely run it more efficiently and for a profit and if the course goes under, there wasn’t a market for it. That doesn’t give the state an excuse to step in. It means that the golf lovers of that area will have to find somewhere else to play.

And…Alan Essig, a left-leaning economist with the Georgia Budget and Policy Institute (of course they are labeled as “nonpartisan” article, nothing could be further from the truth), who seems to believe that Georgians aren’t already overtaxed and that our government doesn’t spend enough money as it is, believes that there is “nothing fundamentally wrong with having publicly funded parks or golf courses.” Alan Essig has never seen a spending program that he didn’t believe was “fundamentally wrong.” Essig represents everything that is wrong with the current view of government.

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