Sanford calls for
more competitive S.C. in third State of the State
speech
JENNIFER HOLLAND Associated Press
COLUMBIA, S.C. - Gov. Mark Sanford reinforced
his vision to make South Carolina more competitive in a global
economy in his third State of the State address on Wednesday.
The Republican talked about the same themes he's discussed in his
past two speeches, calling for a reduced income tax, more school
choice for parents, a restructured government and getting the
state's financial house in order.
"I would ask that we travel that road less traveled in politics
and make real reforms and real changes to the way things have been
done for too long in many cases in our state," Sanford said.
Sanford said many forces outside the state, including the war in
Iraq, the stock market and the national economy all affect the well
being of South Carolinians.
He said the state's education system needs to be improved and the
state's legal system needs to be reformed to welcome more
businesses.
"If you send someone out into the 21st century without a
first-rate education, you are doing literally the equivalent of
sending a soldier out into war without a gun," Sanford said.
But Sen. John Land, D-Manning, found flaws in the Sanford's
speech, saying the governor's spending plan hurts higher
education.
"He's cut the colleges in his budget," Land said.
Sanford said his plan to reduce the state's income tax would help
small businesses thrive and create jobs and wealth in the state.
Legislation moving through the House would lower the state's top
income tax rate to 4.75 percent from 7 percent over 10 years.
"It is a time for choosing between a tax system that holds us
back and a tax system, frankly, that would allow us to better
compete with the rest of the country and frankly, the rest of the
world," Sanford said.
The governor also reached out to lawmakers for their commitment
to make changes.
"I do know that if we work together - not as Republicans and
Democrats, but as South Carolinians - we can make more than just a
difference in the just the budget and the economy, but frankly in
peoples lives," he said.
After two years of sometimes icy relations with the governor,
leaders of the GOP-controlled Legislature said they liked what they
heard.
"The agenda we've announced really mirrors the agenda he's
announced and vice versa, so there's a lot of common ground," said
House Speaker David Wilkins, R-Greenville.
"It's a very ambitious vision," said Senate Finance Committee
Chairman Hugh Leatherman.
House Minority Leader Harry Ott, D-St. Matthews, said he was
disappointed the governor focused on the state's poor economy and
then discussed programs that would need more funding, including the
income tax reduction proposal.
"I was disappointed he spent no time whatsoever talking about
property tax relief," Ott said. "Folks back home are demanding that
we acknowledge that we need some property tax relief."
Sanford said market-driven reforms in public education would pick
up where politics fall short. He has proposed a tax credit for
parents who send their children to private schools.
He raised the ire of the state's education chief when he asked if
anyone could "imagine tears of joy being shed because you got into
the existing public school in Allendale or Marion" counties, which
rank at the bottom of most education ratings.
"That was a cheap shot," said Democratic State Education
Superintendent Inez Tenenbaum.
She said Sanford should be working to build cooperation to
improve public schools. "There is no accountability in his tax
credit plan."
The governor called for government restructuring and urged
lawmakers to let voters decide in a referendum.
Sanford also said he wanted to tweak the state's drunken driving
law, but provided no specifics.
Criticism of that law is odd, given Sanford's involvement to make
the legal drunken-driving limit parallel the federal limit of .08
percent, Democrats said.
"He sat at the conference table when that DUI bill was hammered
out," Land said.
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Associated Press writer Jim Davenport in Columbia contributed to
this
report. |