By Tim Smith STAFF WRITER tcsmith@greenvillenews.com
COLUMBIA -- House lawmakers Wednesday voted to suspend the
state's 16.75-cent gas tax from October through December, hours
after Gov. Mark Sanford and House members proposed a plan to lift
the tax at pumps this summer.
The vote came amid skepticism about whether drivers will see 16
cents a gallon in relief.
The House changed the time period from summer to late fall,
saying it will benefit state residents more than tourists who flock
to the beaches.
The measure, tucked inside the House budget, must be approved by
the Senate, where Democrats attacked it Wednesday as a political
"gimmick" and Republican leaders reacted with wariness.
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House members voted to require that gas prices be cut 16.75 cents
a gallon during the three-month period after some realized the
initial proposal only lifted the gas tax to distributors.
But lawmakers said even with that provision, gas companies can
raise prices before October and then lower them to comply with the
law.
Others questioned the math. While Sanford's staff estimated it
would cost $134 million, House members said the cost would be closer
to $100 million, which would be paid for through new budget
surpluses.
Harry Ott, leader of the House Democrats, lectured his colleagues
for rushing into the plan and misplacing their priorities.
He said the money should have gone for real needs, including
health care for poor children, rural development, road improvements
and kindergarten for 4-year-olds.
The state Department of Transportation, which has piled up more
than $1 billion in construction and maintenance backlogs, isn't to
be hurt by the legislation, lawmakers said.
But several wondered why their colleagues were rushing to cut the
gas tax but not to improve the state's infrastructure.
Rep. Rubin Rivers, a Jasper County Democrat, said he could
already hear the calls from constituents: "You mean you've got $100
million lying around and you're not fixing our roads?"
Sanford, surrounded by House GOP members and even some Democrats,
proposed the gas-tax cut earlier Wednesday, saying the state had
enjoyed almost $1 billion of new revenue this year.
"Whether it's easing the pain at the pump on the way to work or
on the way to the Grand Strand for summer vacation, this tax relief
is something that would make a real impact on South Carolinians'
lives and pocketbooks," Sanford said.
The governor's staff projected the plan could save each family in
the state about $63.
House Speaker Bobby Harrell said soon-to-be-released revenue
projections would show the state can afford to pay for property tax
relief and the suspension of gas taxes for three months.
Senate President Pro Tem Glenn McConnell said he "wouldn't close
the door to it," adding, "If we're looking at how to benefit the
taxpayer, the first place is to retire bonds or use the surplus for
things we would otherwise borrow money for."
Sen. Brad Hutto of Orangeburg, speaking for the Senate Democratic
Caucus, accused Sanford of engaging in "election-year pandering."
Hutto said that with little more than a month before the
Republican primary, "Sanford finally realizes regular South
Carolinians are hurting because of inflated gas prices. His timing
is extremely suspicious. Election-year gimmicks like this cannot
cover the fact that four years of Mark Sanford have been a disaster
for South Carolina."
The House considered other options, including a proposal by Rep.
Rex Rice of Easley to offer $100 refundable tax credits to every tax
filer. That proposal was defeated 58-38.
Rep. Doug Jennings criticized his colleagues for approving a
"little political gimmickry" that would amount to a tank and a half
worth of gas on the same day it limited funding for 4-year-old
kindergarten to "six measly million dollars."
The governor said he was making his proposal because of the lack
of tax relief provided this year by the Senate. He denied that his
plan was influenced by politics or elections.
Sanford and House members are up for re-election this year.
The campaign of Oscar Lovelace, Sanford's challenger in the June
13 primary, called the plan "an election-eve gimmick."
Rod Shealy, the Prosperity physician's strategist, questioned why
Sanford didn't back "the same idea" when some lawmakers proposed it
weeks ago.
Karen Gutmann, press secretary for state Sen. Tommy Moore of
Clearwater, a candidate for the Democratic nomination for governor,
chided Sanford.
"Last fall, South Carolinians begged Mark Sanford for help after
devastating hurricanes caused gas prices to skyrocket. Sanford
declined, citing his faith in market forces.
"It seems market forces can't be trusted so much in an election
year," she said.
Joe Werner, spokesman for Democratic gubernatorial candidate
Frank Willis, said Sanford, having tried to "buy the election in
January" with a failed plan for a $400 income tax rebate, now "is
going back to the bag of incumbent tricks."
"Our schools are underfunded. Our unemployment rate is fourth
highest in the nation, and Mark Sanford is more worried about
election-year pandering than actually putting our state back to
work." |