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Senate deadlock downs tax plans Web posted Wednesday,
May 14, 2003 By
Jim Nesbitt | South Carolina
Bureau
AIKEN -The South Carolina Senate's snarled budget
debate, running through a fifth day Wednesday, has killed both a
Republican and a Democratic plan to rescue the state's
deficit-battered public school system.
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| Leaving
members frustrated and facing more deadlock, the Senate chopped down
an ambitious tax package offered by one of Aiken County's most
powerful legislators, Democratic Sen. Tommy Moore.
That drew sharp criticism from another powerful Aiken legislator,
Republican Sen. Greg Ryberg, about the Senate's inability to agree
on a revenue plan. He said he didn't support Mr. Moore's revenue
package but insisted the Senate must take action on a $5.1 billion
spending plan.
"I don't know what the strategy is on either side of the aisle -
Democrat or Republican," he said. "There doesn't seem to be one.
There's no compromise coming forward and we aren't getting anything
to vote on."
Defeated in a 30-15 vote late Wednesday, Mr. Moore's plan, which
included a 2-cent sales tax increase and a $53 million tax burden on
tobacco, would have raised $912.8 million. A huge part of that new
revenue was earmarked for the state's education coffers and would
have helped offset deep budget cuts that threaten up to 6,000
teachers' jobs across the state.
Senate Republicans hostile to any tax increase also killed a plan
by one of their own late Tuesday night. The plan by Sen. David
Thomas, R-Greenville, was much closer to demands by Gov. Mark
Sanford that any sales tax increase be offset by a cut in income
taxes.
Mr. Green's plan called for a 2-cent sales tax increase
accompanied by a property tax reduction on personal vehicles and
residential property.
Mr. Moore's package also included a series of income tax
reductions, including elimination of state income taxes for anybody
making less than $15,000 a year and a reduction of the income tax
rate for small businesses from 7 percent to 5 percent.
Mr. Moore said he didn't lobby hard for his plan, which he
claimed would have given public schools a permanent revenue source.
"It's not about partisan politics," he said. "If you're not
willing to find new revenue for schools, you have to be able to say
what you're going to cut. This is about an opportunity for South
Carolina to say we will not put the full burden of this bad economy
on the backs of school kids and teachers."
Reach Jim Nesbitt at (803) 648-1394 or jim.nesbitt@augustachronicle.com.
--From the Thursday, May 15, 2003 printed
edition of the Augusta Chronicle |
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