Legislature: focus on tax cuts, schools

Published: Sunday, Jan. 20, 2008 12:04 a.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
In beautifully remodeled chambers, new offices and with a sense that they are back where they belong, Utah's 104 part-time legislators open their 2008 Legislature Monday morning in the Utah State Capitol.

And legislative leaders hope it will also be the last time they convene on Martin Luther King Jr.'s holiday — ending the annual debate about legislative "insensitivity," as well, since the conflict is rooted in the state's constitution.

For the past three years, legislators and top state elected leaders have been in temporary digs in two office buildings behind the Capitol, which underwent a $250 million earthquake retrofitting and remodeling, reopening just weeks ago.

And a state constitutional amendment will go before voters in November, seeking to officially change the first day of each Legislature to miss the holiday honoring the slain civil rights leader.

Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr. and GOP and Democratic leaders alike believe this 45-day general session will bring increased spending for Utah's schoolchildren and teachers, a renewed effort to provide affordable health insurance to Utah's uninsured, the adoption of a nearly $13 billion budget, debates on hundreds of proposed new laws, and another round of tax cuts.

Story continues below

This is also an election year for Huntsman, all 75 House members and half of the 29-member Senate. So local and statewide politics will be considered in Capitol hallways, too. All candidates must file for office just two weeks after lawmakers adjourn March 5, as Huntsman ponders whether to sign or veto 300 or so new laws.

Unknown to many

While the 104 egos in the House and Senate may find it hard to believe, a new Deseret Morning News/KSL-TV poll shows that 60 percent of Utahns can't name their representative or senator. Only 14 percent said they can name both of their legislators, found pollster Dan Jones & Associates.

Even legislative leaders whose names are often in the media labor in obscurity.

"My own poll of my constituents found that most didn't recognize my name," said House Speaker Greg Curtis, R-Sandy, who will lead his two-thirds GOP majority in the House for the fourth straight year.

Jones, whose wife and polling partner is Sen. Pat Jones, D-Holladay, also found that most Utahns — 51 percent — do not want another tax cut from lawmakers this year. Forty-one percent of Utahns said they want a tax cut.

Huntsman did not suggest a tax cut in his recommended 2008-2009 budget released last month, saying that after $400 million in tax cuts over the past three years, 2008 was time to catch up on some needy programs.

"I'm not thinking in terms of a tax cut or I would have put it in the budget," Huntsman said. But if a tax cut "hits my table" in the form of bills "we will certainly take a look at it on the property tax side" because many Utahns are "feeling the pinch" of higher home property taxes following reappraisal in several large counties.

Recent comments

I will never vote for John Valentine again even though I am a...

Anonymous | Jan. 25, 2008 at 7:41 p.m.

I will not vote for any legislator that proposes a tax cut this year!...

Anonymous | Jan. 21, 2008 at 3:41 a.m.

No More Taxes. We need heavy tax cuts.
No More Illegal Aliens....

Lauren C. | Jan. 20, 2008 at 9:25 p.m.

Image

2008 is an election year for Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr. and most legislators.

previousnext

Latest comments

See ya later Paul. Have fun in Portland making way too much money.

wow! i cant believe this! he was a great man and no one expected this. he...

Just another example of the skewed world of professional sports...true...

LDS seminary principal is arrested in sexual abuse

wow!! he lied to so many!!!!!!

I forgot what I was going to say. Let's go ride bikes!

I have had it up to here......next time I am voting for Prop Hate!

Everyone here blames the victim over the teacher in these cases...regardless...

"friend says..." dang typos.

LDS institutions will not crack down more on this issue...they tend to...

In economic bad times if your neighbor is out of a job, it's a recession. If...

Advertisements