From Deseret News archives:
Expect a lively debate over Utah tax cut
State tax revenues hit an all-time high surplus in June, topping $350 million in the state's two main funds.
The Republican-dominated Legislature in February adopted a fiscal year 2006-07 budget that grew by more than 17 percent much higher than population and inflation.
Just as the GOP-controlled Congress is overseeing record federal budget deficits, in Utah supposedly conservative Republican legislators are spending like . . . well . . . drunken sailors, as one House Republican put it.
But even as Utah conservatives are talking about controlling state government spending, citizens are not happy that lawmakers didn't fully fund human service programs like emergency dental care for the poor and disabled or the children's health insurance plan.
Up and down the Wasatch Front, drivers are angry as they sit in seemingly endless traffic jams.
And St. George and Cedar City residents are approaching water shortages, hopeful for funding for a $300 million pipeline from Lake Powell.
The Utah Tax Commission says in fiscal 2006 the state took in $2.28 billion in personal income taxes, a whopping $162 million more than estimated. Income taxes grew by nearly 18 percent from June to June, when state economists guessed only a 9.6 percent growth rate.
By law, all personal and corporate income taxes go to higher and public education. With a teacher shortage upon us and more than 100,000 new students coming into public schools over the next decade, one would think that such tax growth would be welcomed.
And of course it is.
The tough political question, however, is what to do with all this money.
It's tough for so-called fiscal conservative legislators to just keep spending.
Record state tax surpluses should lead to record state tax cuts, says Rep. Greg Hughes, leader of the Conservative Caucus within the Utah House's 56-strong Republican majority.
Hughes sponsored a bill several years ago that reworked the state's spending limitation law first enacted 20 years ago when then-Gov. Norm Bangerter faced a tax revolt after pushing through the largest tax hikes in Utah's history to adequately fund education.
Hughes' new law exempts public education and transportation from any spending limit caps.
But it does limit growth in the state's general fund, made up mainly of sales taxes that pay for most non-education state spending.
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