Loaded, Leading
Gordon Smith and the Klamath Fish Kill
The Smearing of Betsy Johnson


Mesothelioma


Learn more about mesothelioma cancer and other asbestos-related diseases.

NiewertAward NiewertAward


Poll
Should the Lieberman Health Care Bill Be Killed?
Yes
No
Wait and See
Not Sure

Results

LoadedO Blogger Archives
Loaded Orygun

Click here to find our archives from February 2006 through July 14, 2007

Search




Advanced Search


Send email to LoadedO!
Follow LoadedO on Twitter!
Find your favorite Trail Blazers memorabilia including jerseys and apparel

Measure 66

Tax Fairness Opponents Get Double-Blow from Courts on Ballot Titles

by: torridjoe

Thu Nov 19, 2009 at 18:07:37 PM PST

It's not been a good week for those who are trying to build opposition to the tax fairness bills passed in the Leg last year and now referred to January's ballot. In two separate rulings at both the lowest and highest levels of Oregon's court system, teabagging plaintiffs who had sued for a change in the ballot titles were dealt strong rebukes--all but ensuring that the original (or even improved) titles will remain intact. 

Our friends at Yes For Oregon have the details on both. First, their statement on last week's OR Supremes ruling {google doc}, which not only rejected plaintiffs' arguments about the titles, but to my mind actually improved them in a way that is not only more accurate but a boon for M66/67 proponents:

In short, the Court ruled today that the opponents challenge was without merit. The core of the argument made by the opponents -- -- Oregonians against job killing taxes -- -- was that voters should be made aware that the revenue from measures 66 and 67 will be spent to protect education, healthcare, and public safety.

The Court rejected that argument for both measures, changing only the phrase "maintains funds currently budgeted for education, healthcare, public safety, other services" to "provides funds currently budgeted for education, healthcare, public safety, other services."

The court also ordered a modification in the "Result of a No" statement on both measures. "Reduces funding currently budgeted for education, healthcare, public safety, other services by estimated $472 million" is now "leaves amount currently budgeted for education healthcare, public safety, other services underfunded by estimated $472 million."

The Vote Yes for Oregon coalition agrees that this language is a more clear and accurate way of describing to voters what's at stake in January. [emph orig]

As it appears the coalition believes, the change from "reduces funding" to "leaves underfunded" is not only closer to the real truth of the matter, it better highlights the consequence--UNDERFUNDING. Reducing funding is one thing, and can sound like a prudent savings, but nobody should think leaving something "underfunded" is a good thing. To put it another way, would you like your caloric intake reduced, or would you prefer to take in fewer calories than you need?

And yesterday, a circuit court judge in Marion County refused to place an injunction on the ballot title process, essentially clearing the decks for moving forward on the matter. In the aftermath the coalition's Scott Moore had some snark to throw down:

"The corporate lobbyists had spent weeks misrepresenting the ballot titles in the process, and the courts have now thrown out all of their arguments" says Scott Moore, spokesperson for the Vote Yes for Oregon Coalition. "It's too bad there isn't a process that also allows the Supreme Court to throw out their committee name -- -- Oregonians Against Job-Killing Taxes -- -- for misrepresenting the impact of the measures."

Moore has a valid point of course, but it's hard to avoid the sense that they're gloating a little bit over the epic fail of the plaintiffs. That's usually how these kinds of things go when one side really doesn't have much of a leg to stand on, but throws whatever it can at the wall anyway. So I don't blame 'em for letting a little giddiness slip.

Feeling legalo-wonky? The two OSC decisions are readable in their entirety here {pdf}, and also here {pdf}(there were two rulings, one for each Measure.) The Marion County decision can be found in this Google Doc.

Discuss :: (0 Comments)

Live Blog with OLCV's Isaacs on M66/67, NOW!

by: torridjoe

Thu Nov 19, 2009 at 16:12:04 PM PST

A quickie: right now (4pm) the new head of the Oregon League of Conservation Voters, Jon Isaacs--late of the victorious Merkley for Senate campaign--is conducting a live blog on Measures 66 and 67. Why would an environmental advocacy concern take the time to talk about tax fairness? Isaacs has already responded:


These measures will preserve our environment for future generations by preserving funding for vital environmental programs -


-clean air monitoring, clean water protection, investments in renewable energy, reducing pollution.


all of these things require revenue and if measures 66 & 67 fail, they will face devastating cuts.


Its really that simple.

They've got a fair number of questions apparently set up for Isaacs to go through, and you can email toby-at-olcv-dot-org to submit your own question. Head on over! And if you still need more convincing that the Leg did the right thing, OCPP's Chuck Sheketoff uses the state's December Revenue report to explain why.

Discuss :: (0 Comments)

Measures 66/67, Explained in Pictures for Teabaggers

by: torridjoe

Tue Nov 03, 2009 at 14:31:17 PM PST

Today's Election Day across the country, such as it is in Oregon with only local races on the ballots in-state. But there's another one coming up in January that you may not be thinking about, and it's an important one--the key question will be an attempt at repeal of the tax fairness measures established by the Legislature last session. The astroturf Freedomworks affiliate in Oregon, strongly assisted by the Oregon Republican Party, secured more than enough signatures to place the question on the ballot, and so here we go playing Russian roulette with basic services again. 
 
Most ballot questions are at least a little convoluted in their makeup, written as they are in legislative legalese and designed to explain something typically very complex in a few vague, catch-all phrases. Make it a ballot item about taxes, however, and the confusion doubles. Who pays what, and how much? Of course, it doesn't help when proponents of repeal have no compunction about misleading and flatly lying on the specifics.
 
Which makes the effort by the Oregon Center for Public Policy welcome indeed:
Which businesses are going to be paying more taxes under Measure 67, and which won’t? Which Oregonians will pay more and which Oregonians will get a tax cut on their personal income taxes under Measure 66?

Oregonians now have an easy way to answer those questions with today’s release of two flowcharts by the Oregon Center for Public Policy.

“The flowcharts are designed to bring clarity to the debate over Measures 66 and 67,” said OCPP executive director Chuck Sheketoff. “We want to help the public and the media understand how the two measures work.”

Sheketoff said the impetus for the charts was “widespread confusion about who will be paying more taxes, and how much they will pay.” He attributed the confusion to an opposition campaign that is “banking on fear and misinformed voters to beat the odds.”

Those odds, according to Sheketoff, are based on the fact that “people, not corporations, vote.” About 3 out of 100 taxpayers will see their taxes increase while about 270,000 of Oregon’s 1.5 million taxpayers will have a tax cut under Measure 66, according to an analysis by economists in the legislature’s revenue office.

“Our flowcharts will break through the campaign noise and dispel the fear created by the opposition,” said Sheketoff.

The press release links to the two pdfs showing the flowchart for each measure, but I've got a call in to OCPP in order to get the image versions that I can embed right into the page here. I'll add those when I get them. Edit--how about here and now?

 

Also, for a more in-depth review of what M66/M67 do and why, they've got that explanation as well.

No excuses now, it's easy! Unemployed? You'll likely GET money. One of the vast majority of Oregonians who make less than $125K by themselves, or $250 in their household? Congratulations, you pay nothing extra and get a host of urgently needed basic services in return. Make more than that? Your taxes will indeed go up, but by 2% on just the marginal amount--that is, just the part OVER 125/250K. Are you a corporation? The numbers are different, but the same principle applies--those who can most afford it are the ones taking on the burden (and it finally puts an end to the ridiculous $10 tax bill for corporations privileged to operate in Oregon).

There are just over two months to make sure folks are aware of the election, the ballot measures at hand, and what they mean. But you can distill it into one simple phrase, which I carved into a pumpkin this weekend:

 

Discuss :: (0 Comments)

Return to LO home...!


RSS Feed: http://www.loadedorygun.net/rss/rss2.xml
Menu

Make a New Account

Username:

Password:



Forget your username or password?


Change.org|Start Petition

Put your message up top!


Blog ads are good karma...

Thanks for Saving Soapblox! (and by extension, LO!)


Loaded Links
Register to Vote: Rock the Vote, powered by Working Assets Wireless

Powered by: SoapBlox