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Conservatively Speaking

State Senator Mary Lazich (R-New Berlin) represents parts of four counties: Milwaukee, Waukesha, Racine, and Walworth. Her Senate District 28 includes New Berlin, Franklin, Greendale, Hales Corners, Muskego, Waterford, Big Bend and parts of Greenfield, East Troy, and Mukwonago. Senator Lazich has been in the Legislature for more than a decade. She considers herself a tireless crusader for lower taxes, reduced spending and smaller government.

Governor Doyle + Democrat controlled State Senate + Democrat controlled Assembly – QEO = big property tax increases

By Mary Lazich
Friday, Nov 14 2008, 01:52 PM


Now that Democrats control the governor’s mansion and both houses of the state Legislature, it is a pretty safe bet that there will be a serious effort to repeal the Qualified Economic Offer (QEO) when the Legislature reconvenes in January 2009. In the past, Governor Doyle has said the QEO (opposed by the state teacher’s union that strongly backs Governor Doyle) “isn’t working.” The governor needs a history lesson.

The QEO was instituted by the Legislature in 1993 after angry taxpayers statewide demanded action be taken to stop the tidal wave of huge property tax increases. Since its inception, the QEO has helped keep property taxes from being even higher than they already are.

Under the QEO, the compensation package for teachers including salaries and benefits is to be limited to a 3.8 percent increase. Prior to the implementation of the QEO, settlement packages with teachers were much larger, forcing a tremendous burden on taxpayers.

According to data from the Wisconsin Association of School Boards (WASB) that used figures from the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction, the average total teacher salary and benefit package increase in the years before the QEO was 8 percent during 1984-85, 8.4 percent during 1985-86, 7.7 percent during 1986-87, 7.4 percent during 1987-88, 7.1 percent during 1988-89, 7.3 percent during 1989-90, 7.4 percent during 1990-91 and 6.9 percent during both 1991-92 and 1992-93.

Enough was enough. Taxpayers protested. The Legislature heard and listened, and the QEO was adopted.

In reality, most school districts do not stay within the QEO, agreeing to settlements that surpass the 3.8 percent limit. The WASB reports that the average total package of salaries and benefits was 4.29 percent during 2006-07, 4.25 percent during 2005-06, and 4.31 percent during 2004-05. The percentages are higher than the rate of inflation, and more than likely are greater than increases provided in the private sector.

Watch for state Democrats from the top on down to prioritize the repeal of the QEO at a time when property taxpayers are already overburdened. The nonpartisan Tax Foundation in Washington D.C. writes, “Wisconsin Property Taxes: Among the Nation's Highest: Wisconsin is one of the 37 states that collect property taxes at both the state and local levels. As in most states, local governments collect far more. Wisconsin's localities collected $7,324,843,000 in property taxes in fiscal year 2004, which is the latest year the Census Bureau published state-by-state property tax collections. At the state level, Wisconsin collected $104,158,000 in property taxes during FY 2004, making its combined state/local property taxes $7,429,001,000. That brings its per capita collection to $1,350, which ranks 11th highest nationally.”  Here is the full report

The governor and Democrats in the Legislature will be bound and determined to increase your taxes even higher, and that is exactly what will happen with elimination of the QEO.

The QEO must stay intact. Without the QEO, spending and taxes will rise substantially, more people will leave their homes, more people will leave the state, and more jobs will be lost. We cannot afford to lose the QEO.

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Comments

M. Wilson   

THE REASON FOR MORE TAXES EVERYWHERE

The Democrat controlled State Senate + Democrat controlled Assembly + Doyle and now a parallel to that in U.S. Government was predictable.

Something needs to be said about the GOP insurgency and the insidious number of RINO’s [Republicans In Name Only] within the GOP that has enhanced the democratic party stampede in government these days.

Sen. Lazish’s finger pointing and blame is indicative of the GOP’s failure to perform.  

The following article sums this up nicely:

VOTERS DISTRUST “DILUTED” GOP

Chad Groening and Jody Brown - OneNewsNow - 11/10/2008 8:00:00 AM

A conservative non-profit organization has completed a study that shows the liberal tsunami on Election Day 2008 was not because the country wanted to move radically to the left, but because voters wanted to punish Republicans for abandoning conservative principles.

The American Issues Project (AIP) has released its report known as "Issue Autopsy '08," which came from a survey of swing-state voters in Colorado, Florida, Ohio, and Virginia. AIP president Ed Martin says the survey indicates that despite the disastrous showing by the GOP, the country is not really that liberal. He says the "shellacking" delivered to the Republican Party last week reveals:      The party is "diluted" to the point where the American people do not really know what the GOP stands for anymore.

"The voters -- the people who talked about who they were and what the principles and issues were for them in America -- are still sort of classically center-right people," Martin explains.      "Their principles are smaller government, controlling spending, lower taxes, government competent when it is acting."

Martin admits that it does not make any sense, for example, that voters who support lower taxes would trust the Democratic Party, which has consistently been on the other side of the issues. "I think people can vote for a Democratic presidential candidate thinking that he is going to be all about lower taxes because of the rhetoric and the way things have spun out," says the AIP president. "And in this campaign, voters came to distrust the Republican brand enough that they were able to be persuaded by the other party."

According to the AIP survey, more than THREE-FOURTHS of conservative voters agreed that after taking control of Congress in 1994,      THE GOP FAILED TO LIVE UP TO THE PROMISE IT MADE TO REFORM GOVERNMENT AND CLEAN UP CORRUTION IN WASHINGTON.      

Almost the same percentage agreed with the statement:   "The Republican Party used to stand for keeping government spending under control, but not anymore."

Another 30 percent said the GOP has been incompetent and is not getting the job done; and 28 percent said the party has forgotten its principles and lost its way.

Martin says the American Issues Project will be very active during the 2009 legislative session -- a time when he says "a liberal-dominated Congress and a far-left administration will set their sights on a massive expansion in the role of the federal government, in everything from healthcare and labor law to taxes and spending."

November 18, 2008 9:45 PM

Conservatively Speaking   

One of the top priorities of Governor Doyle and legislative Democrats in the next session in Madison

December 12, 2008 8:24 AM

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