Tuesday, June 03, 2008

June 3, 2008 On Election Eve, Tribune Front Page Banner Headline Mentions Sales Tax Referendum

Sales tax election tomorrow

That was last night's headline in the Tribune. The report is that 577 people voted early.

During this election, the Tribune has carefully avoided the front-page infomercials that were the core of its "news" reporting during the failed February 5 countywide sales tax increase referendum.

Instead the promotion of this citywide sales tax increase referendum has been by the City with promotional letters sent out at taxpayer expense with the specific request that the recipient vote YES on the sales tax increase. [I may have missed it, but I don't remember the Tribune reporting that these letters went out--even though the Tribune, its owner-publisher, and most staff and reporters would have received these official letters.]

The City plans to slide a permanent sales tax increase in with the offer of a temporary 15-cent property tax increase.

Then the plan is for the county to come back and try to pass the sales tax increase in the county.

If at first you don't succeed (countywide), try, try again (citywide and then county only).

The fall back plan (city vote, then county) began as soon as the countywide referendum failed.

That's likely why the City, despite early talk of supporting the schools, has NOT agreed to provide any of its extra $1 million in projected sales tax money to the schools. That leaves it open for the county to call for another referendum in the fall and say we need to pass a sales tax increase in the county so we can swipe the extra $1 million back from the City "for the children."

The City will say fine and, boom, the permanent sales tax increase is in countywide despite the initial resistance of those pesky voters.

And then the good old boys can resume the practices of administrative overstaffing, hiring relatives, making interest-only payments on debt, overspending, $100 M city wish lists, and $50M? $70M? county building programs.

Conflicts of interest, no-bid contracts, nepotism, special raises to select workers, and take-home vehicles and lots of late model chrome for the elite can continue!

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