Gov. Rick Perry is at it again with his ideas of not
touching the Rainy day Fund and refusing to increase taxes to help out the budget crisis. On Monday April 16th Governor Rick Perry announced his five
part Texas Budget Compact to lawmakers. Gov. Rick Perry said, “It is imperative
we remain committed to the sound conservative values that have made Texas the
prosperous state it is today, and take steps to advance us even further.” The
Texas Budget Compact is composed of five very conservative principles: practice
truth in budgeting, supporting a constitutional limit of spending to the growth
of population and inflation, oppose any new taxes or tax increases, preserve a
strong Rainy Day Fund, and cut unnecessary and duplicative government program
and agencies. Perry said this “will lead to a stronger Texas.”
Conservatives
took this very well. Conservative groups like Texans for Fiscal Responsibility
and Americans for Prosperity are almost ecstatic about the Governors proposal.
AFP director Peggy Venable said, “The most important promise in this compact is
that it limits government growth to the growth of population and inflation, and
that’s just good common sense."
I think basically Perry’s proposal is summarizing that he wishes
to continue budget cuts in schools and cut even more government programs that
help low income families. Texas Democratic Party Chair, Boyd Richie said about
the proposal "Perry is calling on his fellow Republicans to commit to
permanently underfunding public education and human services. He’s leading
Texas into a race for the bottom that jeopardizes the future of both our
children and our parents,"
Texas
schools are already suffering from the budget cuts and with a proposal like
this there is almost no hope for public education. Rita Haecker, president of
the Texas State Teachers Association said, "Instead
of sitting on billions of taxpayer dollars left idling in the Rainy Day Fund,
which is flush and growing, the governor and the legislature should be using
part of that money to preserve and ensure a strong future for the public
schools.”
So just who exactly will be benefiting from this Budget Compact?
Certainly not children, parents, schools, health care professionals, seniors,
and low-income families. So how will this be helping our future? During a
statement Senator Kirk Watson said about Perry that "Perhaps he hasn't
listened to the teachers, parents and children who've suffered as a result of
bad budget practices and the perpetual lack of budget transparency. Or he
hasn't heard from the health care professionals across Texas who are struggling
under this budget, or the seniors, children and low-income Texans who were
targeted by it," said Watson.
I believe that this proposal will hurt more
people than help them. There are so many Texans out there who can’t afford
healthcare and rely on these programs that Perry is planning to cut.
There are overcrowded classrooms, teachers loosing there jobs, and now there’s
going to be kids who will lose health services because and Gov. Perry still
doesn’t want to touch the rainy day fund? And Perry says that this plan will
help the future of Texas?
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