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18.4.12

Debased rhetoric again appears to try derailing reform

As the debate over changes to the Louisiana State Employees Retirement System, one particular red herring has come up in an attempt to stymie this legislation and avoid argument over the merits of an increased contribution of three percent employees would have to make. Unfortunately, it gained credence because of political reasons, and now must be batted away as a distraction from the real issues.

Some opponents to the increase claim that it is a “tax” and point to a ruling made last year by then-Speaker Jim Tucker concerning a bill that asked for the same increase that it was a “fee” or “tax,” in order to rule whether it needed just a majority or two-thirds vote to advance. No doubt a similar choice looms on the horizon for current Speaker Chuck Kleckley, with two other considerations also thus in the balance: this being an even-numbered-year sessions, tax increases are prohibited, and in any year they cannot originate in the Senate, as the current bill is.

It was a politically-motivated decision for the term-limited Tucker then had his eye on higher office, so seeming to cut off any increase might win him favors among state employees who voted (apparently not enough, as he subsequently lost a bid for secretary of state). As it was, the legal reasoning behind his opinion was exceptionally shoddy.

Besides the argumentation that decimated Tucker’s conclusion, the fact remains that federal jurisprudence specifically defines a Louisiana state government employee in LASERS as receiving deferred compensation, deductible when contributed but taxable when distributed as income, which is standard treatment for qualifying plans under the Internal Revenue Code. Put simply, you only can tax income even if deferred, not tax a tax itself, nor can an amount be both a tax and tax deduction simultaneously. And in any event, Tucker also then noted he would not consider the hike either a tax or fee if the additional money raised was put into funding the system, as the current legislation does.

Regrettably, this tendency for knee-jerk opponents of bill backer Gov. Bobby Jindal to try to rally against this and any bill that affects state government’s revenue stream has become more common, at witnessed by intellectually-deficient claims that tuition increases at state universities, for example, are “tax increases.” This bad trend impoverishes debate, and, on this issue, the public is served better by focusing on the merits of whether the generous nature of compensation for state employees generally means they should pay more of their share of their future benefits, rather than get hung up on sorting through dishonesty in term definition.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hey, Doc!

Where'd you get your law degree? Bobby Jindal give it to you for kissing his ass.

Anonymous said...

Can you furnish your readers any instance in modern times where an involuntary, mandatory payroll deduction from salary, whether called a contribution, deferred compensation payment, or a tax, was increased FORTY PERCENT at one time? And, in a discriminatory fashion?

It is outrageous, no matter the debate or intellectual considerations.

Especially when the chosen employees it is being levied on had nothing to do with the debt attempting to be addressed.

Anonymous said...

How about "intellectual honesty"?

Does that ever get expressed in this blog?

The Governor's Deputy Chief of Staff, that left her prior post in shambles, keeps testifying that the Systems are broke and that they are unsustainable (one of their favorite terms).

At the same time, her boss, the Scorecard, is spending tens of thousands of dollars to buy additional retirment credit in the two largest systems.

Broke, huh, Kristy Nichols? Unsustainable, huh, Gofer? You two need to talk to the Governor and tell him he is spending his money very unwisely.

How about a little intellectual honesty? or, perhaps, just a little simple honesty?

Anonymous said...

Yeah, did you hear Ms. Nichols testify(?) that the Governor intended all along to be included in the bill to raise the retirement contributions by 40%?

Some one forgot to tell that to the Governor, his press person and Prof. Sadow!