Machinations and fortune are combining to make the ultimate disposition – and therefore the fate of a balanced fiscal year 2014 budget for Louisiana – of the latest version of state tax amnesty more and more interesting, and political.
Turns out that the nonprofit (if funded
by both politically neutral and leftist sources) news source The Lens got hold of a memo from state Rep. Joel Robideaux
that described past tactics in dealing with amnesty money. The first phase of
this version has been completed with a goal of securing $200 million that
appears to have been exceeded. Each of the next two fiscal years also
features smaller, less-generous versions to delinquent taxpayers.
In it, Robideuax lays out a strategy
of funds transfers that he said for fiscal year 2010 laundered amnesty dollars
for use in the operating budget. Any money that arrives in excess of forecasts
by the Revenue Estimating Conference, which explicitly excludes amnesty
proceeds, when forecast subsequently by the REC, unless it designated otherwise
is classified as nonrecurring and thereby becomes unavailable for use in the
operating budget. Robideaux described a process that shifted money, some
designated by the statute setting up the amnesty and another portion declared
by the REC as nonrecurring, and essentially sanitized it all into recurring money
thusly eligible for use as operating funds.
Charitably, this violates the spirit
of the state Constitution, which sought to enunciate a principle that if money
came in as a bonus, it should not go to operating expenses. Less
diplomatically, it violates in letter the Constitution. And despite all of the caterwauling
of a group of legislators who styled themselves the “fiscal hawks” because,
among other things, they opposed in budgeting the use of “one-time money,” in
part recurring dollars collected for one purpose used for another via a funds
transfer like that elucidated by Robideaux, not only did they embrace the idea
of using one-time money from amnesty initially, but also as yet no public
complaints have emanated from any of them about the propriety of the funds
transfer subterfuge explained here as a possible strategy to deal with the
upcoming amnesty bonanza.
However, members of the REC – an independent
academician and the governor, House speaker, and Senate president or their
representatives – might not be so amused at this notion. Already, the
non-politician on it, James Richardson, has voiced skepticism that a portion,
perhaps any portion, of the booty should get designated as recurring. The House’s
chairman of its Appropriations Committee, state Rep. Jim Fannin,
expressed doubt that all of it could be used for operating expenses.
Theory supports such views. While
a good chunk of what gets collected logically fits as recurring – because it
merely accelerates what would have been collected from scofflaws absent amnesty
– some of it is cash that otherwise never would have come in, either through illegal
avoidance or successful legal cases against the state, without relaxation of
penalties. The writers of the 2013 law tried to minimize this segment by
stretching the process out over three years – to dodge the limitations in statute
that define nonrecurring monies as those not lasting more than two years, even
if it’s clear that by definition amnesty even spread out over three years is
not a recurring source of revenue for most of what gets collected – and by
eschewing any language that directs money directly to nonrecurring purposes, as
was done in the 2009
legislation,.
But REC members, particularly
Richardson, in light of the letter might adopt on this matter the aphorism of
if fooled once, shame on you, but if fooled twice, shame on me, thereby
tempting them to rule (because their decisions require unanimous consent,
otherwise the old forecast without the proceeds stays in effect) a substantial
portion of the found bucks as nonrecurring and thus daring legislators to
perform another shell game yet this time with an aware public. Which is why
there is much interest in what that final number will be, because a political
solution may present itself if enough is collected over $200 million to
save face by then allowing a significant amount to be declared nonrecurring
without any shenanigans needed to slough off an adequate amount declared
recurring to balance the budget.
ReplyDelete"Inconvenient circumstances do not provide absolution from following clear intent expressed in the Constitution."
Huh?
You have not been following Bobby Jindal, have you, and the line of cases finding unconstitutional actions he has left in his wake?