#1 – no. This not only would lock
in nursing home Medicaid reimbursement rates and put pressure on cutting rates
for home- and community-based care, but have them automatically increase – even
as legally the state must move people out of institutional care. The lack of
budget flexibility introduced almost assuredly would lead to higher taxes,
legal difficulties, and reduced funding for the only other significant area
that would not be protected, higher education (more information is here).
#2 – no. This allows hospitals to
increase prices to sock away in a special protected fund. Similar to #1, it
also reduces budgetary flexibility, encouraging tax increases in addition to
the indirect “sick tax” and cuts elsewhere (more information is here).
#3 – yes. This allows local
governments to contract out selling blighted property. It can deliver a better
return on investment to citizens by hastening rehabilitation of these.
#4 – no. This actually sets up a
mechanism to fund a state-run bank for local government transportation needs which
doesn’t exist. Why vote on something nonexistent, and plenty of other financing
means are available to states already.
#5 – no. This eliminates the
requirement that judges cannot be elected after their 70th birthday.
A number of states as does Louisiana wisely have age limits on judges because with advanced age judicial
performance can decline and it also discourages treating these positions as
lifetime jobs, which would only increase the already very high reelection rates
for these, and introduces new blood (more information is here).
#6 – no. This allows New Orleans’
already highest-in-the-state property tax rates to go even higher, above
constitutional limits, for police and fire protection. Do our neighbors a favor
and force the city to make better spending choices without being able to tax
more.
#7 – no. This allows some
veterans not classified by the federal government as totally disabled to have
their homestead exemptions doubled. But it privileges this class compared to
the totally disabled for any reason and eats away at local government revenues.
#8 – no. This allows an extremely
low-priority fund in state government, the Artificial Reef Development Fund, to
be protected from funds sweeps that could go to pay for much more important
needs. Rather than cordon off more of the roughly 300 such funds in state
government, the state’s fiscal structure should be changed to introduce more
flexibility (more information is here).
#9 – no. This eliminates the
requirement that the totally disabled who must annually supply verification of
their status and income to assessors to enjoy a freezing of the assessed value
of their homesteads do this, instead creating a cutoff for income indexed by
inflation and then voluntarily reporting if its exceeded. The change creates
too much opportunity for failing to report and it is not too much to ask for
annual verification.
#10 – yes. This halves to 18
months the time required until blighted property can have ownership changed
after a tax sale. This would place no special burden on the previous owners and
would expedite rehabilitation of these properties.
#11 – no. This creates an
additional cabinet department intended for a Department of Elderly Affairs.
Many states as Louisiana does presently do not give cabinet status to an agency
with these functions and this merely shuffles around boxes on an organizational
chart with no extra benefits. Instead, this only increases costs by increasing
bureaucracy (more information is here).
#12 – no. This makes some of the
state’s Wildlife and Fisheries Commission members required to come from
non-coastal Louisiana instead of leaving those positions at-large. Better would
be to remove this from the Constitution and if the governor’s appointment
discretion needs clipping, do it by statute.
#13 – no. This permits a New
Orleans local government agency to sell flood-distressed property in the city’s
Ninth Ward at below-market values. This makes no sense; something at market
value by definition sells and the state’s prohibition on these “donations”
should continue.
#14 – yes. This prohibits certain
tax exceptions from being passed into law during general sessions of the
Legislature. The constitutional parsing of “general” and “fiscal-only” sessions
was to reduce competition for attention to fiscal matters that only can be
attended to in fiscal sessions, so the change makes sense for consistency sake.
So unless it involves fair-market valued blighted properties or statewide tax exceptions, meaning voting for only #3, #10, and #14, voting against these is best for the state.
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