Right idea, wrong time; a day late, a dollar short; pick your pithy aphorism but regardless they accurately describe the request by state Rep. Joe Harrison to have a special session of the Louisiana Legislature called prior to this year’s regular session.
Harrison wants the subject matter
to encompass the loosening
of budgetary dedications that steer revenues to specified expenditures;
some end up funding items well beyond any actual need and then forces the state
to sweep these funds into other areas of higher priority, a cumbersome and
confusing process that has turned annual and makes responsible budgeting
chaotic. He also hopes that such a convening would take the opportunity to
discard tax
exceptions that do not stimulate economic development in a cost-effective
fashion that also generate budgetary inefficiency.
Both are good ideas and worthy of
pursuit. It’s just that the timing’s all wrong. The upcoming regular session
the Constitution specifies as “fiscal-only;” after the session’s commencement,
each member may introduce only five each non-fiscal bills, and only during
these regular sessions may matters that have the effect of raising taxes be
introduced. In other words, even as it is shorter than the “general” kind of regular
session that occurs every even-numbered year alternating with this, it exists precisely
to concentrate on the kind of fiscal matters Harrison proposes.