Print this story |
E-mail story |
This story has 3 comments | Add your own |
iPod friendly | Bookmark this
What is this?
Nobody likes taxes
Published Monday, August 31, 2009
Alabama ranks 50th in the nation on taxes. Alabama has the lowest taxes in the nation on what is collected per person. The fact is that Alabama government does more with less than any other state. Alabamians like it that way, and those of us in the Legislature take with the utmost seriousness the issue of taxes and budgets.
Having the lowest taxes in the nation is interesting to note during this time of tax “protests” popping up across the state lately. The lowest tax fact seems to get overlooked at these gatherings.
It is safe to say nobody likes taxes, but when some folks argue they are not necessary, it just defies reason. The fact is we live in a civil society, one where there are many things that must be done by public entities for the common good.
The preamble of the United States Constitution lists many of these public duties: “establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity.” Right there in our country’s founding document are outlined some of the things we must all do in common, like having a court system and police, a military to protect the country, and public schools to increase prosperity. All these things require taxes.
Schools promote the general welfare because in today’s world there is no doubt that education is absolutely fundamental to the future prosperity of everyone. The jobs of the future require a highly educated workforce.
As an example, Birmingham once was a national leader in steel production, creating more metal than even Pittsburgh. The furnaces and local raw materials like coal that went into them created the economic engine for our state for decades.
Now, healthcare is Birmingham’s largest industry, and the hospitals, research facilities and training programs employ more people than the steel industry at its height of the 1950s.
The difference is that back then a kid could walk out of high school and right into a mill. He could get that job and it would pay enough to raise a family. Now, almost all the jobs in the health industry not only require a high school diploma, but also most require a college education. Moreover, the jobs that are the engine of Alabama’s health industry, the positions in the research labs and specialized clinics, require highly advanced degrees.
Education is clearly the basis of our future prosperity, whether it’s in manufacturing, small business, technology, agriculture, or healthcare.
That is where we come back to taxes. Being the lowest in the nation means we have less to spend on Alabama’s schools.
There was once a story where some politician was talking to a group of teachers and said “you can’t fix Alabama’s schools by throwing money at the problem.” To where a teacher replied “how do you know, we’ve never tried.”
When the economy was strong earlier this decade, we invested in schools, fully funding things like the Alabama Reading Initiative. What we got back was the largest jump in reading test scores in the nation. Investments in education had huge dividends in student learning.
Now there is news that a $13.2 million grant from the National Math and Science Initiative to 12 struggling Alabama high schools increased their passing scores in math, science and English by a whopping 81 percent last year, compared to a 5.7 percent increase nationally.
Yet, in every other Alabama school there are no increases, just the opposite, massive cuts across the board are happening everywhere due to proration.
Jimmy Martin serves as Chilton County’s representative in the Alabama Legislature.
WOULD YOU LIKE TO SHARE THIS STORY?




Comments
Posted by November162000 (anonymous) on September 2, 2009 at 10:52 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Jimmy, would it make you feel better if we all just sent our ENTIRE paycheck to the state and federal government for you to spend on whatever makes you feel good. Maybe, just maybe, if we're real good, you'll let us keep just enough to feed ourselves with? If you're trying to makes us feel guilty because we don't pay QUITE as much in state taxes as some of our neighbors do, well, it won't work for me. The fact is that the state (and federal government too) shouldn't be taking ANY of our income through income taxes. Study up on the Fair Tax Plan, there you will find the answer to our budget problems that you have been searching for.
After reading this article, and given your refusal to help the people who are having their wages wrongly confiscated by Jefferson County, I'm starting to see what you are really made out of, and it's very disappointing.
Posted by RktScience (anonymous) on September 3, 2009 at 9:43 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Our tax system is upside down. We send so much of our earnings through the bureaucratic seive in Washington that we can't stomach higher state and local taxes-and it's about to get much worse.
We encourage folks to buy Alabama and Chilton County goods to keep the money local. We should also demand that our tax dollars be kept local as well.
Posted by janwashere (anonymous) on September 12, 2009 at 8:48 p.m. (Suggest removal)
I would like to say our tax system favors the rich and big corporations. The level for the poor, middle class, and the rich is backwards. If you will ckeck our Al arise (alarise.org) you will see
the middle class pay the same if not more than the rich. It has been this way for, oh too long! The poor pay too much taxes according to their income. If the scale was like it should, the poor paying the less with the rich paying the most, the scale would be correct and fair for all. It is not! This is sad and wrong, Big corporations have so many tax breaks they end up paying no tax. Let's do what is right and good for the people of Al and our ST. Particular the middle class gets most of the tax burden.
Post a comment (Terms of Use Policy)
(Requires free registration.)