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Wally's Folly
by Albert Paschall
While the big lights in this election year are trained on the marquis
names like Bush and Gore, Harrisburg is scrambling in its own inimitable way to
get ready for November. Republicans
control the House by a whisker and with scandal season breaking out in
Republican ranks all over the state the last thing they need is a rowdy
Republican advancing liberal ideas.
So leave it to Delaware County Commissioner Wally Nunn,
a rowdy Republican if there ever was one to shake up the Harrisburg
establishment with a left-wing liberal idea bent on almost doubling personal
income taxes in the state.
Wallace H. Nunn is a veteran of the rough and tumble of
Delaware County Republican politics. Elected
in 1993 to the all-Republican Delaware County Council, Nunn’s views on fiscal
policies and taxes make Ronald Reagan look like Mr. Tax and Spend.
Preferring sound public policy to good public relations Nunn’s critics
call him a conservative curmudgeon to the rest of us he is the essence of sound
spending practices in government. That’s
why so many of Harrisburg’s Republican elected-class were aghast when he
called for upping Pennsylvania’s Personal Income Tax to fund public schools.
Conservatives and liberals called it Wally’s Folly.
Maybe, but only in the way that Harrisburg thinks.
Today all Pennsylvanians have their homes held hostage to the property
tax. On average about 72 cents of
every property tax dollar goes to a school district.
That’s no accident. The
educational establishment knows that right after family comes home and
Pennsylvanians will pay to keep their homes.
So the local school board’s $5 a month increase here, the $10 a month
increase there in the monthly mortgage installment doesn’t meet with a lot of
politically potent resistance. Yet
with the Sheriff’s auction block always 12 months away our senior citizens,
the poor, disabled and those with just bad luck are held hostage to a system
that forces them to pay for public education that they don’t need or can’t
afford. Pennsylvania’s systems of
tax and education are both merciless. Philosophically
the taxing education establishment has turned them into pay or get put out.
Out of your homes or out of a quality education.
That’s the reality check on Wally’s Folly.
Based on fiscal ’98, taking the Pennsylvania income tax from 2.8% to
4.8% would generate in the neighborhood of $4.9 billion.
That about $2,700 for every public school student in the state.
With the $13.9 billion spent on public education in Pennsylvania last
year that’s a straight-line reduction of 35% on our property taxes.
Coupled with other educational reforms, like Governor Ridge’s voucher
plan, Wally’s Folly could cut homeowners’ school tax burden in the state by
half.
However relief for homeowners wasn’t Nunn’s target.
His concerns run to the kids in Pennsylvania who get educated by how much
their district can afford, minus the mandates and eliminating the digressive
elements of politically motivated property assessments.
And he’s right. While the
educational establishment tries to convince taxpayers that housing values are
linked to the quality of education the turn of the circle is true. Sure its true that in the wealthy suburban school districts
that touch Philadelphia dolling out $12,000 a kid per year is the norm and
houses in these wealthy districts sell for more.
However its equally true that in Philadelphia County, that can only
afford $6,500 a year per kid while taping text books back together, the high
assessments, coupled with the onerous city wage tax, have caused the biggest
housing sell off and suburban migration in the city’s history despite the
rhetoric of Mayor Ed Rendell.
Wally’s Folly levels the playing field.
Those who use the schools, wage earners with kids, pay the most.
Those that don’t, especially our senior citizens, get a break and those
who need it, the school kids in disadvantaged areas get the chance that they
deserve. But with the state setting
the stage for a solid stipend that is equal for every one of the 1.8 million
public school students in the state the notion that wealthy suburban kids get an
education while poor urban kids get tendered in schools diminishes.
Someday under Nunn’s system every kid could get at least half a fiscal
chance at an education.
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Albert
Paschall is senior commentator for the Lincoln Institute, a non-profit
educational foundation in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Ó
Calvin-Graham Enterprises 1999. www.lincolninstitute.org
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